BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  ARRL Hosts Successful HamSCI 2026 Workshop
De:       ARRL de WD1CKS
Data:     Fri, 20 Mar 2026 18:43:06 +0000
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 03/20/2026 

The worlds of amateur radio and ionospheric science came together once again on
March 14 and 15 at the 9th annual HamSCI Workshop. HamSCI 2026[1]was hosted by
ARRL and held at Central Connecticut State University, just minutes away from
ARRL Headquarters in Newington.

HamSCI[2]- the Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation program - encourages
radio amateurs to collect data that scientists use in their research on
ionospheric phenomena. This year's workshop featured 17 oral presentations, 3
tutorials, 5 demonstrations, and 31 posters, and drew researchers from Virginia
Tech, Saint Francis University, Dartmouth College, Boston College, and others.

ARRL CEO David Minster, NA2AA, welcomed participants at the conference opening,
followed by Dr. Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF, lead organizer of the HamSCI
community, who set the stage for the weekend's activities. The keynote speaker
at Saturday evening's banquet was NASA astrophysicist and Citizen Science
Officer Dr. Marc Kuchner. The workshop also included a field trip to tour ARRL
Headquarters, and attendees were invited to participate in late-night operating
from the iconic W1AW station.

One overriding theme of the conference was that you don't need to be a
scientist to contribute valuable data. HamSCI's basic Personal Space Weather
Station, which costs around $100, can observe space weather effects both as a
single-point measurement and as part of a larger distributed network. The group
has made data collection fun, with such activities as the Solar Eclipse QSO
Party and Meteor Scatter QSO Party. One presentation demonstrated how ham
observations and measurements captured ionospheric effects during two recent
solar eclipses.

At Sunday morning's poster session, University of Scranton student Owen
Ruzanski, KD3ALD, described a project to develop a dashboard for HF contesting,
DXing, and general operations using data from the Personal Space Weather
Station and other remote sources. The project is intended to enhance the
real-time propagation assessments sought by amateur radio operators.

For many participants, the chance to operate from W1AW was a highlight of the
weekend. ARRLSenior Director of Marketing and Innovation Bob Inderbitzen,
NQ1R, described the atmosphere at the station as "energetic." All six guest
operating positions were occupied until closing time at 11:30 PM Saturday.
Participants were treated to a first-ever 630-meter contact from W1AW, a
contact with the J51A DXpedition to Guinea-Bissau, and a QSO between W1AW and a
remotely-controlled station in Bonaire, operated by Inderbitzen as PJ4/NQ1R
with both control operators in the same room! The roughly 35 visiting operators
had a chance to use equipment from multiple manufacturers, notably Icom, Yaesu,
Kenwood and FlexRadio. Ryusuke Takata, JI1VHV, who had traveled from Japan to
attend the workshop, made 46 contacts in 20 minutes! Each visitor left with a
personalized certificate, and several considered it a once-in-a-lifetime
experience.

ARRL extends its thanks to many partners supporting HamSCI 2026 including The
University of Scranton, New Jersey Institute of Technology, the National
Science Foundation, NASA, Amateur Radio Digital Communications, and others.


[1] https://hamsci.org/hamsci-2026-program
[2] https://hamsci.org/
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