Analysis by Citizen Scientists of Doppler Radio Observations of the April, 2024 Solar Eclipseations

TitleAnalysis by Citizen Scientists of Doppler Radio Observations of the April, 2024 Solar Eclipseations
Publication TypeConference Proceedings
Year of Conference2025
AuthorsWest, MLou, Frissell, N, Mikitin, G, Popelas, G, Wilcox, R, Denton, MK, Spalletta, R, Engelke, W, Griffiths, G, Cerwin, S
Conference NameHamSCI Workshop 2025
Date Published03/2025
PublisherHamSCI
Conference LocationNewark, NJ
Abstract

The HamSCI community (Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation) has analyzed high frequency radio observations of the total solar eclipse of April 8, 2024 and found interesting correlations. Nearly fifty ham radio operators recorded over 200 Doppler time series of the national time standard transmitters WWV in Colorado and CHU in Canada using specialized GRAPE (Great Radio Amateur Propagation Experiment) receivers. These observations are archived at the Personal Space Weather Station website, and cover ten frequencies from 0.6 to 25 MHz. There were over sixty different paths from transmitter to receiver at various angles across and along the path of totality from Texas to Maine. For each observation six citizen scientists collected demographic data, found distances and midpoints (where radio signals are reflected from the ionosphere), noted local eclipse information, measured the maximum Doppler shifts, counted multi-path signals, and judged the symmetry of the S-shaped Doppler curves over ingress and egress time periods. We found that the Doppler shifts depend mostly on the Sun’s obscuration at the midpoint, but also on the carrier frequency and the distance between the transmitter and the receiver. At closer distances a radio wave measured a greater change in the path length as the bottom of the ionosphere retreated skyward and then returned as the Moon uncovered the Sun.  

Refereed DesignationNon-Refereed