11 Mar 2025 Solar
Adding to the pile, here's some solar Type III from the 11th. Interesting angled (negative freq drift) components in the last few Type III bursts. -- Dave
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Dave Typinski
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#13043
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Solar 11 March 2025 (Dark Sky Observatory)
Hi Folks, Here are the solar bursts that we detected with our TFD array at the Dark Sky Observatory today.? These three bursts coincided in time with three flares, an M1, C7 and a C9 flare
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Richard Gray
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#13042
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New radioJove station at Lancaster University, UK
Hi folks: we'll be installing a dual-dipole antenna and receiver at Lancaster in July, with the aim of autonomous operation. This will be away from our campus at an experiment site in a field. If
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JoeK
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#13041
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Solar 11 MAR 2025
Observations from Grafton, WV. Some noise with a little bit of solar mixed in. ~Duane
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Duane
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#13040
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Solar 03/11/2025 Easley, South Carolina
Good evening: ? ? ?Solar from today. John
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AOL
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#13039
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Re: 10 Mar 2025 Doubtful Io-B and real TPs
David, Thanks for sharing the Cas A papers. The 1700 UTC time is when Cas A transits here, not sure what time it transits in Germany. Andy [email protected]> wrote:
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Andrew Mount
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#13038
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Re: 10 Mar 2025 Doubtful Io-B and real TPs
Hi Andy, Weird stuff does happen, so it's often unwise to speak in absolutes. However, in our experience: Sabine's spectrogram shows a couple nested TPs with skip-focused edges (the slightly hotter
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Dave Typinski
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#13037
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Re: 10 Mar 2025 Doubtful Io-B and real TPs
Sabine, Could that be Cassiopeia A scintillation instead of a TP? Cass A RA is at transit at your location at 17:00 UTC. Best wishes, Andy [email protected]> wrote:
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Andrew Mount
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#13036
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Re: 10 Mar 2025 Doubtful Io-B and real TPs
Hi Sabine, Wow nice one. The TP is popping out nicely! Huub
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Huub Hameleers SWL/JO21JN
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#13035
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10 Mar 2025 Doubtful Io-B and real TPs
It would take a lot of imagination to pass the spots off as Io-B. But the TPs are real and really beautiful! Sabine -- Germany Standard time: UTC +1 hour
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Sabine Cremer
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#13034
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Re: How much do your calibrations vary?
Jim To be honest Jim I¡¯ve been working on taxes every spare minute. Think I¡¯m close to finished. But I can barely see any thickness in the plot. I need to move the calibrator over to a different
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Larry Dodd
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#13033
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Re: How much do your calibrations vary?
Thank you Larry. Appreciate the encouragement. [email protected]> wrote:
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Jim Sky
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#13032
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Re: Some non-Io-A from tonight March 09 2025
Here is a little bit of the non-Io-A from last night later than 00hr UTC.? The second image shows the positive drift portion seen in the first image in more detail. Richard
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Richard Gray
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#13031
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Lightening
Spectrograms have been nothing but lightening strikes for hours. Very large storm in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina (about 1100 miles southeast from Prospect, ME) and small storms west of the
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bsneed1@...
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#13030
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Edited
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Re: Some non-Io-A from tonight March 09 2025
Hi Dave, Thanks for those interesting comments.? I am still just at the beginning of understanding the nuances of ionospheric propagation and, for that matter, the mechanisms behind Jupiter-Io DAM
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Richard Gray
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#13029
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Re: How much do your calibrations vary?
Jim Yes good idea Jim. I have voltage regulators on each calibrator voltage line, 12v, 5v, and 3.3v and I can tell you they do drift slightly over months of time. Have not charted that but might be
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Larry Dodd
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#13028
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Re: How much do your calibrations vary?
This is an outstanding line of investigation, Jim! Excellent idea. -- Dave
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Dave Typinski
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#13027
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How much do your calibrations vary?
For those who have ongoing observations and working calibrators,? I would like to ask a favor.? I want to see how much your calibrations vary over time.? If you have the calibrator running
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Jim Sky
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#13026
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Re: Solar. 09/03/2025
Looks good! John Sent from the all new AOL app for iOS
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AOL
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#13025
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Solar. 09/03/2025
Hi Solar events Today Salvador
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salvador aguirre
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#13024
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