What kind of radio station is Sun FM?

What kind of radio station is Sun FM?

Sun FM is Hit Music Radio Station. It is the station where sun hits with vibes, not shynes. Listen this every day if you want to be in a good mood. Show more CHSU-FM is a Canadian radio station, broadcasting at 99.9 FM in Kelowna, British Columbia. The station currently broadcasts a contemporary hit radio format branded as 99.9 Sun FM.

How did people know there was a solar storm in 1958?

In 1958 you couldn’t tell that a solar storm was underway by looking at the bars on your cell phone; cell phones didn’t exist. Even so, people knew something big was happening when Northern Lights were sighted three times in Mexico.

Is there a solar storm on the Sun?

Solar flares are nonexistent. The sun is utterly quiet. Like the quiet before a storm. Recently researchers announced that a storm is coming–the most intense solar maximum in fifty years.

Why are songs on the radio about the same length?

Three minutes is a very common time length for a song. I asked a knowledgeable friend and he suggested that the time length of popular songs was based on the phonograph. You know, the original medium for recording sound.

How does the sun affect radio propagation on Earth?

I will try to give you some general background about how the Sun affects radio propagation here on Earth. The Sun emits electromagnetic radiation of all kinds, ranging in frequency from below HF all the way to the X-ray region. Much of the energy is emitted as heat.

How long does it take to record a song on the radio?

These have a 75 – 80 minute recording time (again, depending on the format) and became commercially available in 1982. You could easily put a 20 minute song on there and send it to the radio station. Of course now, everyone just uses some type of digital format for music.

How much material is taken away from the sun each second?

The Sun also is constantly ejecting material from its surface in all directions into space. This makes up the so-called solar wind. Under relatively quiet solar conditions the solar wind blows around 200 miles per second-675,000 miles per hour-taking away about two million tons of solar material each second from the Sun.