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The Lunar Crater Radio Telescope (LCRT) is a proposal by the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts to create an ultra-long-wavelength (hereby wavelengths greater than 10 m – i.e., frequencies below 30 MHz) radio telescope inside a lunar crater on the far side of the Moon. Square Kilometer Array (SKA-Phase2) Australia, South Africa 0.05–30 GHz
Some of the more notable frequency bands used by radio telescopes include: Every frequency in the United States National Radio Quiet Zone; Channel 37: 608 to 614 MHz; The "Hydrogen line", also known as the "21 centimeter line": 1,420.40575177 MHz, used by many radio telescopes including The Big Ear in its discovery of the Wow! signal
Radio astronomy is a subfield of astronomy that studies celestial objects at radio frequencies. The first detection of radio waves from an astronomical object was in 1933, when Karl Jansky at Bell Telephone Laboratories reported radiation coming from the Milky Way .
The GEM Radio Telescope measures the radio emission of our galaxy in five frequencies, between 408 MHz and 10 GHz, from different places of the earth. This data will be used to calibrate other telescopes, more specifically the Planck Surveyor, and will give the means to filter the Cyclotron Radiation and the free free radiation from other maps in a way that the only radiation left on the map ...
A radio quiet zone is an area where radio transmissions are restricted in order to protect a radio telescope [1] or a communications station [2] from radio frequency interference. The Radio Regulations of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) define interference as being detrimental to radio astronomy if it increases measurement ...
The Very Long Baseline Array usually makes radio observations at wavelengths from three millimeters to 90 centimeters, or in other words, at frequencies from 0.3 gigahertz to 96 gigahertz. Within this frequency range, the VLBA observes in eight different frequency bands that are useful for radio astronomy. The VLBA also makes observations in ...
S. Sagamore Hill Radio Observatory; San Pedro Valley Observatory; São Gião Radio Telescope; Sardinia Radio Telescope; Siberian Solar Radio Telescope; Solar Submillimeter Telescope
SETI: The Radio Search (page 2) "What Is the Water Hole" (has a cleaner diagram) Planetary.org: A Blueprint for SETI; How SETI Works Discusses the water hole. "waterhole" entry in The Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight' "The ABCs of SETI: the search for extraterrestrial intelligence" "SETI: The water hole" from Astronomy Now