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Welcome to Radio JOVE 2.0
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Dear Radio JOVE Community, The Radio JOVE Project is a NASA Partner citizen science project where participants purchase, assemble, and operate their own 16-24 MHz radio spectrograph to observe solar, Jupiter, Galactic, and Earth-based radio emissions. Learn to become a citizen scientist and contribute scientific-quality data to our data archive. Visit Getting Started to learn how to participate in Radio JOVE. Regards, The Radio JOVE Team
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Views of the Solar "Storm" from the Dark Sky Observatory May 13, 2025
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Here are some views of the fantastic solar earlier today from the Dark Sky Observatory. The first shows the entire "storm", and the remaining spectrographs show some of the details. Richard
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non IoA 05/14/2025 Easley, South Carolina
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Good evening again: I am not at all sure about this one. Calling this non IoA. Any opinions? John
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Solar today, May 14, 2025, from the Dark Sky Observatory
Here is the solar, also observed by John and Bill. Richard
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Solar SID 05/14/2025 Easley, South Carolina
Good evening: Solar SID from today. John
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Solar events, 14 May 2025, Prospect, ME
Good evening...so late afternoon activity. There first 3 spectrograms may all be part of about a 7 minutes of activity. The next at about 1920:30 UTC was weak and may have been followed by 2 or 3 more even weaker. The last 1939:20 UTC. ....bill....
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Solar Events 13 May, 2025
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Here are my recordings of the X1.2 flare initiated events from the 13th, both Jove and SID Rx. -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software. www.avg.com
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Solar Events 12-13 May, 2025 Wasilla AK
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Good Day All, Some solar events, all day long... Still working on my local setting with SDR Console/SDRC2RSS on getting it cleaned up. Not quite sure whats causing the High/Low end dropoff. Anyone else has this? Carl Wasilla AK USA
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Solar and RF fadeout North Tasmania, Australia
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Hi, Some weak solar and RF fade out. Also see comparison from Learmonth observatory around the same timeframe. Regards, Luke. Virus-free.www.norton.com
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Solar 13 MAY 2025
Observations from Grafton, WV. So a storm came through and knocked my electricity out for several hours. I am just now getting back online and looking at yesterdays events. Looks like I might have missed one this morning. ~Duane
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Solar 05/13/2025 Easley, South Carolina
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Good evening: Great solar from today. John
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RSS with a Dongle
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Hi All, When one try to chance settings in config fil: SolarSweeper for dongle used with RSS one get these error: Maybe jim is around that? -- Aloha - john s,
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Solar event on 13 may 2025 @ 15:36 UTC
Solar accompanied with a strong radio blackout from the far side. Huub Breda, The Netherlands Grid locator: JO21jn
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May 13 2025 X1 spectrograms - Heliotown
May 13 2025 X1 spectrograms - Heliotown. Tom
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Solar event?? 13 May 2025, Prospect, Maine
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I pass along for whatever it's worth... (1) Did not have my "jove" receiver on today because I had to disconnect the antenna for Spring field maintenance. (2) My wife was watching the local broadcast TV news on channel 5, 76 to 82 Mhz. (Yes, we still use over-the-air TV!) about 1700 EDT or 2100 UTC. (3) She ask what the Sun was doing and I replied I had no idea, "Why?" (4) She said the signal was frequently very pixilated and for seconds at a time would go completely black. We are about 40 miles as the crow flies from the xmitter. (5) She wondered if solar activity might be causing this? This is not the first time she has commented on "interrupted" TV reception. Anyway....fun with radio.....bill...
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Use of Dongle with RSS
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Hi All and jim, I ?m trying to connect with a Dongle but get only these message: I have ben around in here and read jim's instruktion about the Option settings but there are no dongle in that menu more to set ? Please helpe me out! - maybe jim are around! -- Aloha - john s,
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X-1.2 FLARE
Thanks for the alert or this would have gone by my active window. I happened to have a 3-element Yagi pointed directly upward to catch Cass and Cyg on 144.070 MHz. Nothing "magic" about that frequency other than the antenna was optimized for the low end of 2-meters. Here is the X-1.2 flare at 144.070 MHz. Nothing is calibrated, so don't make any conclusions regarding specific peak levels. The sun is not boresighted, but a 3-element frontal lobe isn't that sharp. -- Dave - W?LEV
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