Anyone ever see a Pico Balloon? They use miniaturized GPS enabled amateur radio transmitters with various weather related sensors. Some have circumnavigated the Earth over six times and have solar panels that make them look like a miniature version of you know what.
There is a worldwide HAM radio network that can track them for thousands of miles over oceans and continents without the use of satellites. They typically fly at altitudes between 40,000 - 80,000 feet, and some are just a meter in diameter.
You can use this website to see them real-time. If you look, there’s several crossing the Pacific, and Canada and the Northern US, and even one currently flying eastward across Alaska:
And here: http://www.wsprnet.org/drupal/wsprnet/map
There is a worldwide HAM radio network that can track them for thousands of miles over oceans and continents without the use of satellites. They typically fly at altitudes between 40,000 - 80,000 feet, and some are just a meter in diameter.
You can use this website to see them real-time. If you look, there’s several crossing the Pacific, and Canada and the Northern US, and even one currently flying eastward across Alaska:
And here: http://www.wsprnet.org/drupal/wsprnet/map
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