Question: questions about signals

lelex76 is asking a question about satellite-imagery
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by lelex76 | September 15, 2020 00:02 | #24578


and could be one radio wave capture-transmitter system ? and after generate the translation those waves to internet?may be with GPS also?It is possible?



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Hi @lelex76 , thanks for your question. Are you asking about whether it would be possible to link a radio ground station to the internet along with geolocation data? Something like this exists- it's called WebSDR and it is a site that allows anyone in the world to tune-in to different antennas and ground stations in real time. http://websdr.org/ However not all of the antennas on WebSDR are able to decode satellite signals. Many of them are HF (high frequency) antennas primed for ham radio reception. I think it would be really cool if Satellite Ground Stations could be accessed in a similar way on the internet. If anyone else on this forum knows if this is already happening, do flag!

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wuau it woulb be great

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tile could a signal be generated that enters your site and you can make sound remixes there or am I a kind of antenna to which you access? When I touch or knit something here?

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The current web sdr receivers tune up to 30 mhz. The older receivers didn't work that way. They used a ham it up- up converter and fed the signal to an rtlsdr (or split the signal to multiple rtlsdrs). The standard rtlsd r really doesn't work to well below 24 mhz, regardless of what you hear. The ham it up steps the signal up to the 125 mh z region. They usually attached one rtlsd r ,as well, just to receive standard vhf/uhf signals. As you know, if no restriction is put on receive freq. , the rtlsd r will go up to about 1700 mh z ( give or take). It would be nice to get something like 136 mh z satellite weather signals. That's if there are no bandwidth issues.

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