All,
Here is an extract from 'The Radio Times' for 10 Saturday 13 December 2003.
'New sundials are being erected everywhere, including Mars,
where, from 4 January 2004, NASA will measure the Martian day
with a sundial designed by artists and children, as well as
astronomers.At the Basildon retai
Any more details ? Who by, What about, Where ? etc.
David.
Message date : Nov 28 2003, 06:04 PM From : Andrew James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>To : sundial@rrz.uni-koeln.de Copy to : Subject : RE: BBC radio program(me) on sundials on 13 Dec. Actually BBC Radio 4 long wave is on 198 kHz, 1514
Many thanks to all! Just checked - nothing happening at 198 kHz except
heterodynes and voice I can't make out at this time here at 37.7N, 122.1W.
(not that I seriously expected to be able to hear anything in the longwave
bands at this distance)
Thanks again,
John
-
PROTECTED]
Sent: 28 November 2003 17:42
To: sundial@rrz.uni-koeln.de
Subject: Re: BBC radio program(me) on sundials on 13 Dec.
In a message dated 2003/11/27 02:50:54 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
> BBC Radio 4 will carry a 30-minute show on sundials on Saturday, 13
> December at 1530
The Radio 4 longwave transmitter is on 198 kHz. Not 198 m mediumwave.
Reception is more or less restricted to Europe.
-- Richard Langley
Professor of Geodesy and Precision Navigation
On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>In a message dated 2003/11/27 02:50:54 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] w
In a message dated 2003/11/27 02:50:54 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> BBC Radio 4 will carry a 30-minute show on sundials on Saturday, 13
> December at 1530 GMT.
>
> It's of course easy to hear in the UK, but anyone with a Web
> connection who can stream audio can also listen at
>
> http://w
December at 1530 GMT.
It's of course easy to hear in the UK, but anyone with a Web
connection who can stream audio can also listen at
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/
or through the ether on long wave at 198 meters.
**
Prof. Woodru