[math-fun] Stairway to Heaven?
I wrote to the webmaster of the HIPAS site http://www.hipas.alaska.edu/hipasweb/hipas.htm and they have improved the description of their transmitters: The Heater system consists of 8 transmitters capable of conducting amplitude modulation of 100 Hz - 20 kHz and phase modulation of 0 -20 kHz. Each transmitter can transmit up to 150kW at 2.85 or 4.53 MHz on CW mode. The HAARP transmitter is also in the HF band (3 - 30mHz), so neither is anywhere close to 17 Hz! I think a 17 Hz transmitter and antenna need to be quite different from HF far-cousins. In fact I'm having a hard time imagining a 17 Hz directional antenna in Alaska since the wavelength is 18,000 kM. CO2 is only .04% of the atmosphere by volume. Maybe the laser can be tuned to heat CO2. And then, maybe a heated column of CO2 can be a major absorber of 17 Hz radio waves even with an omnidirectionnal transmitter? I only watch EE from the sidelines. --Steve
On Wed, 11 Jul 2007, Steve Witham wrote:
neither is anywhere close to 17 Hz! I think a 17 Hz transmitter and antenna need to be quite different from HF far-cousins. In fact I'm having a hard time imagining a 17 Hz directional antenna in Alaska since the wavelength is 18,000 kM.
Yeah, thinking about a 17hz RF transmitter makes my head hurt. We do have a pretty serious 60hz transmitter, though, that even has sufficiently long antennas...
Jason Holt wrote:
Yeah, thinking about a 17hz RF transmitter makes my head hurt. We do have a pretty serious 60hz transmitter, though, that even has sufficiently long antennas...
Of course -- the desired 17Hz must be the frequency of whale songs! Good thing they're not extinct yet! (Hey, wasn't there a Star Trek movie about this?) --Michael Kleber -- It is very dark and after 2000. If you continue you are likely to be eaten by a bleen.
On 7/11/07, Michael Kleber <michael.kleber@gmail.com> wrote:
Jason Holt wrote:
Yeah, thinking about a 17hz RF transmitter makes my head hurt. We do have a pretty serious 60hz transmitter, though, that even has sufficiently long antennas...
Of course -- the desired 17Hz must be the frequency of whale songs! Good thing they're not extinct yet! (Hey, wasn't there a Star Trek movie about this?)
You can hear the 60 hz buzz near high power lines, but without piezo stuff I don't think you can swap EM for sound. -- Mike Stay metaweta@gmail.com http://math.ucr.edu/~mike
participants (4)
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Jason Holt -
Michael Kleber -
Mike Stay -
Steve Witham