Fractional wave tuned antenna/inductor

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The discussion revolves around tuning a coil to the Schumann Resonance frequency of approximately 7.8 Hz, which poses challenges due to the extremely low wavelength requiring impractically large antennas. Participants explore the concept of fractional wave antennas as a potential solution for coupling to this natural frequency without needing oversized equipment. Questions arise about the source and nature of the energy being targeted, emphasizing the desire for a scientifically grounded approach rather than pseudoscience. There is also curiosity about alternative antenna designs and their construction methods. Overall, the conversation highlights the interest in harnessing natural frequencies for oscillator circuits while navigating technical limitations.
Jdo300
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Hello,

I have posted a while ago wondering how to make a coil that was tuned to Earth resonance (~7.8 Hz). I realize that the wavelength at that frequency range is ridiculously low and would require an antenna the size of Texas to couple too normally. But I heard something about fractional wave antennas and was wondering if something like that would work. I basically want to tune into that frequency range to run a small oscillator circuit. But I am wondering if there is anyway to input the signal into the tank circuit without using a huge antenna.

Thanks,
Jason O
 
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What is the energy exactly that you are trying to couple to? I don't mean some pseudo-science energy field. I mean, where is the energy coming from, and what form is it in?
 
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berkeman said:
What is the energy exactly that you are trying to couple to? I don't mean some pseudo-science energy field. I mean, where is the energy coming from, and what form is it in?

No, the signal source I want to tune into is 100% natural, no psudo-science necessary. Here is a link with information about this natural frequency range. It's called the Schumann Resonance.

http://www.iihr.uiowa.edu/projects/schumann/Index.html

Thank you,
Jason O
 
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Jdo300 said:
No, the signal source I want to tune into is 100% natural, no psudo-science necessary. Here is a link with information about this natural frequency range. It's called the Schumann Resonance.

http://www.iihr.uiowa.edu/projects/schumann/Index.html

Thank you,
Jason O
Hmmm. Looks like a reputable source, and the two-conductor thing sounds reasonable. How about just using the meter-size antennas that the author describes? The article mentions several other ULF antennas -- how big are they, and how are they constructed?

I googled Schumann Resonance and got lots of hits. Kind of interesting. I totally don't get the spoiler warning thing at Wikipedia's page for Schumann Resonance -- what the heck is "Serial Experiments Lain"? I followed the link, but that made even less sense to me :confused:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schumann_resonance
 
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berkeman said:
what the heck is "Serial Experiments Lain"?
Looks like a Japnese SciFi cyberpunk cartoon/game.
 
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