This may be a little off topic for a weather site, but given we look at the weather and it certainly affects this part of the atmosphere, I thought it might be of interest to start a topic.
One of my other hobbies is long distance radio. Certainly shortwave is outside the range of this topic, but FM is another mode of long distance reception. For example I heard some north Queensland sations on the car radio a couple of weeks ago. OK, that is the E layer (Sporadic E propagation) at 100km up so a bit out of our league here.
The other common long distance mode though is tropospheric. This layer occurs between 7 and 20km above the earth so is of interest in the layers we look at for storms. Tonight northern NSW stations to Grafton were coming in quite strong here in Sydney, though I now have a good antenna setup. Normal reception only gets to Taree.
From wikipedia, it talks about tropo like this....
Tropospheric ducting is a type of radio propagation that tends to happen during periods of stable, anticyclonic weather. In this propagation method, when the signal encounters a rise in temperature in the atmosphere instead of the normal decrease (known as a temperature inversion), the higher refractive index of the atmosphere there will cause the signal to be bent. Tropospheric ducting affects all frequencies, and signals enhanced this way tend to travel up to 800 miles (1,300 km) (though some people have received "tropo" beyond 1,000 miles / 1,600 km), while with tropospheric-bending, stable signals with good signal strength from 500+ miles (800+ km) away are not uncommon when the refractive index of the atmosphere is fairly high.
Now given that definition I think the soundings should make it relatively easy to see on the soundings. As conditions are particularly good to the north tonight, I see on the Newcastle sounding for 10am (the latest on BoM) there is a warmer layer at about 8-10km. So this could explain the conditions tonight.
Has anyone had any experience with predicting things like this from the soundings, or any experience with long distance reception?
Incidentally, there is a tropo ducting prediction site at
http://www.dxinfocentre.com/tropo_aus.htmlStations from the west (Dubbo/Orange) were also in well, but not much to the south. So it is a "localised" (for want of a better term) phenomenon. Any for those interested, yes if conditions are really good NZ can be heard from Sydney on both Sporadic E and tropo modes if you are lucky.