Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 7, 1:03 pm, wrote:
The "tones" you hear at night on MW are heterodynes. IE: the carriers of various stations clashing with each other. This is due to the increased sky wave signals at night. In the day, you have little sky wave, and most stations you hear are ground wave. Being most are on separate frequencies, you don't hear many het's... Het's are a common noise on the CB bands... AM anyway... Listen to ch 19...Heterodyne city... You would hear the same thing at 300ghz if two stations were on the same frequency at the same time. Frequency has nothing to do with that. What is the best frequency if I want to listen to distant heterodynes from outer space? AFAIK, if the frequency is too high, then you only get line of sight. Too low, and you can't get signals from space, because the ionosphere keeps out long-wave signals. Low-frequency signals on earth that reach the upper atmosphere are bounced back down to the lower atmospheres because the ionosphere reflects them. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Anyone ever hear AB8MQ on the radio? | Scanner | |||
Anyone ever hear KB9RQZ on the radio? | Scanner | |||
Anyone ever hear KB9RQZ on the radio? | Swap | |||
External Speaker for your Radio/Receiver - You Can Hear It ! | Shortwave | |||
Hear Great Balls-to-the-Wall Talk Radio! Bob Lassiter, the "Mad Dog" in alt.binaries.sounds.radio.misc | Broadcasting |