[time-nuts] another source of time...

jimlux jimlux at earthlink.net
Wed Aug 5 22:44:41 UTC 2020


I was researching potential calibration sources for our orbiting 
receivers (where we need to line up GNSS signals with HF signals) and 
after looking at the usual suspects like WWV, we came across another one.

Ionosondes - they're all over the place, and these days, they're fairly 
accurately timed (how accurately? I don't know.)

Timing wise, since wide band and oblique sounders are popular, they must 
be fairly well controlled, since the transmitter and receiver are not 
co-located.  A traditional vertical sounder drives the transmitter and 
receiver off the same clock, so they don't care so much about what time 
it is.

I think these things are designed so they have resolutions in "meters" 
or "tens of meters" which implies sub microsecond accuracy at worst.



There's several kinds:

The Oblique/QVI sounder - 100 watts into an omni(-ish) antenna - 2-20 
MHz chirp at 100kHz/second, for 180 seconds total sweep. They do the 
chirp once every 12 minutes.

Wide Sweep Backscatter Ionogram (WSBI) sounder
20 kW(!) into a 2 element log periodic curtain pointed in the general 
direction of an over the horizon radar.  5-28 MHz over 282 seconds, also 
at a 12 minute cadence.



They have some of these in Vieques PR, New Kent VA, and Corpus Christi 
TX.  I would imagine the Australians have some associated with JORN 
(their OTH radar network).  There are plenty of other sounders around, too.


There's a USRP implementation of a receiver for various sounders from 
Juha Vierinen

http://www.radio-science.net/2019/04/oblique-ionograms-between-sodankyla-and.html







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