• Ionosphere, Eclipse, HAMSci, Ham Radio

    From ARRL Members Only Web site@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 26 21:46:20 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.amateur.moderated, oma.general, nebr.misc
    XPost: rec.radio.info

    I've seen two total solar eclipses in my life. They are amazing events.
    I can't express the awe I felt when the world went dark, and this
    amazing halo of light appeared in the sky. As hams, we have another way
    to enjoy an eclipse event and to help science at the same time.

    As you know, the ionosphere is the reason that we can talk around the
    world on HF radio. It has been the goal of scientists and engineers to understand how the ionosphere works, to model it, and to predict how it
    will respond to the stream of energized particles from the sun. You and
    I have a chance to help in that effort.

    NASA is requesting our assistance in probing the ionosphere during two
    upcoming solar eclipses -- October 14, 2023, and April 8, 2024. And we
    can do it just by talking on our radios -- even if that "talking" is via digital modes. You can learn more in an article on the NASA website:
    "Ham Radio Operators, We Need Your Help During Solar Eclipses!" The
    link is:

    http://bit.ly/3EILsyX

    Additional information is at the HamSCI website. The link for their
    page "HamSCI Festivals of eclipse ionospheric science" is:

    https://hamsci.org/eclipse

    I hope all of you survived our winter easily. Despite last week's snow
    here in Lincoln, it's nice having some warmer temperatures this
    weekend.

    73, Art K0AIZ

    --------------------------------------------------------------------
    ARRL Midwest Division
    Director: Arthur I Zygielbaum, K0AIZ
    k0aiz@arrl.org --------------------------------------------------------------------

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)