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Q:
Why Do AM Radio Signals Coming From A Distance,
Seem Much Stronger At Night; Especially When
Cloudy And Why Do FM Signals Seem Stronger In
The Early Mornings?
Earth's atmosphere changes how radio waves
travel. Out in space they zip along at light
speed and travel vast distances: from Earth to
Pluto, for example.
Here on Earth, when a signal travels in a
straight line from transmitter to receiver,
Earth blocks the signal at the horizon. Viewed
from eye level, the horizon is about 2.5 miles
away but, from the top of a 500-foot
transmission tower, it's about 100 miles
distant. Line-of-sight signals, thus, go about
100 miles.
When we pick up an AM signal from farther
than that, a cloud-like layer of ionized
particles in the air (called the ionosphere
F-layer) bent the radio wave down to reach us.
The drawing at the right shows this. When a
radio wave enters the F-layer air, it slows down
and therefore bends to a new direction. A soda
straw in a glass of water appears bent due to
the same phenomenon.
The ionosphere bends signals best at night
because the Sun is no longer ionizing the
atmosphere then. That's why you pick up distant
AM signals at night. An AM signal can hop all
the way around the world at night, bending down
from the ionosphere and reflecting back up from
Earth: hopping in that fashion and ultimately
going vast distances.
On the other hand, FM radio waves go right
through the ionosphere. Consequently, most FM
signals are line-of-sight.
Water in the atmosphere weakens all signals
but the higher frequencies more than the lower
ones. For this reason, water reduces FM strength
much more than AM since FM frequencies are about
100 times greater than AM. In fact, AM is not
much affected even by rain. This argues against
AM signals being stronger on cloudy nights.
However, it may explain why you pick up FM
signals better in the morning.
"FM repeater stations, which rely on long
distance pick up of an FM signal, often
experience reduced signal level during the
hotter summer months..." says Lewis Downey,
engineer at KUER FM in Salt Lake City, Utah.
This may be due to more moisture in the air
during summer, which weakens FM signals. The
morning, however, has cooler temperatures and
less water vapor in the air. Consequently, the
air contains less water to disrupt the FM
signal. Thus, the FM signal is somewhat stronger
in the cool of the morning.
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