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Detecting masers associated an amateur radio astronomer

Amateur radio astronomers can indeed detect natural astrophysical masers, though the practical options are limited by sensitivity, equipment, and local regulations. Here’s a breakdown:


1. Hydrogen (H I) Masers

  • Frequency: 1420.40575 MHz (21 cm line)
  • Notes:
    • The 21 cm line is technically a hyperfine transition and can produce maser action in certain interstellar regions, though most emissions are weak thermal signals rather than strong masers.
    • Easily detectable with modest antennas like Yagis, small dishes, or simple dipole arrays.
    • Common for amateurs as part of radio astronomy projects.

2. Hydroxyl (OH) Masers

  • Frequencies: 1612, 1665, 1667, 1720 MHz
  • Notes:
    • These are stronger astrophysical masers often found in star-forming regions, supernova remnants, or around late-type stars.
    • Detecting them requires sensitive receivers and narrowband filters because the signals are often very weak.
    • Popular among dedicated amateur setups with SDRs and directional antennas.

3. Water (H₂O) Masers

  • Frequency: 22.235 GHz
  • Notes:
    • These are very bright astrophysical masers associated with star-forming regions and evolved stars.
    • Detection is challenging for amateurs due to the high frequency, requiring low-noise amplifiers, high-gain antennas (parabolic dishes), and sometimes microwave waveguides.
    • Some advanced amateurs have successfully detected these with 1–3 m dishes and sensitive receivers.

4. Methanol (CH₃OH) Masers

  • Frequencies: Commonly 6.7 GHz (class II), 12.2 GHz
  • Notes:
    • Found in massive star-forming regions.
    • Detection is difficult for amateurs because of the higher frequency and weaker flux compared to H₂O masers.
    • Requires careful tracking, precise antennas, and often low-noise microwave front ends.

5. Other Molecules

  • Molecules like SiO (43 GHz) and ammonia (NH₃, ~24 GHz) masers exist, but these are almost entirely out of reach for amateur setups due to the very high frequencies and extremely low flux densities.

Practical Takeaways for Amateurs

  • Most achievable: OH masers at 1.6 GHz and H I regions at 1.42 GHz.
  • Advanced: Water masers at 22 GHz with a small dish and good LNA.
  • Challenging: Methanol and higher-frequency masers due to atmospheric attenuation and equipment demands.

Many amateur astronomers focus on OH and H₂O masers, often combining SDR receivers with Yagi or small parabolic antennas to track sources like W3(OH), Orion KL, or W49N.


Here’s a detailed table for masers detectable by amateur radio astronomers, including frequency, typical flux ranges, antenna recommendations, and WR waveguide sizes for microwave frequencies. I’ve included practical guidance for amateurs.

Maser TypeFrequency (GHz)Typical Flux (Jy)Common SourcesAmateur AntennaWR Waveguide (approx.)
H I (Hyperfine)1.42040.1–10Galactic H I regions, Orion ArmYagi array or small dish (1–3 m)— (coax or feed line used; not waveguide)
OH1.612 / 1.665 / 1.667 / 1.7200.1–100W3(OH), OH 127, IRC+104203–5 m dish or Yagi array— (coaxial feeds; waveguides not typical at 1.6 GHz)
H₂O22.2351–10³Orion KL, W49N, W3(OH)≥1 m dish, Cassegrain or prime focus, LNAWR-42 (18–26.5 GHz)
CH₃OH6.6681–100W3(OH), NGC 7538≥2 m dish, precise trackingWR-159 (4.9–7.05 GHz)
SiO (rare for amateurs)43.1221–50Orion KL, VX Sgr≥3 m dish, very low-noise LNAWR-22 (33–50 GHz)

Notes for Amateurs

  1. H I and OH masers: Use coaxial feeds with Yagis or small dishes. Waveguides are unnecessary and uncommon below ~4 GHz.
  2. H₂O masers at 22 GHz: WR-42 waveguide is standard for feeds; dishes ≥1 m with LNAs are recommended. Atmospheric attenuation can be significant—best on clear days.
  3. Methanol (6.7 GHz): WR-159 is the relevant waveguide for high-efficiency feeds, though some amateurs use coaxial-fed horn antennas.
  4. SiO and higher-frequency masers: Mostly beyond typical amateur reach, but WR-22 waveguide feeds can be used if dish and LNA are available.

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