I think we made contact :-D
A nice thumping sound spanning across 100Khz. These are definately encoded plans to make a device that allows us to travel safely through worm holes.
👾👽️
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A nice thumping sound spanning across 100Khz. These are definately encoded plans to make a device that allows us to travel safely through worm holes.
👾👽️
Comments
Sorry to dissapoint.
It's a Wave radar, but it must be a new one, as it's not on my list of European or North American ones.
Is that CODAR, @G8JNJ ?
According to signalwiki, CODAR is 50 kHz wide, maybe the page needs an update.
This was a tongue in cheek post :-P
bearing in mind I'm in the south pacific.
Yeh, I realised you were joking.
If you live in that part of the world, then I'm surprised you can hear anything other than radars :-(
The Wave radar you mentioned is very strong in Europe, which is why I thought it must be located over this direction, but I could be wrong.
Wave radars do occupy more than 50kHZ, so the SigID Wiki is incorrect.
The list of US Wave Radars can be found here (warning, it takes a long time to load) This also states their sweeprate (typically 1, 2 & 4 seconds) and bandwidth (some are 100, 600, 1000kHz)
https://hfrnet.ucsd.edu/sitediag/stationList.php
Another list containing European projects (also slow to load) click on the "download metadata" option to get a list.
https://www.hfrnode.eu/map/
If anyone does find a list for Asia, Australia etc. I'd be keen to see it.
Regards,
Martin