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Is VLF suitable for sea transmission? Water is good absorber of RF. May be they use AM or?
You appear to be referring to sound waves. EM Radio waves are used for submarine communication although they are at audio frequencies. They travel slower in water than air but that's not a significant factor at terrestrial distances for light speed waves.Lower frequencies tend to be able to travel around obstacles (and through media) more easily. If I am remembering correctly (and correct me if I'm wrong), "VLF" stands for "Very Low Frequency", "VHF" stands for "Very High Frequency", and "UHF" stands for "Ultra High frequency" (very imaginative names, right?). This is (I would assume) why it's used underwater and over long distances. Audio frequency (20hz-20khz) waves actually travel faster through water than through air, and since VLF is between 3khz-30khz, it would actually travel faster through a medium such as water than through air.
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You appear to be referring to sound waves. EM Radio waves are used for submarine communication although they are at audio frequencies. They travel slower in water than air but that's not a significant factor at terrestrial distances for light speed waves.
Is VLF suitable for sea transmission? Water is good absorber of RF. May be they use AM or?
I don't really know the answer but I would make a few guesses (I'm sure someone will say if I'm wrong)
IIRC that system supposedly killed cattle in Minnesota or Wisconsin. I was drinking then, so it could have been a fragment of my imagination.looks like the US Navy had an experimental ELF system operating at 76hz for a few years but shut it down. as for vlf systems, it seems those are still operating. i was actually able to see the 76hz signal once on a spectrum analyzer.
most anything below a few hundred khz is reflected by the D layer of the ionosphere and would be impractical for space communication, so the OP must have some mysterious other Voyager in mind.... the OP used lower case voyager.... could be a translation anomaly.... original word in OP's native language may have meant something like "sailor" or "seafarer", and "voyager" was a "best guess" result
looks like the US Navy had an experimental ELF system operating at 76hz for a few years but shut it down. as for vlf systems, it seems those are still operating. i was actually able to see the 76hz signal once on a spectrum analyzer.
Sorry If I used a word "voyager" badly. Then do not focus on a word 'Voyage'. I just heared that submarines and ships uses VLF to communicate. So I just wanted to know that why they use such extremely low frequency? Or what advantages they found on such VLF or EVLF? Does it has greater distance on transmission?