The Amateur Radio Science Citizen Investigation (HamSCI) is an initiative to connect amateur radio operators with scientific researchers, and to use amateur radio as a citizen science tool to collect scientific data, particularly in geospace science.[1] HamSCI holds annual workshops[2] each year. Most HamSCI projects focus on the ionosphere. The central initiative of HamSCI is the Personal Space Weather Station, a project to conduct distributed sensing of space weather by developing modular hardware similar to traditional weather stations.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Ham Radio Forms a Planet-Sized Space Weather Sensor Network". Eos. 9 February 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. ^ "HamSCI Workshop 2021: Midlatitude Science | HamSCI". www.hamsci.org. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  3. ^ Frissell, N.; Joshi, D.; Collins, K.; Montare, A.; Kazdan, D.; Gibbons, J.; Mandal, S.; Engelke, W.; Atkison, T.; Kim, H.; Gerrard, A.; Vega, J.; Cowling, S.; McDermott, T.; Ackermann, J.; Witten, D.; Silver, H.; Liles, W.; Cerwin, S.; Erickson, P.; Miller, E.; Miller, E. (2020). "HamSCI Distributed Array of Small Instruments Personal Space Weather Station (DASI-PSWS): Architecture and Current Status (Invited)". www.hamsci.org.