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Dave Oldridge wrote in
: .... I used to have an FT-221 tricked out with a hot front end. Solar noise would run the S meter up to well over the S9 mark and you could even see the galactic plane passing through the antenna pattern. Needless to say, it heard well on terrestrial 2m SSB. That is no mean feat! I think ambient noise temperature at 144MHz for an antenna pointed at cold sky is somewhere around 200K to 250K, when you add a pretty good receiver at say 30K, you are talking 230K to 280K total system noise, and the sun is probably around 800K with a low end 4 bay EME antenna setup (Gain~22dBi), for a noise rise of 10*log((800+255)/255) or 16dB. A single yagi of gain around 15dBi is much poorer, not only is the sun noise reduced proportionately to the gain reduction, but the ambient noise increases with higher gain in the side and back area of the antenna, but it still should be possible to reliably 'see' the sun with a very good receiver. Ambient noise temperature for a beam at zero elevation here in suburbia varies from 1000K to 6000K depending on the day and time... so a very low temperature receiver is wasted for terrestrial contacts. Owen Owen |
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