Thanks Dave, that is very helpful.
Cheers........Steve
I have no idea... but I speculate that it wouldn't sound like much of anything
for the smooth L-type N events -- just a really gradual slight rise in
background noise and an equally slow decay as the N event slewed past the
frequency channel being monitored.? For an N event made of a train of S bursts,
it would probably sound like S bursts.
Since N events are narrow band emission, the challenge is tuning a single-freq
AM or SSB receiver to the appropriate freq where the N event exists -- when it
exists.
That might be easier to do in real time with the SDRs using the waterfall
spectrogram as a guide, but I don't know if their software can output the audio
(AM or SSB demodulation?) from a single FFT output channel when the SDR is
operating at its widest coverage mode (8 or 10 or 16 MHz or whatever it is).
--
Dave
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On 3/24/25 23:14, Steve Chaters via groups.io wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have learned that Jovian L bursts sounds like waves breaking on a beach, and S
> bursts sound like popping corn.? But I have looked and no one seems to talk
> about what N bursts sound like.....does anyone know?
>
> Cheers..........Steve
>