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Citizen Radio Science: An Analysis of Amateur Radio Transmissions With e‐POP RRI
Author(s) -
Perry G. W.,
Frissell N. A.,
Miller E. S.,
Moses M.,
Shovkoplyas A.,
Howarth A. D.,
Yau A. W.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
radio science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.371
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1944-799X
pISSN - 0048-6604
DOI - 10.1029/2017rs006496
Subject(s) - fading , high frequency , radio frequency , modulation (music) , radio propagation , computer science , telecommunications , ionosphere , physics , acoustics , decoding methods , geophysics
We report the results of a radio science experiment involving citizen scientists conducted on 28 June 2015, in which the Radio Receiver Instrument (RRI) on the Enhanced Polar Outflow Probe (e‐POP) tuned in to the 40‐ and 80‐m ham radio bands during the 2015 American Radio Relay League Field Day. We have aurally decoded the Morse coded call signs of 14 hams (amateur operators) from RRI's data to help ascertain their locations during the experiment. Through careful analysis of the hams' transmissions, and with the aid of ray tracing tools, we have identified two notable magnetoionic effects in the received signals: plasma cutoff and single‐mode fading. The signature of the former effect appeared approximately 30 s into the experiment, with the sudden cessation of signals received by RRI despite measurements from a network of ground‐based receivers showing that the hams' transmissions were unabated throughout the experiment. The latter effect, single‐mode fading, was detected as a double‐peak modulation on the individual dots and dashes of one of the ham's Morse coded transmissions. We show that the modulation in the ham's signal agrees with expected fading rate for single‐mode fading. The results of this experiment demonstrate that ham radio transmissions are a valuable tool for studying radio wave propagation and remotely sensing the ionosphere. The analysis and results provide a basis for future collaborations in radio science between traditional researchers in the academia and industry, and citizen scientists in which novel and compelling experiments can be performed.

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