Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб Listening to Weather Satellites with Random Junk в хорошем качестве

Listening to Weather Satellites with Random Junk 3 года назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



Listening to Weather Satellites with Random Junk

Listening to NOAA weather satellites as they pass overhead is relatively simple! All you need are some bits of wire and a basic radio. Actually getting imagery decoded from the transmissions took a little more effort, as I learned in the process of making this video. Below are some of the resources and guides I found helpful for this project: Basic intro to satellite reception: https://publiclab.org/notes/sashae/06... The antenna design I used: https://lna4all.blogspot.com/2017/02/... Website for tracking satellites and determining upcoming overhead passes (As of early 2021, the ones to watch are NOAA 18, 19, and 15): https://www.n2yo.com/ Info on the NanoVNA I used for antenna tuning:    • #480 NANOVNA Made Simple   This is a decent Software Defined Radio that's capable of hearing these satellites. You can get them with or without lots of extras like antennas and amplifiers: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/buy-rtl-sdr-d... The software I used to interface with the SDR and record audio files (for Linux / Raspberry Pi): https://gqrx.dk/ (I have heard SDR# is good for Windows, but have not tried it: https://airspy.com/download/) The software I used for decoding images: https://wxtoimgrestored.xyz/ Some "gotchas" I ran into when working with saved audio files (not always obvious from online guides): -WXtoIMG is ancient abandonware and barely works on modern computers. The Linux version has some display issues and freezes when trying to update Keplers, at least on my system. On Windows I found that the beta version works better, the "stable" release won't install at all). It also doesn't like modern sound drivers, so if you can't decode live signals you may have to record and decode later (see below for even more tricks with this!) -Gqrx saves recordings in stereo at the wrong sample rate. You'll need to open the saved audio file in Audacity (or some other audio editor), collapse the file to mono and change the sample rate to 11025. You'll probably also want to Normalize the file after each step. See here for more details: https://lucasteske.dev/2016/02/record... -WXtoIMG It is very finicky about date/time stamps and you may need to fiddle around a lot to get your recording to match a known satellite pass. I had no luck using the filename to specify recording time as the faq recommends. I had to download a file attribute editor (Or this software can change timestamps: https://noaa-apt.mbernardi.com.ar/ ). You need to change the "Modified" date and time (not the "created" attribute) to the time when the recording started (because once you process the file through Audacity, the timestamp will be different). I then had to manually adjust the map overlay in WXtoIMG (fortunately I had a visible reference point, if it's all clouds you might be out of luck!) See https://wxtoimgrestored.xyz/faq/ for some info on this. Hopefully all that helps! There are a lot of guides online for how to do this, some are more complete than others. There are problably also plenty of videos better at explaining this than mine, I was just trying everything out for the first time.

Comments