Thank you to Alex Petit Jr who wanted to submit ‘Project H Line 3D’ which is a collection of document and programs designed to be a beginners guide to antenna fabrication, reception, recording, software processing, and graphic display of the 21 cm Hydrogen line. The project makes use of an RTL-SDR and LNA as the radio front end.
If you were unaware, the Hydrogen Line is an observable increase in RF power at 1420.4058 MHz that is created by natural hydrogen atoms. The Hydrogen line is most easily detected by pointing a directional antenna toward the Milky Way where neutral hydrogen is abundant. Properties of the hydrogen line curve such as its shape and Doppler shift can be used to measure the shape and properties of our galaxy.
Alex’s project H Line build is designed to be cheap and easy for students to build and set up for drift scans which involve pointing the antenna towards the sky and letting the Earth’s rotation drift the Milky Way into view of the antenna.
The project includes a design for a 13-element circular path feed Yagi that can be built using common materials available from a hardware store. Alex started with a Yagi design using circular director elements but found these difficult to find and fabricate. However, through NEC antenna analysis software he found that replacing the circular elements with more commonly found and easier-to-fabricate square elements had a negligible effect on the antenna’s performance, unlocking a cheaper build. The 13-element Yagi results in about 15dBi gain and a 30-degree 3dB bandwidth.
The software portion of the instructions uses the SDR# IF Average plugin, and uses that to record log files every few minutes. The log files are then converted by an included Java program by Jamison Adcock into a logarithmic dB scale and a format compatible with Rinearn 2D and 3D graphics packages.