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Meteor Scatter The Black Magic of David R. Kerl N9HF
Linda H. Straubel N9LHS DBARA March, 2019
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You’d be right! What is meteor scatter and what can hams do with it?
Meteor scatter allows us a contact range of 500 to 1,400 miles on 28 MHz – 432 MHz. While millions of meteors soar over the earth every day, most are too small to use for meteor scatter. Usable meteors range in size from a grain of sand to a grain of rice. You might well think that bouncing a signal off such a tiny particle careening through space would be impossible. You’d be right!
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What is the signal actually bouncing off?
The term “meteor scatter” is a bit of a misnomer. We are actually bouncing signals off their ionized trails. These trails can be up to 30 km or 18 miles long.* Duration is anywhere from a fraction of a second to 45 minutes.** While longer durations are possible, 30 seconds is the longest usual duration before the trail dissipates. This is what we’re actually aiming for: Sources:
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Oops, let’s make the transmitter uni-directional, as well . . .
1,400 miles, max. In effect, we’re aiming the signals “over their heads,” giving them a lead to hit the trails and bounce our signals off them toward the receiving stations.
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What equipment and software does meteor scatter require?
SSB transceiver capable of watts minimum, a Yagi antenna (e.g. 6m, 3 elements or more), a computer with Windows and WSJT-X installed, and a radio-to-computer interface. SOFTWARE: WSJT-X This is a suite of many weak-signal and EME programs, of which we are only interested in two, FT-8 and MSK-144. Example of an interface
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MSK-144 is the program we will be using for meteor scatter.
For those used to FT-8 for digital work, it is inadequate for meteor scatter. Here’s why: FT-8 requires approximately 6-7 seconds minimum of a solid signal to decode. MSK-144 will decode with a signal duration of fractions of a second. (Remember: that ionized trail may sometimes last only a fraction of a second.)
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Here’s what my monitor looks like during meteor scatter:
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Here’s a close-up of multiple pings:
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Here’s a close-up of big, long-lasting ping:
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A really long burn is nicknamed a “school bus.”
Here, you can see why
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* *This will indicate how visible they are in case you are actually so foolish as to go out and look at them instead of using them for QSO’s.
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