On the flight to the Dominican Republic I was listening to Fraser Cain's interview with Dr. Christiaan Brinkerink. I was kind of blown away when they started talking about where the neutral Hydrogen signal would be NOW, after the all of the cosmological red shift. Asked this question, Christiaan kind of casually responds that it would be "just above 7 MHz." He talks about this at 41 minutes and 41 seconds in the video above. He points out that this represents a redshift of about 200. Wow, that is just where our SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receivers tune, and where their PTO/VFOs operate. And we thought Radio Marti was a factor to consider! No wonder Christiaan and his colleagues want to go to the far-side of the moon. They want to get above the ionosphere, but they also want to get the shielding provided by the moon to protect them, I suppose, from signals like those being produced by the 40 meter ham band, and, (to a lesser extent) by devices like our little oscillator.
You can watch Fraser's interview with Christiaan above. It is really interesting and inspirational. Christiaan talks about dipole arrays, RFI, interferometers, sensitivity, signals of "several kHz" in width, dynamic range, and other topics known to us. Christiaan is an "Instrument Systems Engineer" at Radboud University. I think he deserves a ham radio license. Maybe he should build a SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver. Fraser should build one too.
Here are a couple of links to articles about this:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10961189/
Thank you Fraser and Christiaan.
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