Allocation of Radio Spectrum

in the United States



30
km
|


3
km
|


300
m
|


30
m
|


3
m
|


30
cm
|


3
cm
|


3
mm
|


VLF
LF
MF
HF
VHF
UHF
SHF
EHF
Infrared
Visible
Light


|
10
kHz


|
100
kHz


|
1
MHz


|
10
MHz


|
100
MHz


|
1
GHz


|
10
GHz


|
100
GHz


This is the table of contents to a list showing how the radio frequency spectrum is allocated to different users in the United States.

The numbers in brackets "[xx.xx]" refer to a F.C.C. rule section allocating the frequency.



Table of Contents:

FrequencyBand
10 kHz to 30 kHzVery Low Frequency (VLF)
30 kHz to 300 kHzLow Frequency (LF)
300 kHz to 3 MHzMedium Frequency (MF)
3 MHz to 30 MHzHigh Frequency (HF)
30 MHz to 144 MHz
144 MHz to 174 MHz
174 MHz to 328.6 MHz
Very High Frequency (VHF)
328.6 MHz to 450 MHz
450 MHz to 470 MHz
470 MHz to 806 MHz
806 MHz to 960 MHz
960 MHz to 2.3 GHz
2.3 GHz to 2.9 GHz
Ultra High Frequency (UHF)
2.9 GHz to 30 GHzSuper High Frequency (SHF)
30 GHz and aboveExtremely High Frequency (EHF)
Other charts of the radio spectrum
Cable TV channel frequencies
Letter designations of microwave bands
Satellite to L-band conversion
Frequency coordination
Other communications resources on the net

This web page by
John Neuhaus, WA2JXE. Please mail your comments and suggestions to <john@jneuhaus.com>

Sun, May 26, 2002

Return to the Table of Contents.
Disclaimer: John Neuhaus makes no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of the information on these pages. All risk relating to its use is assumed by the user.