Stephen P. McGreevy's ground-based ELF-VLF recordings
Aurora over northern Manitoba, Canada on 23 August 1996. Photo by Stephen
P. McGreevy
LATEST AUDIO
FILES: A STEREO recording of spectacular 'hooks.'
This file was recorded in northern Alberta, Canada on 13 August 2000 at approximately 1500 UT, during my August 2000 (near solar-maximum) VLF recording expedition into the auroral-zone region of northern Alberta, Canada.
"Natural Radio" describes naturally-occurring electromagnetic (radio) signals
emanating from lightning storms, aurora (The Northern and Southern Lights), and
most importantly, the Earth's magnetic-field (the Magnetosphere).
This is a presentation of Earth's natural radio emissions that occur in the
extremely-low-frequency to very-low-frequency (ELF-VLF) radio
spectrum--specifically, at AUDIO frequencies between approximately 100 to 10,000
cycles-per second (0.1 - 10 kHz).
Unlike sound waves which are vibrations of air molecules that our ears are
sensitive to, natural radio waves as received at ground-level are vibrations of
electric and magnetic energy (electromagnetic waves) which--though occurring at
the same frequencies as sound--cannot be listened to without an audio-frequency
ELF-VLF radio receiver to convert the natural radio signals directly into the
same sound frequencies. Another amazing realm of nature is thus ready to be
explored and observed.
Naturally-occurring VLF radio emissions are being studied both via
ground-based receiving systems as well as orbiting spacecraft receivers such as
the POLAR spacecraft. Much of these phenomena begin as plasma waves in Earth's magnetosphere. Please check out the U. Iowa Plasma Wave Group links toward the bottom of this page for much more information.
All of the following Natural Radio recordings were recorded by Stephen P.
McGreevy using the McGreevy WR-3 with 85 cm whip
antenna or WR-4b E-Field VLF receiver and 10' (3 meter) vertical antenna
except for the Alberta June 1998 stereo recordings which were made on two
similar (but not exactly the same) magnetic-field/loop antenna receiving systems
developed by Stephen Ratzlaff and Stephen McGreevy. Most of the the following
files were recorded at 8 bit, 11 kHz sampling rate.
These are examples of ELF-VLF radio phemonena which can be heard in
middle-latitudes (30-60 degrees north geographic latitudes) by anyone with an
audio-frequency ELF-VLF radio receiver at ground level. Similar recordings to
these have been made by satellite-based receivers in Earth's orbit, such as the
POLAR-PWI spacecraft (please see links at bottom of this page). Those data
recordings lack the ever-present lightning static present when listening with
ground-based receivers.
The following files can be downloaded either in "bulk" via the larger .ZIP
extension heading over the individual .WAV file listings, or they can be
downloaded individually. You will need PKUNZIP version 2.04g or greater to
un-compress the .ZIP files. This page updated 12 October 1998. Special thanks to
the University of Iowa Plasma Wave Group for sponsoring this presentation!
Stephen P. McGreevy
Natural Radio Audio Files Listing:
Whitemud River region, Northwestern Alberta, Canada 13 August 2000 - Near Solar-Maximum Recording Expedition to Alberta Canada
Spectacular STEREO recording of a phenomenon called 'hooks' recorded on 13 August 2000 at
approx. 1500 UT using a cross-azimuth dual loop recording ststem. The location was 56.3 deg. north/118.1 deg. west. HOOKS.ZIP 5.5 MB compressed file in ZIP format recorded at 22050/16 bit rate, about 1 min 20 sec. in duration.
SUMMER 1996 SOLAR-MINIMUM VLF RECORDING EXPEDITION
to Manitoba, Canada: Grass River Provincial Park 22 Aug. - 05 Sept.:
Beautiful full-sky aurora in Manitoba, Canada on the night of 28-29 August
1996. Photo by Stephen P. McGreevy
I was located 45 miles south-east of Flin Flon, Manitoba, a fine place for
aurora watching and Natural ELF-VLF Radio monitoring during the late
summer)
August 1996 Manitoba audio files:
Recorded at Grass River Provincial Park in central-western Manitoba,
Canada on 30 August 1996 at 1652 UTC during the McGreevy Summer 1996
Solar-Minimum ELF-VLF Recording Expedition in the auroral-oval region when
aurora can be frequently seen overhead - LONG RECORDING and ONE OF MY FAVORITE
recordings of a mesmerizing mixture of different elements of chorus. Also a nice
segment of echoing (whistler-mode) chorus trains. 30a1652.wav,
51 sec., 562268 bytes
23 August 1996 at 2228 UTC - Spectacular "nose-whistler" along with
hissband and triggered upward-rising emissions similar in sound to bird calls.
This whistler had sustained echo-trains and many of them are audible in this
recording, along with its initiating lightning static burst! 23a2228.wav,
40 sec., 442656 bytes
View
Spectrogram of 23 August 1996 - 2228 UT recording
Spectrogram of 23 August - 2228 UTC recording
24 August 1996 at 1500 UTC -Strong, low-pitched whooping and hooting tonal
emissions of 1 kHz or less, and very-weak background low-pitched roaring
hissband. One of my favorite segments! 24a1500.wav,
14 sec., 161140 bytes
June 1996 Alberta ELF-VLF radio phenomena audio file:
View
spectrogram of 24 August 1996 - 1500 UT recording
Spectrogram of 24 August - 1500 UTC recording
- ABWT001.WAV,
156 sec., 1727030 bytes
- An incredible-sounding 2 1/2 minute recording of spectacular wavering-tone
periodic emissions. Wildly varying upward and downward pitched whistling and
whooping sounds. Similar phenomena to the "Kenai Crazy Whistlers/Hooks" audio
files below but even more spectacular sounding. Well worth the download time!
Recorded in a remote location by the Whitemud River in northwestern Alberta,
Canada, about 45 miles/60 km north-west of Peace River, AB on 02 June 1996 at
approx. 1030 UT (4.30 a.m. MDT).
Death Valley National Park, s.e. CALIFORNIA
Panamint Valley
Whistler Shower This recording was taped on Thursday, 12 March 1998 at 1415
UT/6.15 a.m. PST in the northern Panamint Valley, Death Valley National Park in
a very quiet place far from any AC powerlines. There are about 100 (fairly
diffuse) whistlers per-minute occurring, of light to moderate intensity. A
closer, more pure-tone whistler is heard following a loud lightning stroke
static burst about 9 seconds into this recording. (Local weather was clear and
about 45F, minor geomagnetic storm in progress). McGreevy WR-4b VLF receiver,
2.5m vertical whip antenna.
This event was very RARE at 36.5 degrees north latitude between the middle of
1996 up to recently due to the low sunspot count and a very quiet sun. NOW,
we're going to be hearing more of this event as the the sunspot count and
associated solar-flux and CME/flare-induced magnetic storms occur. This event is
not of the caliber of 'whistler storms' heard during the most recent
solar-maximum (1989 - 1991), but the fact that this occurred is very exciting!
pvws0312.wav,15
sec.,160138 bytes
- ALB_CHOR.WAV,
42 sec., 463052 bytes
- Beautiful Alberta Auroral Chorus taped during a visible display of Aurora
(Northern Lights). I was located 150 miles east of Red Deer, AB Near Consort,
AB. In this segment, squawking "chorus" is accompanied by a multitude of
"sliding-tone emissions." When these sliding- tones would be heard, the aurora
would suddenly brighten up and move quicker. Taped 26 Sept. 1993 at 1115 UTC.
- BC_CHOR.WAV,
678020 bytes
- Very loud Auroral Chorus taped during rare severe magnetic storm. I was
located next to Eve's River in northern Vancouver island, BC, Canada on 21
Feb. 1994 at 1045 UT. Aurora was visible through partial cloud cover and
moonlight. This mag. storm also nearly wiped out HF (SW) reception.
- ORECHORS.WAV,
34 sec., 374860 bytes
- Loud Dawn Chorus and Hiss, recorded 18 Aug. 1993 in southeastern Oregon's
Alvord Desert. 1430 UTC, 0730 PDT. Major magnetic storm in progress. Magnetic
field "micro-pulsations" are very evident (slow undulations in the hiss/chorus
every 3-4 sec similar to ocean waves.
-
-
- HUGH_WHI.WAV,
7.5 sec., 82724 bytes
- Huge whistler (very strong), moderate diffusion recorded 17 Sept. 1993 20
mi. west of Wendover, NV at around 6:30 am PDT (1330 UTC).
- LOUD_WHI.WAV,
8.5 sec., 93748 bytes
- Another strong whistler, same location as above within 10 minutes of the
other one. Initiating sferic "tweek" clearly obvious!
- LOUDWHI2.WAV,
9 sec., 99260 bytes
- VERY LOUD Mod. diffusion whistler with weak diffuse echo accompanied by
triggered emissions at time of whistler.
- PURENVWH.WAV,
19.5 sec., 215012 bytes
- 04 June 1993, 60 miles NNE of Reno, NV, 1430 UTC, 7:30 am PDT. Weak Dawn
Chorus (minor mag. storm in progress with weak background layer of sferics
plus very strong sferics from lightning within 100 mi. of receiver. A strong,
pure whistler of slow descending rate occurs after one of these semi- local
lightning sferics.
- WHIS4194.WAV,
12.5 sec., 137844 bytes
- 01 April 1994, 1130 UT/0330 PST, 100 mi. north of San Francisco, CA in
Mendocino Co. (Fish Rock Road 20 mi. west of Ukiah). Clusters of nearly pure
whistlers occurred all night and were quite beautiful! This segment has two
strong and two very weak whistlers.
-
-
- NVWH_HQ.WAV,
11 sec., 463094 bytes
- 04 June 1993, 60 miles NNE of Reno, NV, 1430 UTC, 7:30 am PDT. Weak Dawn
Chorus (minor mag. storm in progress with weak background layer of sferics
plus very strong sferics from lightning within 100 mi. of receiver. A strong,
pure whistler of slow descending rate occurs after one of these semi-local
lightning sferics. This segment taped at 44 kHz sampling rate.
- ORECHORS.WAV,
34 sec., 374860 bytes
- Loud Dawn Chorus and Hiss, recorded 18 Aug. 1993 in southeastern Oregon's
Alvord Desert. 1430 UTC, 0730 PDT. Major magnetic storm in progress. Magnetic
field "micro-pulsations" are very evident (slow undulations in the hiss/chorus
every 3-4 sec similar to ocean waves.
-
-
- 2WHIS494.WAV,
30.5 sec., 336276 bytes
- 01 April 1994, 1130 UT/0330 PST, 100 mi. north of San Francisco, CA in
Mendocino Co. (Fish Rock Road 20 mi. west of Ukiah). Clusters of nearly pure
whistlers occurred all night and were quite beautiful! This segment has many
whistlers of varying strength. I really like this segment of the tape for its
nice mix of whistlers and tweeks.
- AB_CHOR2.WAV,
62 sec., 683532 bytes
- Beautiful Alberta Auroral Chorus taped during a visible display of Aurora
(Northern Lights). I was located 150 miles east of Red Deer, AB Near Consort,
AB. In this segment, squawking "chorus" is accompanied by a multitude of
"sliding-tone emissions." When these sliding- tones would be heard, the aurora
would suddenly brighten up and move more quickly. Taped 26 Sept. 1993 at 1110
UTC.
-
-
- SKAUCHOR.WAV
347300 bytes
- Taped 25 Sept. 1993 at around 0930 UTC 20 km. north of Watrous,
Saskatchewan parked on a dirt road in a wheat field about 250 meters from
powerlines (hence somewhat louder powerline hum than desired). Interesting
Auroral chorus and "nose whistlers" recorded during faint auroral display.
Risers, hiss, and the peculiar whistlers are heard in this 31.5 sec. segment.
Taped by Steve. McGreevy, using the WR-4B receiver.
- NDWVTONS.WAV
132332 bytes
- (12 sec.) 22 Sept. 1993, about 1830 UTC 7 miles north of Rolla, ND and
just a few miles from Manitoba border. Very loud hissband with strange
upwardly wavering tone emissions of extreme purity--sort of like a tropical
bird call! Taped by S.P. McGreevy, using McGreevy version of Mideke RS-3
modified for hand-held use with 1 meter whip antenna.(Also called "Periodic
Emissions").
- PUWHICA.WAV
143356 bytes
- (13 sec.) Nice, pure whistlers and hissband, recorded by Michael Mideke
using one of his many "whistler receivers" (RS-2, RS-3, etc.) near San Simeon,
CA (Baldwin Ranch) in 1989 or 1990. Taken from his "INTRO TO NATURAL RADIO"
cassette developed for the NASA Inspire experiments in Spring 1992.
- PUWHS2.WAV
170916 bytes
- 15 sec.) Another recording taken from Mike's "INTRO TO NATURAL RADIO"
cassette. Series of nice, loud pure whistlers.
- WHEPKWHI.WAV
485100 bytes
- (44 sec.) I taped these weak pure whistlers while van-camped at Wheeler
Peak Campsite (Great Basin National Park), campsite 25, on 16 Sept. 1994 with
a 500 ft. wire strung to the north-east at about 6-15 feet above the ground in
the aspen and fir trees. A lovely dawn was occurring with beautiful orange and
other colors. These whistlers and associated lightning sferics were probably
occurring from nasty t-storms pummeling Dallas, Texas and eastern Nebraska
(Omaha area). The geomagnetic indices were also rather low (A=6-7, K=0-1, SF
in the 80's). Not the most impressive recording of whistlers but it was a very
pretty moment there by that awesome mountain! Taped via McGreevy WR-4B and
longwire front-end unit.
- SOFTWHIS.WAV
784364 bytes
- (71 sec.) T-storms in the Plains and Rockies were launching this multitude
of very hissy (diffuse) whistlers, taped on 13 June 1993 near Berlin, Nevada
(Ghost town) at about 1330 UTC with WR-4B and 15 foot vertical wire.
- PURE0891.WAV
638508 bytes
- (58 sec.) An early recording of pure whistlers taped in Marin County, CA
on 16 Sept. 1991 with McGreevy BBB-2 whip ant. receiver and funky Craig 212
3-inch reel-to-reel machine with speed variations. This was the year I really
began taping natural radio in earnest, and there was plenty to hear during
this Solar Maximum period!
- CA_CHOR.WAV
352812 bytes
- (32 sec.) A Michael Mideke recording of dawn chorus and evident mag. field
micro-pulsations (undulations in the chorus trains). Taken from his INTRO TO
NATURAL RADIO TAPE at its closing. Recorded in Cen. CA at Mike's Ranch
listening site in 1990 or 1991.
-
-
- AKAUCHO.WAV
1008740 bytes, 92 seconds
- 06 September 1995, 40 miles (65 km) NE of Fairbanks, Alaska. 2030 UTC
during major magnetic storm. Recorded by the Chatanika River deep in the
Interior of Alaska, this strong mid-day Auroral Chorus phenomena presented
loud hissband centered on 1 kHz; chorus trains of low barks and high chirps
centered at 1.5 and 3 kHz, and other tonal emissions above 3 kHz. This
location is within the Auroral Oval, and such phenomena is audible during the
daytime at these high geo-magnetic latitudes. Recorded using the McGreevy
WR-3E hand-held ELF/VLF receiver with 1 meter long whip antenna into Marantz
PMD-212 cassette recorder.
- KENAIWHI.WAV
678020 bytes, 61 seconds
- 09 September 1995, 0930 UTC. Periodic Emissions sounding like "Crazy
Whistlers" due to their falling then abrupt rising tonal qualities and pure
tones. These were recorded near Skilak Lake on Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. Nice
aurora was also visible through the broken cloud cover. Recorded using the
McGreevy WR-3E hand-held ELF/VLF receiver with 1 meter long whip antenna into
Marantz PMD-212 cassette recorder.
- KENAIWH2.WAV
678020 bytes, 63 seconds
- 09 September 1995, 0930 UTC. Continuation of the Periodic-Emissions
recording above.
-
- You can download SPECTROGRAM 4.2, an incredable freeware Spectrogram program written by R. S. Horne. This spectrogram program plots frequency- versus-time of
digital audio recordings. A sound card is required. This is an update over Gram 2.3 for 32-bit operating systems (Win 95, Win 98, NT 4.0)
Naturally-occurring ELF/VLF Radio emissions such as these occur in the 0.1 to
11 kHz radio spectrum--essentially, they are audio-frequency radio
(electromagnetic) waves as received at ground level. Most of these emissions
begin as PLASMA WAVES within Earth's magnetosphere. This is just a small variety
of fascinating 'sounds' to be received at these ELF/VLF frequencies. You must be
located at least 1 to 2 miles from any power-lines so their 'hum' is not
received (this is why I make my recordings in the California, Nevada and Oregon
high-desert and associated Great Basin region, as well as western and central
Canada--plenty of open spaces away from electric lines to make decent
ground-based recordings and observations.
For spacecraft observations and more information on related phenomena, see
the U of Iowa Plasma Wave
Group page.
Sounds
of the Magnetosphere at the University of Iowa Plasma Wave Group. .WAV-file
Recordings from orbit via the POLAR spacecraft. Includes text descriptions and
spectrograms of each.
Another interesting ground-based observation program is the NASA INSPIRE
project, a project to involve high school students in the study of these
fascinating phenomena.
Stanford
University's STAR LAB also studies VLF emissions.
Also check out the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute's excellent Home Page (includes pages about actual auroral SOUNDS) and UAF's Poker Flat Research Range
Page
Special THANKS again to the University of Iowa Plasma Wave Group for
sponsoring my Ground-based ELF/VLF radio recordings presentation!
Беларускага перакладу даступныя на
http://webhostinggeeks.com/science/ground-based-be,
thanks to Bohdan Zograf.
Deutsch Übersetzungen erhältlich
http://www.autoteiledirekt.de/science/stephen-p-mcgreevy-die-bodengebundenen-elf-vlf-aufnahmen,
thanks to Kate Bondareva.
Stephen P. McGreevy
Postal: P.O. Box 928, Lone Pine, CA 93545-0928.
larry-granroth@uiowa.edu,
U. Iowa Plasma Wave Group (PWG) Web Master