Galera, existe uma rádio de ondas curtas na Rússia enviando código numéricos chamada de UVB-76, faz uns 40 anos que ela vem fazendo estas transmissões e ninguém sabe o motivo, nem o significado das mensagens e tão pouco a localização da transmissão
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DUGA-3
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http://www.mundogump.com.br/uvb-76-mist ... e-numeros/
Este ano apareceram mensagens novas!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyKEEDQz ... ture=share

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DUGA-3
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UVB-76 escreveu:
At 2100 UTC on December 24, 1997: "Ya UVB-76, Ya UVB-76. 180 08 BROMAL 74 27 99 14. Boris, Roman, Olga, Mikhail, Anna, Larisa. 7 4 2 7 9 9 1 4."[3][5][10][11]
At 0418 UTC on December 9, 2002: "UVB-76, UVB-76. 62 691 IZAFET 36 93 82 70"[10]
At 0757 UTC on February 21, 2006: "UVB-76, UVB-76. 75-59-75-59. 39-52-53-58. 5-5-2-5. Konstantin-1-9-0-9-0-8-9-8-Tatiana-Oksana-Anna-Elena-Pavel-Schuka. Konstantin 8-4. 9-7-5-5-9-Tatiana. Anna Larisa Uliyana-9-4-1-4-3-4-8."
Wikipedia escreveu: The purpose of the station has not been confirmed by government or broadcast officials. However, the former Minister of Communications and Informatics of the Republic of Lithuania has written that the purpose of the voice messages is to confirm that operators at receiving stations are alert.[5][22][23] Other claims are[24] that the broadcast is constantly being listened to by military commissariats. Another theory concerns an article published in the Russian Journal of Earth Sciences which describes an observatory measuring changes in the ionosphere by broadcasting a signal at 4625 kHz, the same as the Buzzer.[25] However, this would not explain the voice messages.
It is likely that voice messages are some sort of Russian military communications, and that the buzzing sound is merely a "channel marker", used to keep the frequency occupied by making it unattractive for other potential users.[1] This is reinforced by the existence of two other Russian stations that follow a similar format, nicknamed "The Pip" and "The Squeaky Wheel". Like the Buzzer, these stations transmit a signature sound that is repeated constantly, but is occasionally interrupted to relay coded voice messages.[1]
There is much speculation about the current transmitter site.[26] The former transmitter[27] was located near Povarovo, Russia[28] at 56°5′0″N 37°6′37″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 known voice broadcast of 1997.[29] In September 2010, the station's transmitter was moved to near the town of Pskov. This may have been due to a reorganization of the Russian military.[2] In 2011 a group of urban explorers explored the abandoned buildings at Povarovo.[30] They claim that it is an abandoned military base. A radio log record was found, confirming the operation of a transmitter at 4625 kHz.
http://www.mundogump.com.br/uvb-76-mist ... e-numeros/
Este ano apareceram mensagens novas!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyKEEDQz ... ture=share