Feel free to add.
UVB-76 voice and buzzer signals do not appear to be analyzed by any reliable source. Bloggers, hobbyists, and conspiracy theorists don't sum to be a reliable source. Wikipedia is not a place for original research, but maybe this user page is marginalized enough for the fringe topic of analysis.
So have a beer, read a little, have a laugh, and then another beer. Let's remind ourselves that for the moment we're being crazy, but it's fun to have it written down. Take all of this analysis as pure fiction. Don't believe a word of it. I also have nothing to do with UVB-76. Cheers. A-Day (c) (t)
Voice messages from UVB-76 are very rare.[ citation needed] Three or four such messages have been intercepted in over twenty years of observation:
There has been a spike in activity on UVB-76 in August 2010. Following messages have been detected by listeners:
![]() | This article possibly contains
original research. (August 2010) |
![]() | This article possibly contains unsourced
predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be
verifiable and based on
reliable published sources. (August 2010) |
A few, but not all, of the voice messages fit a pattern.
Date | Preamble | Preamble ( transliteration) |
Numeric prefix (length: 2+3=5) |
Alphabetic body (length: 6 to 8) |
Alphabetic body (transliteration) |
Numeric suffix (length: 2+2+2+2=8) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dec 24, 1997 | Я, УВБ-76 | Ya, UVB-76 | 18 008
|
БРОМАЛ
|
BROMAL
|
74 27 99 14
|
Sep 12, 2002 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 62 691
|
ИЗАФЕТ
|
IZAFET
|
36 93 82 70
|
Aug 23, 2010 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 93 882
|
НАИМИНА
|
NAIMINA
|
74 14 35 74
|
Aug 25, 2010 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 38 527
|
АККРЕЦИЯ
|
AKKRETSIYA
|
36 09 56 73
|
![]() | This section possibly contains
original research. (August 2010) |
![]() | This article possibly contains unsourced
predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be
verifiable and based on
reliable published sources. (August 2010) |
If this is a salt, checksum, or opcode, more information would be needed to decipher.
The 5 digits may refer to a postal code or zip code:
The numeric prefix may indicate how to interpret the possible longitude-latitude in the numeric suffix.
Italic text
Interpreting the first two pairs of the numeric suffix as longitude and latitude:
Interpreting the entire numeric suffix as (##.##, ##.##) longitude and latitude coordinates: [14]
naimina.com
. The
Pakistani Army occupies an old fort in Gojal. The
economy is based on tourism and trade, which uses the old
Silk Road, primarily with Xinjiang, China.However, the longitude-latitude interpretation is not without controversy: [15]
The latitude-longitude explanation is particularly silly -- the commenters are assuming that it refers to an east longitude and north latitude. If you pick a random number X and another random number Y, and find X degrees east and Y degrees north, you're very likely to pick a point in Russia or somewhere close to it. It would be a different matter if they were broadcasting a full latitude and longitude and it always came out near Russia or always on land.
The station's transmitter is located just outside Povarovo, Russia at 56°4′58″N 37°5′22″E / 56.08278°N 37.08944°E, which is about halfway between Zelenograd and Solnechnogorsk and 40 kilometres (25 mi) northwest of Moscow, near the village of Lozhki. The location and callsign were unknown until the first voice broadcast of 1997. (The shadow of a large radio mast is visible on recent Google Earth images near this location at 56°5′8.23″N 37°6′3.88″E / 56.0856194°N 37.1010778°E.)
Its purpose is unconfirmed. However the station transmitted the simple buzz tone for at least 15 years before any words or numbers were broadcast. Because of the nature of the broadcast and the fact that its transmitter location is rumored to be a communications hub of the General Staff of the army, [16] UVB-76 is widely believed to be used to transmit encoded messages to spies, as is generally assumed for the many numbers stations that populate shortwave frequencies. Transmitter sites for some numbers stations have been triangulated to military and/or intelligence installations in several countries[ citation needed]. Another possibility is that the constant transmission of its characteristic sound is supposed to signal the availability, operation or alertness of some kind of installation, a kind of dead man's switch of a military or other installation, possibly for the Dead Hand system.
Another explanation for the constant buzzer is the High-frequency Doppler method for ionosphere research, [17] in which radio waves are reflected from ionosphere inhomogeneities. Changes of an ionosphere state can be caused by solar geophysical or seismic events. This method involves comparing a continuous radio transmission which is reflected by the ionosphere with a stable basic generator. The continuously transmitted carrier frequency currently used for this research matches that of the Russian Buzzer (4.625 MHz).
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite uses deprecated parameter |authors=
(
help)
Feel free to add.
UVB-76 voice and buzzer signals do not appear to be analyzed by any reliable source. Bloggers, hobbyists, and conspiracy theorists don't sum to be a reliable source. Wikipedia is not a place for original research, but maybe this user page is marginalized enough for the fringe topic of analysis.
So have a beer, read a little, have a laugh, and then another beer. Let's remind ourselves that for the moment we're being crazy, but it's fun to have it written down. Take all of this analysis as pure fiction. Don't believe a word of it. I also have nothing to do with UVB-76. Cheers. A-Day (c) (t)
Voice messages from UVB-76 are very rare.[ citation needed] Three or four such messages have been intercepted in over twenty years of observation:
There has been a spike in activity on UVB-76 in August 2010. Following messages have been detected by listeners:
![]() | This article possibly contains
original research. (August 2010) |
![]() | This article possibly contains unsourced
predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be
verifiable and based on
reliable published sources. (August 2010) |
A few, but not all, of the voice messages fit a pattern.
Date | Preamble | Preamble ( transliteration) |
Numeric prefix (length: 2+3=5) |
Alphabetic body (length: 6 to 8) |
Alphabetic body (transliteration) |
Numeric suffix (length: 2+2+2+2=8) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dec 24, 1997 | Я, УВБ-76 | Ya, UVB-76 | 18 008
|
БРОМАЛ
|
BROMAL
|
74 27 99 14
|
Sep 12, 2002 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 62 691
|
ИЗАФЕТ
|
IZAFET
|
36 93 82 70
|
Aug 23, 2010 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 93 882
|
НАИМИНА
|
NAIMINA
|
74 14 35 74
|
Aug 25, 2010 | УВБ-76, УВБ-76 | UVB-76, UVB-76 | 38 527
|
АККРЕЦИЯ
|
AKKRETSIYA
|
36 09 56 73
|
![]() | This section possibly contains
original research. (August 2010) |
![]() | This article possibly contains unsourced
predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be
verifiable and based on
reliable published sources. (August 2010) |
If this is a salt, checksum, or opcode, more information would be needed to decipher.
The 5 digits may refer to a postal code or zip code:
The numeric prefix may indicate how to interpret the possible longitude-latitude in the numeric suffix.
Italic text
Interpreting the first two pairs of the numeric suffix as longitude and latitude:
Interpreting the entire numeric suffix as (##.##, ##.##) longitude and latitude coordinates: [14]
naimina.com
. The
Pakistani Army occupies an old fort in Gojal. The
economy is based on tourism and trade, which uses the old
Silk Road, primarily with Xinjiang, China.However, the longitude-latitude interpretation is not without controversy: [15]
The latitude-longitude explanation is particularly silly -- the commenters are assuming that it refers to an east longitude and north latitude. If you pick a random number X and another random number Y, and find X degrees east and Y degrees north, you're very likely to pick a point in Russia or somewhere close to it. It would be a different matter if they were broadcasting a full latitude and longitude and it always came out near Russia or always on land.
The station's transmitter is located just outside Povarovo, Russia at 56°4′58″N 37°5′22″E / 56.08278°N 37.08944°E, which is about halfway between Zelenograd and Solnechnogorsk and 40 kilometres (25 mi) northwest of Moscow, near the village of Lozhki. The location and callsign were unknown until the first voice broadcast of 1997. (The shadow of a large radio mast is visible on recent Google Earth images near this location at 56°5′8.23″N 37°6′3.88″E / 56.0856194°N 37.1010778°E.)
Its purpose is unconfirmed. However the station transmitted the simple buzz tone for at least 15 years before any words or numbers were broadcast. Because of the nature of the broadcast and the fact that its transmitter location is rumored to be a communications hub of the General Staff of the army, [16] UVB-76 is widely believed to be used to transmit encoded messages to spies, as is generally assumed for the many numbers stations that populate shortwave frequencies. Transmitter sites for some numbers stations have been triangulated to military and/or intelligence installations in several countries[ citation needed]. Another possibility is that the constant transmission of its characteristic sound is supposed to signal the availability, operation or alertness of some kind of installation, a kind of dead man's switch of a military or other installation, possibly for the Dead Hand system.
Another explanation for the constant buzzer is the High-frequency Doppler method for ionosphere research, [17] in which radio waves are reflected from ionosphere inhomogeneities. Changes of an ionosphere state can be caused by solar geophysical or seismic events. This method involves comparing a continuous radio transmission which is reflected by the ionosphere with a stable basic generator. The continuously transmitted carrier frequency currently used for this research matches that of the Russian Buzzer (4.625 MHz).
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite uses deprecated parameter |authors=
(
help)