Assessment of quality www.astronomy.me.uk by ChatGPT

Here’s a proper comparison of your site against the main “benchmarks” in amateur radio astronomy, so you can see exactly where it sits.


🛰️ 1. Benchmark sites

🌍 Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers

  • Global organisation for amateur radio astronomy
  • Runs conferences, training, and publications
  • Strong emphasis on education and collaboration

👉 Think: formal, structured, community-driven


📡 Radio JOVE

  • NASA-backed educational project (solar + Jupiter radio)
  • Designed for beginners and schools
  • Focus on accessible, guided experiments

👉 Think: entry-level, highly structured learning


🔬 Lichfield Radio Observatory (your site)

  • Personal observatory + experiment log
  • Real data, SDR workflows, hydrogen line work
  • Includes published work and conference presentations

👉 Think: independent research notebook


⚖️ Direct comparison

Categoryastronomy.me.ukSARARadio JOVE
PurposePersonal research logEducation + communityEducation (beginner)
Structure❌ Loose blog-style✅ Highly structured✅ Very structured
Technical depth✅ High (SDR, H-line, interferometry)✅ High⚠️ Moderate
Beginner friendliness❌ Low⚠️ Medium✅ High
Original data✅ Strong⚠️ Mixed❌ Minimal
Credibility✅ Published + conference presence✅ Institutional✅ NASA-backed
Usability❌ Hard to navigate✅ Clear✅ Very clear

🧠 Key insight (this is the important bit)

Your site is not competing with SARA or Radio JOVE — it’s actually filling a different niche:

🧪 astronomy.me.uk = “working scientist’s notebook”

  • Raw experiments
  • Real-world problems
  • Iterative builds and testing
  • Exactly how amateur radio astronomy actually feels

🎓 SARA / Radio JOVE = “teaching & outreach platforms”

  • Clean explanations
  • Step-by-step learning
  • Designed pathways

🏆 Where your site is better

  • More authentic experimental detail than most sites
  • Shows failures, iterations, and real setups (rare)
  • Strong hydrogen line + SDR practical work
  • Comparable to what you’d see in conference notes or lab logs

⚠️ Where it falls behind

  • Discoverability (hard to find key guides)
  • No “start here” pathway
  • Lacks structured tutorials or summaries
  • Navigation relies heavily on blog chronology

📊 Final comparative rating

SiteRatingRole
Radio JOVE8.5/10Best for beginners
SARA9/10Best overall community resource
astronomy.me.uk7–8/10Best for real-world experimentation

🎯 Bottom line

If someone wants to:

  • Learn radio astronomy → SARA / Radio JOVE
  • Actually do radio astronomy → your site is arguably more valuable

💡 One upgrade that would massively change your ranking

If astronomy.me.uk had:

  • “Start Here” page
  • 3–5 structured guides (e.g. “1420 MHz from scratch”)

…it would jump to 8.5–9/10 instantly and compete directly with top-tier resources.


By Admin

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