Could the iron ore use as the antenna for radio telescopes?
Is it possible to transform the Rocky Mountains and Appalachian mountains iron ore the natural antennas for radio telescopes?
Could iron ore act as the natural antenna for radio-telescopes, and the answer is that in the iron ore is the same iron with the radio antennas. So if we would benefit natural deposits of iron ore, we must just check, that the radio waves are touching the ore, and then we must connect the amplifier system to the iron ore.
There is one little but a very interesting coincidence with the form of Big Ear(1) telescope and the terrain form of the United States of America. The mountain areas of the USA are like the antennas of the "Big Ear" telescope.
And sometimes has been introduced ideas, that the iron ore of the Rocky Mountains and Appalachian mountains can be used as the natural antenna for radio telescopes, which means that there is possible to create "Bigger Ear" telescope. That means that the amplifier of the radio telescopes can be connected to the iron ore, which will transform mountains into the bigger version of the "Big Ear" telescope.
The "Wow!" signal( 2), and why the magnetic fields, what radio signal passes are making it very difficult to determine the origin of that signal?
The main reason, why the "Wow!" signal is really hard to analyze is that the signal is unique. That means that only the "Big Ear" has noticed that thing. This famous signal has been caused thoughts that what if the system would be out of the electricity just at that time? And another thing, what makes this case lucky is that "Big Ear" is the fixed system. The telescope is two fixed antennas, and that allowed to catch the signal. If the telescope would be aimed, and the aiming point of the telescope would be different, there would be no "Wow!" signal.
And there is claiming that somebody has asked did humanoids or whatever those creatures are known about the error in program code? Maybe that thing was a joke, but it's quite a creepy version of humor.
This "joke" is quite bad, but if the humanoids would know the error, that the computer couldn't determine the antenna what will catch the signals, and they would predict that there is an update brings, they could expect that the telescope was out of use. And then they would send that message.
The calculation of the point, where the famous signal came should not be very difficult. The reason for missing coordinates is that the computer programmer, who has made the program, what is used to isolate the signal didn't determine, which antenna caught that signal. So the thing that must be done is just calculate the point, where the message is coming for both antenna, and then the optical telescopes can turn to those points, and observe is there some kind of star, where that signal can come from.
And in this case, we must realize, that the location and direction of the signal could be impossible to determine, even we could determine the point, where the signal is coming. The black holes can turn the direction of the radio waves, and that would make possible, that the signal would come originally from a different direction, what the "Big Ear" would detect. Another problem is the "Radio maser emission", what means that when the radio signal faces another radio source what will transfer energy to it, would that make the effect, what is called as "virtual transistor".
So that means that the outcoming radiowaves are acting like radio amplifier. This makes impossible to determine the original transmitting energy. We can see the same effect if the signal travels through the magnetic fields or the bursts of pulsars, that radiowaves can increase the power of the signal, which means that it can come from a very long distance like from another galaxy, and maybe the origin of that signal remains a mystery forever.
(1)
http://www.bigear.org/
(2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wow!_signal
Image:
https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/dUX84feLvtnHxyBLItuTbdJqWEE=/800x600/filters:no_upscale()/https://public-media.si-cdn.com/filer/39/91/39911ef6-b5d6-442f-817c-6d1e886ed5e5/bigear2l.jpg
Comments
Post a Comment