• The K7RA Solar Update

    From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, December 16, 2022 16:28:23
    12/16/2022

    Heightened sunspot activity over the past week no doubt produced the
    great conditions during last weekend's ARRL 10 Meter contest.

    Compared to the previous seven days, average daily sunspot numbers
    jumped from 85 to 136.9, while solar flux averages increased from
    137.5 to 150.

    Geomagnetic indicators were lower, with planetary A index decreasing
    from 14.4 to 7.7, and middle latitude A index from 9.1 to 6.

    Higher sunspot numbers and lower geomagnetic indicators is an ideal
    combination for favorable HF propagation.

    New sunspots appeared every day except December 12, with one new
    sunspot on December 8, another on December 9, and three more on
    December 10, another on December 13 and one more on December 14.

    N0JK commented on the ARRL 10 Meter contest:

    "What a difference a year makes. 10 was wide open this year for the
    ARRL 10M contest with strong single hop F2 from Kansas to both
    coasts. Europe and Japan in, and I completed WAC (Worked All
    Continents). Operated fixed mobile with 1/4 wave whip. Solar flux
    this year was 148, last year only 78."

    The latest prediction from the USAF via NOAA shows solar flux at
    164, 162, 160, 158, 154, 152 and 150 on December 16-22, then 120 on
    December 23-28, then 125, 130 and 135 on December 29-31, 145 on
    January 1-8, 2023, then 140, 130, 125 and 120 on January 9-12, and
    115 on January 13-18, then 120 on January 19-24.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5 on December 16-17, 10 on December
    18, 8 on December 19-20, then 12, 8, and 15 on December 21-23, 20 on
    December 24-28, then 12, 10, 12, 8, 5 and 18 on December 29 through
    January 3, 2023, 10 on January 4-5, 8 on January 6, 5 on January
    7-14, 10 on January 15-16, then 5, 20, 15 and 12 on January 17-20,
    and 20 on January 21-24.

    F.K. Janda, OK1HH wrote:

    "Evolving solar activity was erratic over the last seven days,
    starting with the Earth entering a high-speed solar wind stream (up
    to 600 km/s) on 8 December.

    "It came from a canyon-shaped coronal hole that approached the
    western limb of the solar disk. The day after, a magnetic filament
    erupted in the Sun's southern hemisphere, but the CME was weak.

    "We expected a slight increase in solar wind speed around December
    12. However, not only did this not occur, but the solar wind slowed
    to 350 km/s in the following days. At the same time, the Earth's
    magnetic field calmed down.

    "On 12 December, nine groups of sunspots were observed on the Sun,
    the largest number so far in the 25th Solar Cycle. Two days later
    there were eleven sunspot groups.

    "Of these, two regions (AR 3163 and 3165, both with the Beta-Gamma
    magnetic configuration) had moderately strong flares (the strongest
    on 14 December at 1442 UT was M6 class, produced the Dellinger
    effect up to a frequency of 15 MHz). The ejected CMEs have missed
    the Earth for now, and we can expect a possible hit from AR3163. The
    increase in solar radiation caused an increase in MUF and therefore
    the shortest shortwave bands opened up regularly.

    "Decrease in solar activity, increasing geomagnetic activity and
    worsening of short wave disturbances can be expected after December
    20."

    The Dellinger Effect is an SID, or "Sudden Ionospheric Disturbance."

    https://bit.ly/3HCHytO[1]

    David Moore shares this about our Sun's middle corona:

    https://bit.ly/3hvZX0O[2]

    Nine new sunspots. I do not agree that they are dangerous:

    https://bit.ly/3FuPniB[3]

    Interesting speculation. What happens to cryptocurrency during a
    Carrington event?

    https://bit.ly/3BEYtrR[4]

    Newsweek reports on the terminator event:

    https://bit.ly/3YtyAF3[5]

    More and more news about flares:

    https://bit.ly/3W3Vhyc[6]

    https://bit.ly/3HG0XtK[7]

    https://bit.ly/3WpcD8k[8]

    Another Solar Cycle 19?

    https://bit.ly/3FYgioi[9]

    N0JK reports:

    "Some sporadic-E to W1 from Kansas December 15. Logged K1SIX FN43."

    More 6 meter news from KM0T:

    "Well, it took since 1999, but I finally worked my first ZL. In
    fact, 8 of them. Opening lasted on and off here for about an hour.
    Started hearing them just after 0000 UTC. EN40s were working them
    first for about 10 minutes before, which tipped me off. I Then
    worked AA7A in Arizona at +25, so there was a link perhaps to TEP F2
    hop.

    "There was one station calling an FO, but never saw any report of
    the monitoring FO station showing up on PSK reporter. FO was on the
    exact path to ZL, but I don't think there was a hop there, perhaps a
    blind caller to FO. If anyone actually heard them or worked them,
    let us know as that would be an interesting path.

    "My antennas were as low to the ground as they could be due to the
    ice storm.ÿ Bottom antenna about 25 feet.ÿ (Stacked 6el over 6el,
    20' apart.)

    "Now that I think about it, flux was 151 and SSN 148.

    "I'm pretty sure it was E-skip link, just like when I worked Chatham
    Island here some months ago.

    "The SW had all kinds of storms (as the whole USA did).ÿ I heard snow
    and rain and 'thunder snow' in Arizona.

    "That would make sense of such a strong E-skip link to the SW. With
    the flux only at 151, seems to me this is a good number for TEP if
    you're in the right spot, but not enough to make it to the upper
    Midwest with true F2.

    "I was lucky that our area had ice only in the morning.ÿ It rained
    pretty much all day with bouts of ice, but by the time evening came
    around, my ice was off the antennas.

    "Signals were strong actually. I gave -01 to -17 reports on the ZLs.
    +25 and just below given to stateside 7-land stations I worked in
    between the ZLs.

    "First ZL was at 0003 - ZL3NW with -11 sig - I got a -07 report.
    Strongest ZL was at 0033 - ZL3JT with a -01 sig.ÿ He gave me a +00.

    "Last ZL was ZL1AKW, where the spotlight moved a bit north.ÿ At 0107
    UTC - he had -06 sig and I got a -19 report."

    He did not mention a mode but judging from the signal reports it was
    probably FT8 or FT4.

    W2ZDP reported on December 14:

    "There was a great 6 meter opening yesterday. I first noticed it
    around 2020Z and worked 12 stations in grid 'EM,' all on FT8.

    "I also noticed that a few of them were working ZLs although I
    didn't see the response. After the local 2 meter net at 7 PM local
    time, I again worked a few stations in 'EM' when I started seeing
    both sides of ZLs working stateside stations. After several
    attempts, I finally worked ZL1RS at 0100Z from FM04. Not too bad for
    100 watts and a 4 element beam at 30 feet!"

    Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW, the Space Weather Woman, has an
    informative new video:

    https://youtu.be/i0QbCZZpYRY[10]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[11].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[12] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[13] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[14] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[15] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[16] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[17] .

    Sunspot numbers for December 8 through 14, 2022 were 115, 116, 111,
    141, 142, 159, and 174, with a mean of 136.9. 10.7 cm flux was 143,
    149.1, 141.7, 147,7, 150.8, 153, and 164.7, with a mean of 150.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 11, 11, 8, 10, 6, 4, and 4, with
    a mean of 7.7. Middle latitude A index was 9, 9, 6, 7, 5, 3, and 3,
    with a mean of 6.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3HCHytO
    [2] https://bit.ly/3hvZX0O
    [3] https://bit.ly/3FuPniB
    [4] https://bit.ly/3BEYtrR
    [5] https://bit.ly/3YtyAF3
    [6] https://bit.ly/3W3Vhyc
    [7] https://bit.ly/3HG0XtK
    [8] https://bit.ly/3WpcD8k
    [9] https://bit.ly/3FYgioi
    [10] https://youtu.be/i0QbCZZpYRY
    [11] k7ra@arrl.net
    [12] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [13] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [14] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [15] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [16] http://k9la.us/
    [17] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Tuesday, January 10, 2023 19:46:24
    01/10/2023

    Two new sunspot groups emerged on December 29, one more on December 30 and another on January 1, then two more on January 5.

    Solar activity was a little higher, with average daily sunspot
    number rising from 96.1 to 97, and solar flux averages rose 14
    points to 157.8.

    On Thursday, January 5 the sunspot number rose to 103, above the
    average of 96.1 over the previous seven days.

    Predicted solar flux is 154 on January 6, 152 on January 7-8, 150 on
    January 9, 148 on January 10-11, then 146, 148 and 145 on January
    12-14, 140 on January 15-16, 145 on January 17-19, 150 and 155 on
    January 20-21, 160 on January 22-23, 165 on January 24-26, then 160,
    155, 155, 158 and 155 on January 27-31, 150 and 148 on February 1-2,
    145 on February 3-4, 140 on February 5-6, 150 on February 7-9, 145
    on February 10, 140 on February 11-12, and 145 on February 13-15.

    Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 8 on January 6-7, 5 on January
    8-16, then 8, 12, 25, 20 and 10 on January 17-21, 5 on January
    22-24, then 8, 28, 15 and 10 on January 25-28, and 5 on January
    29-30, 18 on January 31 through February 1,15 and 10 on February
    2-3, and 5 on February 4-12.

    OK1HH wrote:

    "Solar activity increased so rapidly in recent years that earlier
    last year it already reached the level predicted for July 2025, the
    predicted peak of the current 25th solar cycle. The year 2022 ended
    with the highest monthly sunspot count in 7 years.

    "Solar flares are already routinely of moderate magnitude (M-class
    in X-rays), while geomagnetic disturbances are so far only very
    rarely in a higher class than G1 (minor). In the G1 class was also
    the disturbance on 30 December, which was triggered by a CIR
    (co-rotating interaction region) impact, as predicted.

    "This week the Earth is in the impact zone of possible eruptions in
    the AR3176 sunspot group directly opposite our planet, which
    produces M-class solar flares. The strongest so far, on December 30
    at 1938 UTC, was class M3.7, which sent a CME toward Earth with an
    expected arrival on January 4 - and the prediction proved correct -
    the disturbance began at 0254 UTC.

    "The CMEs filled the space between the Sun and Earth, and clouds of
    solar plasma shielded the incoming cosmic rays enough to reach a
    six-year low.

    "Thus, since 26 December, we can observe the 'Forbush Decline,'
    named after the American physicist Scott Forbush, who studied cosmic
    rays in the early 20th century and first noticed the relationship
    between them and solar activity. With more CMEs hitting Earth, the
    cosmic ray decline will grow.

    "On January 3 at 1058 UTC, something exploded on the far side of the
    Sun. The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) detected a bright
    CME sweeping across the southeastern limb of the Sun. The source of
    the outburst was likely the old sunspot AR3163, which has been on
    the Sun's far side for the past two weeks. We are now starting to
    see it on the solar disk as AR3182, and we might tentatively expect
    an X-class flare from it.

    "The Geminid meteor shower is coming to Earth these days. On the
    first three days of January, the most meteors arrived on January 3
    at 2127 UTC when the Zenithal Hourly Rate (ZHR) of 125.3 was
    calculated. Also, the activity of the sporadic-E layer in the
    ionosphere increased, which we immediately noticed in the fading
    shortwave propagation conditions (because sporadic-E is sporadic).

    "ZHR (Zenithal Hourly Rate) of a meteor shower is the number of
    meteors a single observer would see in an hour of peak activity if
    it was at the zenith, assuming the observing conditions are
    excellent (when and where stars with apparent magnitudes up to 6.5
    are visible to the naked eye)."

    OK1HH mentioned sunspot numbers are ahead of the consensus forecast for Solar Cycle 25, so we will compare averages from a year ago with current numbers.

    In Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP001 for 2022, the average
    sunspot number reported was 36.4, and 97 in the current report.
    Average solar flux a year ago was 91.4, compared to 157.8 this week.

    Reader David Moore sends along this link about our Sun's corona:

    https://bit.ly/3XaNsXz[1]

    Here is an article on Siberian Radioheliograph:

    https://bit.ly/3vGFJVm[2]

    Solar outburst:

    https://bit.ly/3X6oUio[3]

    A record of old sunspot numbers can be found here:

    https://bit.ly/3XbX8B2[4]

    Solar Terrestrial Activity Report:

    http://www.solen.info/solar/[5]

    Identifying unknown HF signals:

    https://www.sigidwiki.com/wiki/Category:HF[6]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[7].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[8] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[9] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[10] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[11] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[12] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[13] .

    Sunspot numbers for December 29, 2022 through January 4, 2023 were
    113, 121, 82, 94, 94, 89, and 86, with a mean of 97. 10.7 cm flux
    was 162.8, 178.3, 164.9, 152.6, 146.4, 148.5, and 151, with a mean
    of 157.8. Estimated planetary A indices were 11, 31, 16, 14, 8, 7,
    and 21, with a mean of 15.4. Middle latitude A index was 8, 22, 10,
    9, 5, 5, and 17, with a mean of 10.9.


    [1] https://bit.ly/3XaNsXz
    [2] https://bit.ly/3vGFJVm
    [3] https://bit.ly/3X6oUio
    [4] https://bit.ly/3XbX8B2
    [5] http://www.solen.info/solar/
    [6] https://www.sigidwiki.com/wiki/Category:HF
    [7] k7ra@arrl.net
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [9] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [10] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [11] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [12] http://k9la.us/
    [13] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, January 13, 2023 14:52:15
    01/13/2023

    Wow! Sunspot numbers up, geomagnetic disturbances down. What could
    be better? Okay, maybe Solar Cycle 19, but that was 66 years ago and
    by far the all time largest.

    But this is now, we are in Solar Cycle 25, and this sunspot cycle is
    emerging better than the consensus forecast. It is predicted to peak
    about 30 months from now in Summer 2025.

    Solar cycles tend to ramp up faster than they decline, so we look
    forward to great HF propagation for years to come.

    There were six new emerging sunspot groups in our reporting week,
    January 5-11. The first two appeared January 5, the next on January
    8, another on January 9ÿ two more January 10 and still another on
    January 12, when the sunspot number was 151.

    Average daily sunspot number rose from 97 to 135.9, and average
    daily solar flux from 157.8 to 181.2, compared to the previous seven
    days.

    On Thursday, January 12 the noon solar flux was huge, 211.6, far
    above the 181.2 average for the previous week.

    Average daily planetary A index declined from 15.4 to 6.7, and
    middle latitude A index from 10.9 to 6.1.

    Compare the solar numbers to last year. A year ago in Propagation
    Forecast Bulletin ARLP002 the average daily sunspot number was only
    42.4 (135.9 now) and average daily solar flux was 101.6 (181.2 now).
    10 and 12 meters now have openings every day.

    The solar flux prediction was revised dramatically upward between
    the Wednesday numbers in Thursday's ARRL Letter and the Thursday
    numbers in this bulletin, from 196 to 210 for January 13.

    Predicted solar flux is 210 on January 13 and 14, then 208, 206 and
    204 on January 15-17, 200 on January 18-19, then 180, 160, 130 and
    135 on January 20-23, 140 on January 24-26, 145 on January 27, then
    155, 155 and 160 on January 28-30, 170 on January 31 through
    February 2, 175 and 180 on February 3-4, 185 on February 5-6, then
    180, 178 and 175 on February 7-9, 155 on February 10-12, 145 on
    February 13, 140 on February 14-16, 130 on February 17-18 and
    increasing to 160 by the end of the month.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 10, and 8 on January 13-15, 5 on
    January 16-17, then 10, 8, 10 and 8 on January 18-21, 5 on January
    22-24, then 8, 22, 12 and 8 on January 25-28, 5 on January 29-31,
    then 12 and 8 on February 1-2, 5 on February 3-5, then 10, 12 and 8
    on February 6-8, 5 on February 9-13, then 8, 15, 10 and 7 on
    February 14-17, and 5 on February 18-20.

    Jon Jones, N0JK wrote:

    "There was a 6 meter F2 opening between Ecuador and North America
    January 6, 2023 around 1530 UTC, mostly between the Southeast United
    States and Ecuador. Solar Flux was 172.4.

    "Later there was some weak sporadic-E on 6 Meters. I logged W4IMD
    (EM84) at 1942 UTC and W7JW (EN82) on 6 meter FT8 via Es at 1954 UTC
    January 6.

    "High Solar Activity this week."

    N0JK writes "The World Above 50 MHz" column in QST.

    https://www.arrl.org/the-world-above-50-mhz[1]

    OK1HH wrote:

    "Large sunspot groups on the Sun's far side, detected by
    helioseismology after the beginning of this year, showed that the
    region of active heliographic longitude, gradually approached the
    eastern limb of the solar disk. Solar activity increased after their
    arrival. Solar flux rose from 146 on January 2 to 195 on January 11.
    Yet one solar revolution back (December 15) it was only 166 and two
    turns back (November 18) only 116.

    "The January 6 prediction of increasing activity was brilliantly
    confirmed, especially by a large X-class flare in AR3182 with a
    maximum at 0057 UTC.

    Surprisingly, it did not produce a CME - the ejected particles never
    left the Sun.

    "In the following days AR3182 activity was joined by the newly
    erupted AR3184, again in the southeast of the solar disk. An X-class
    flare was observed there as well (X1.9 on January 9 at 1850 UTC).

    "Since most of the large flares in the last few days occurred when
    it was nighttime in Europe, blackouts up to 30 MHz were recorded,
    especially by stations in and around the Pacific. It was not until
    the eruption on January 9 at 1850 UTC that a shortwave blackout was
    seen in the western Atlantic, including east coast of the U.S. On
    January 10, the Sun produced another X-class eruption, from new
    sunspot group AR3186.

    "As active regions approach the central meridian, the probability of
    Earth being hit by particles from possible CMEs increases, or more
    importantly the Earth's magnetic field activity increases, MUF
    levels decrease, and the evolution of shortwave propagation
    conditions gradually somewhat worsens during disturbances that are
    difficult to predict accurately."

    Mike Schaffer, KA3JAW in Pennsylvania (FN20jq) reported, "On
    Thursday, January 12, 29.6 MHz FM went active with 3-hop sporadic-E transatlantic propagation to England, Spain from 1346 thru 1600 UTC,
    then to single hop Es to Puerto Rico at 1813 UTC.

    "Readability ranged from (1) unreadable to (4) practically no
    difficulty, Strength ranged from (1) faint - signals barely
    perceptible to (5) fairly good signals. All signals had deep QSB.

    "Time UTC:ÿÿÿ Callsign:ÿÿÿÿÿ Grid:ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ Miles
    1346ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ G3YPZÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ JO02bsÿÿÿÿÿ 3,494
    1354,1528ÿÿÿ ÿ G4RIEÿÿÿÿÿ ÿ ÿ IO83rnÿÿÿÿÿÿ 3,372
    1413,1521ÿÿ ÿÿ 2E0PLOÿÿÿ ÿÿ IO91wmÿÿ ÿ 3,511
    1600ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ ÿ ÿ ÿÿ EA2CCGÿ ÿ ÿ IN92aoÿÿÿÿÿ 3,660
    1813ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ ÿ ÿ ÿÿ KP4NVXÿÿÿÿÿ FK68vlÿÿÿÿ ÿ 1,625"

    Here is a photo of the Sun:

    https://bit.ly/3kfmXSR[2]

    One of a Solar flare:

    https://bit.ly/3W9EWav[3]

    Solar news in the Washington Post:

    https://wapo.st/3iul6sN[4]

    An article on Radio blackouts:

    https://bit.ly/3Xvc4dV[5]

    The Parker Solar Probe:

    https://youtu.be/pOZhPz92Dic[6]

    The latest from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/UPG-BhDybUM[7]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[8].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[9] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[10] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[11] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at, http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[12] . More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[13] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[14] .

    Sunspot numbers January 5 through 11, 2023 were 103, 101, 104, 117,
    142, 201, and 183, with a mean of 135.9. 10.7 cm flux was 154.3,
    172.4, 178.9, 183.8, 190.9, 193, and 195.1, with a mean of 181.2.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 8, 4, 6, 8, 5, 7, and 9, with a
    mean of 6.7. Middle latitude A index was 6, 4, 5, 7, 7, 6, and 8,
    with a mean of 6.1.
    ÿ


    [1] https://www.arrl.org/the-world-above-50-mhz
    [2] https://bit.ly/3kfmXSR
    [3] https://bit.ly/3W9EWav
    [4] https://wapo.st/3iul6sN
    [5] https://bit.ly/3Xvc4dV
    [6] https://youtu.be/pOZhPz92Dic
    [7] https://youtu.be/UPG-BhDybUM
    [8] k7ra@arrl.net
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [10] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [11] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [12] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [13] http://k9la.us/
    [14] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, January 20, 2023 16:08:29
    01/20/2023

    Last week's Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP002 opened with "Wow!"
    I don't know what to say about this week, except it is beyond wow.

    This actually has me thinking about Solar Cycle 19.

    Lately we have seen solar flux at the same levels we saw at the peak
    of Solar Cycle 23. If we are about 30 months away from the peak of
    this Solar Cycle 25, could this get us to the 1957-59 levels last
    seen in Solar Cycle 19? Stories from that time tell of worldwide
    coverage 24x7 on 10 meter AM from low power mobile stations.

    Average daily sunspot numbers rose from 135.9 to 173.4, while
    average solar flux went to 221.8 from 181.2. Yesterday the thrice
    daily solar flux reported from the Penticton, British Columbia
    observatory indicated rising solar flux at 224.6, 226.1 and 230.1.
    These are recorded at 1800, 2000 and 2200 UTC. It is the middle
    number, at local noon, that is recorded as the official number for
    the day.

    From Spaceweather.com: "If sunspot production continues apace for
    the rest of January, the monthly sunspot number will reach a 20-year
    high."

    Average planetary A index increased from 6.7 to 13.9,

    On January 15 the planetary A index reached a peak of 30, a very
    high value indicating a geomagnetic storm. Conditions were stormy
    throughout the week, due to flares and CMEs. On that day in
    Fairbanks, Alaska the college A index was 53, a very high number.
    There was a large polar cap absorption event.

    Nine new sunspot groups appeared during this reporting week, January
    12-18. One on January 12, four on January 13, two more on January
    15, and two more, one each on January 17 and 18.

    Predicted solar flux is 220 on January 20-21, 215 on January 22-23,
    210 on January 24-25, 215 on January 26-27, 185 on January 28-29,
    190 on January 30 through February 2, 195 and 200 on February 3-4,
    205 on February 5-6, 210 on February 7-11, then a big jump to 235
    and 230 on February 12-13, 225 on February 14-16, 220 on February
    17, then 215 on February 18-19, 210 and 200 on February 20-21, 190
    on February 22-23, and 185 on February 24-25. Solar flux is expected
    to rise above 200 again in the first week of March.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15, 12 and 8 on January 20-22, 5 on
    January 23-24, then 12, 10, 12 and 8 on January 25-28, 5 on January
    29 through 31, then 12 and 8 on February 1-2, 5 on February 3-6,
    then 12, 12, 15 and 12 on February 7-10, 5 on February 11-13, then
    8, 15, 10 and 7 on February 14-17, 5 on February 18-20, then 7, 18,
    10 and 7 on February 21-24, 5 on February 25-26, then 7, 18, 12 and
    8 on February 27 through March 2.

    OK1HH wrote:

    "Large sunspot groups on the Sun's far side, detected by
    helioseismology at the beginning of this year, showed the region of
    active heliographic longitude gradually approached the eastern limb
    of the solar disk. Solar activity increased after their arrival.

    "Solar flux rose from 146 on January 2 to 195 on January 11. Yet one
    solar revolution back (December 15) it was only 166 and two turns
    back (November 18) only 116.

    "The January 6 prediction of increasing activity was brilliantly
    confirmed, especially by a large X-class flare in AR3182 with a
    maximum at 0057 UTC.

    "Surprisingly, it did not produce a CME - the ejected particles
    never left the Sun.

    "In the following days, the activity of AR3182 was joined by the
    newly erupted AR3184, again in the southeast of the solar disk. An
    X-class flare was observed there as well (X1.9 on January 9 1850
    UTC). Most of the large flares in the last few days occurred during
    nighttime in Europe. Blackouts up to 30 MHz were recorded,
    especially by stations in and around the Pacific. It was not until
    the eruption on January 9 that a shortwave blackout was seen in the
    western Atlantic, including the East Coast of the U.S. On January
    10, the Sun produced another X-class eruption, from new sunspot
    group AR3186.

    "As active regions approached the central meridian, the probability
    of Earth being hit by particles from possible CMEs increases, or
    more importantly the Earth's magnetic field activity increases, MUF
    levels decrease, and the evolution of shortwave propagation
    gradually worsens, especially during disturbances that are difficult
    to predict accurately."

    Sam, KY8R commented on 30 meter propagation:

    "Reading your report it looks good, but I have to tell you 30M is
    like a dead horse in the Sonoran Desert."

    I replied:

    "On FT8 and I make many contacts on 30 meters, but it seems to be
    best around sunrise or sunset, before and after.

    "I just did a prediction with W6ELprop and it shows 30 meters from
    my location (CN87) open during daylight hours to the East Coast, and
    to Texas 24x7 with brief dropouts at 7am local here (1500 UTC) and
    10:30 PM (0630 UTC).

    "From your location, it looks different. To Texas it fades starting
    at 0200 UTC and stays dead until 1400 UTC and is strongest at 1500
    and 2330 UTC.

    "To Atlanta from DM33 (you) it is weakest from 1700-2100 UTC. Of
    course, these are statistical approximations."

    Mike Schaffer, KA3JAW in Easton, Pennsylvania FN20jq is having fun
    on 10 meter FM.

    "Today (January 19) I made a 2-way QSO with John, AL7ID in Fairbanks
    for five minutes from 2028-2033 UTC on the 29.6 MHz national calling
    frequency, then QSY 29.5 FM.

    "I just barely heard him mention the QSY to 29.5.

    "Initially he was 2x2 QSB, then minutes later 3x4 QSB.

    "The FM signal was spreading apart due to F2 propagation and made it
    difficult at times.

    "He was my first Alaska 10-meter FM simplex contact!"

    Mike has a YouTube video of both his Alaska QSO, and another with
    Argentina:

    https://youtu.be/NDZACCqMd08[1]

    Earlier, Mike reported:

    "On Tuesday, January 17th, 29.6 MHz FM went active with multi-hop
    sporadic-E or F2 propagation into France, United Kingdom, Mexico,
    Alaska, and Argentina into the northeast USA.

    "Readability ranged from unreadable to practically no difficulty,
    Strength ranged from faint - signals barely perceptible to fair
    signals. All the signals had light QSB.

    "UTC:ÿÿÿ Callsign:ÿÿÿÿÿ Grid:
    1544ÿÿÿÿ F5SDDÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ JN23qf
    1617ÿÿÿÿ G4RIEÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ IO83rn
    1803ÿÿÿÿ XE2LVMÿÿÿÿÿÿ DL92dp
    2040ÿÿÿÿ AL7IDÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ BP64ku
    2040ÿÿÿÿ LU1HJSÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ FF79XX"

    Jon Jones, N0JK reported:

    "Some interesting 6 meter propagation on January 16.

    "First, there appeared to be a 6 meter F2 opening between Puerto
    Rico and Colorado that morning. K0RI in DM78 and NO0T/P in DN70
    spotted KP4AJ in FK68 around 1550 UTC on 6 meter FT8. No
    intermediate stations spotted. The 10.7 cm solar flux was reported
    to be 234. [Jon had probably not seen the updated flux for that day
    yet. It was actually 228.1 and 234.3 the day before.]

    "Later there was sporadic-E from Kansas to Mexico. I logged XE2JS in
    DL68 at 1605 UTC. He was very strong.

    "That afternoon the TN8K DXpedition to the Congo Republic worked
    PJ4MM, V26OC, and FG8OJ on 6 meter FT8 via F-layer propagation around
    2230 UTC.

    "The ARRL January VHF contest is this weekend. There is a
    possibility of sporadic-E and even some F2 on 6 meters in this
    contest."

    Later Jon reported a 6 meter contact with Mexico.

    Sunspots in the news:

    https://bit.ly/3Hdilp4[2]

    Sky & Telescope with an article on giant sunspot group AR3190:

    https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/see-a-giant-sunspot/[3]

    An article on 11 year, 100 year, and 2300 year cycles:

    https://bit.ly/3kjVSxC[4]

    Here is the latest report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/e-p-tpNkOss[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[6].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation [7]and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[8] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[9] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[10] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[11] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[12] .

    Sunspot numbers January 12 through 18, 2023 were 151, 181, 170, 177,
    186, 185, and 164, with a mean of 173.4. 10.7 cm flux was 211.6,
    208.5, 227.8, 234.3, 228.1, 221.7, and 220.3, with a mean of 221.8.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 12, 11, 30, 14, 6, and 15,
    with a mean of 13.9. Middle latitude A index was 8, 10, 9, 17, 10,
    5, and 11, with a mean of 10.

    ÿ


    [1] https://youtu.be/NDZACCqMd08
    [2] https://bit.ly/3Hdilp4
    [3] https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/see-a-giant-sunspot/
    [4] https://bit.ly/3kjVSxC
    [5] https://youtu.be/e-p-tpNkOss
    [6] k7ra@arrl.net
    [7] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [8] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [9] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [10] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [11] http://k9la.us/
    [12] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, January 27, 2023 15:36:25
    01/27/2023

    From the first week of this year, we saw a dramatic and welcome
    increase in solar activity, but it softened in this reporting week,
    January 19-25.

    Average daily sunspot numbers starting with the final reporting week
    for 2022 were 96.1, 97, 135.9. 173.4 and 162.

    Over the same period, average daily solar flux was 143.8, 157.8,
    181.2, 221.8 and 198.9.

    The northern hemisphere Winter Solstice was over a month ago, and
    through the next two months we will see a gradual transition toward
    Spring conditions.

    Predicted solar flux over the next month shows values peaking near
    205 on February 14-15, but flux values in the next few days are
    lower than those posted in Thursday's ARRL Letter.

    Predicted numbers are 150 on January 27-28, 145 on January 29-30,
    140 on January 31 through February 1, then 145, 150 and a big jump
    to 185 on February 2-4, 190 on February 5-6, 195 on February 7-12,
    200 on February 13, 205 on February 14-15, 200 on February 16-18,
    then 195, 200, and 190 on February 19-21, 185 on February 22-23, 180
    on February 24-25, then 175 on February 26 through March 1, then
    180, 185 and 190 on March 2-4. Flux values are expected to keep
    rising, peaking above 200 again after March 10.

    Predicted planetary A index, an indicator of geomagnetic instability
    is 8 on January 27-28, 5 on January 29 through February 1, 12 and 8
    on February 2-3, 5 on February 4-6, 12 on February 7-8, then 15, 12
    and 5 on February 9-11, 8 on February 12-13, 5 on February 14-17,
    then 8, 10, 10, 12 and 10 on February 18-22, 8 on February 23-25,
    then 5 on February 26-27, then 15, 10 and 8 on February 28 through
    March 2, and 5 on March 3-5, then 15 on March 6-8.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - January 26, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "We had a week of increased solar activity with areas of sunspots
    visible to the naked eye. These were AR3190 and AR3192. The ejected
    CMEs produced auroras at higher latitudes. Since the geomagnetic
    disturbances were mostly short-lived, they did not cause a
    noticeable deterioration in shortwave propagation.

    "A CME hit the Earth on 17 January at around 2200 UTC. At the same
    time, it also hit the tail of comet ZTF (C/2022 E3) and broke it! A
    piece of the tail of comet ZTF was chipped off and then carried away
    by the solar wind.

    "In recent days, AR3190 was the largest and most active, but even it
    produced no more than moderately powerful flares. Both large
    regions, AR3190 in the southwest and AR3192 in the northwest, are
    beyond the edge of the solar disk by January 26. This is associated
    with a significant drop in solar activity. While we know of other
    active regions beyond the eastern limb of the solar disk, these are
    not large enough to expect a repeat of the January pattern in
    February. But we expect a similarly erratic pattern contributing to
    limited forecasting capabilities."

    Long time reader and contributor David Moore sends us this:

    https://bit.ly/3Jg7V9B[1]

    An article about Starspots:

    https://bit.ly/3Hxoywn[2]

    KA3JAW is still having fun with 10 meter FM on 29.6 MHz.

    On January 26 from 1430-1450 UTC he worked SV6EXH. With QSB, signals were 3x3 to 5x5. Earlier on January 21 at 1646 UTC he worked DM5TS, signals 4x5 with QSB.

    Jon Jones, N0JK reported:

    "Sunday morning (January 22, 2023) of the ARRL January VHF Contest
    had some great propagation on the 6 meter band. I operated portable
    signing W1AW/0 for VOTA. I was surprised when I turned on the radio
    after setting up and the FT8 band map screen was full of strong
    traces at 1505 UTC.

    "There was a surprise sporadic-E opening Sunday morning to W1, W2,
    W3, VE3, and W8. The Ontario stations were booming in and I had a
    pileup calling. Even some F2 with PJ4MM in FK52 peaking at -8 dB at
    1554 UTC.

    "Even more amazing MM0AMW decoded several W9 stations on 6 meters.
    Several stations I worked, such as KW9A were spotted into Scotland.
    Unsure if the propagation mode was multi-hop Es or F2?

    "Later that evening an Es -- TEP opening from the northeast states
    to South America."

    More dramatic solar warnings.

    https://bit.ly/3XGqNmL[3]

    Here is a prediction that was WAY off:

    https://bit.ly/3Jn9UJl[4]

    Space Weather Woman Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW, has a new video:

    https://youtu.be/Vuv3fRUD1Mo[5]

    This weekend is the CQ World-Wide 160-Meter CW contest.

    Check https://www.cq160.com[6] for details.

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[7].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[8] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[9] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[10] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[11] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[12] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[13] .

    Sunspot numbers January 19 through 25, 2023 were 166, 197, 194, 166,
    144, 127, and 140, with a mean of 162. 10.7 cm flux was 226.1,
    217.5, 208.7, 198.6, 189.1, 180.2, and 171.8, with a mean of 198.9.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 6, 17, 9, 7, 4, and 7, with a
    mean of 8.1. Middle latitude A index was 6, 4, 11, 7, 5, 3, and 5,
    with a mean of 5.9.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3Jg7V9B
    [2] https://bit.ly/3Hxoywn
    [3] https://bit.ly/3XGqNmL
    [4] https://bit.ly/3Jn9UJl
    [5] https://youtu.be/Vuv3fRUD1Mo
    [6] https://www.cq160.com
    [7] k7ra@arrl.net
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [9] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [10] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [11] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [12] http://k9la.us/
    [13] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, February 03, 2023 13:52:19
    02/03/2023

    Solar activity softened again this week, with average daily sunspot
    numbers changing from 162 to 80.7, and solar flux from 198.9 to
    139.5.

    This is quite a dramatic shift from the excitement of a couple of
    weeks ago. To review, average weekly sunspot numbers from the first
    Propagation Forecast bulletin of 2023 went from 97 to 135.9, 173.4
    and 162. Average weekly solar flux from 157.8 to 181.2, 221.8 and
    198.9.

    This variability is expected. Soon, perhaps in the next solar
    rotation, activity will rise again. The graphs we see of smoothed
    sunspot numbers are smooth because the numbers are averaged over a
    whole year.

    Geomagnetic numbers barely changed at all, with planetary A index
    shifting only from 8.1 to 7.9 and the middle latitude numbers did
    not change at all, 5.9 last week and 5.9 this week.

    Predicted solar flux is 135 on February 3, 140 on February 4-5, 145
    on February 6, 150 on February 7-9, 155 on February 10-13, 150 on
    February 14-16, 145 on February 17, 140 on February 18-19, 135 on
    February 20, 130 on February 21-23, 125 on February 24-25, 140 on
    February 26-27, 135 on February 28 through March 4, then 140 and 145
    on March 5-6, 150 on March 7-8. and 155 on March 9-12.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 5 and 5 on February 3-5, 10 on
    February 6-7, 8 on February 8-9, then 12, 5, 8 and 8 on February
    10-13, 5 on February 14-17, then 8, 7, 5 and 5 on February 18-21, 10
    on February 22-24, 5 on February 25-27, then 15, 10 and 8 on
    February 28 to March 2, and 5 on March 3-5, then 15 on March 6-8,
    then 12, 8 and 7 on March 9-11 and 5 on March 12-16.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere February 3-9, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH:

    "January this year was another surprise in the development of Solar
    Cycle 25, although we are still about two years away from its peak.
    Sunspots have grown larger, while the configuration of the magnetic
    fields that make them up has become increasingly complex, leading to
    an increase in the number and intensity of eruptions, so far only
    moderately powerful.

    "Solar flux between 12 and 21 January was above 200, while the solar
    wind increased.

    "In the last week, after the large sunspot groups AR3190 and AR3192
    fell behind the western limb of the solar disk, solar activity
    decreased. Between January 27-29 and February 1, solar wind
    intensified, apparently still blowing from the active regions that
    had already set.

    "Further, we expect an irregular evolution without major
    fluctuations. Helioseismological observations show that the activity
    of AR3190 and AR3192 continue on the Sun's far side. We'll have to
    wait another week for their reappearance on the eastern limb."

    Mike Schaffer, KA3JAW in Easton, Pennsylvania reports again on his
    10 meter FM activity. He notes the daily solar flux dropped about
    100 points from mid-January, but good 10 meter propagation
    continues.

    Daily from 1300-1600 UTC he has good propagation to Europe, and is
    recently hearing Israel on 10 meter FM, about 5,700 miles away via
    F2 propagation.

    Mike notes, "Remember, 29.6 MHz is the national FM calling
    frequency, after making the initial contact you should QSY to a
    lower frequency, such as 29.5 or 29.49 MHz, to continue the QSO."

    Jim Hadlock, posting to the email list for the Western Washington DX
    Club noted that sunspot numbers recently hit a 9-year high.

    Jim posted this from Spaceweather.com:

    https://bit.ly/40DEzsj[1]

    Scott Avery, WA6LIE wrote:

    "Today was a fluke on 10 meters FT8.ÿ I worked LA7HJA on FT8 on
    Thursday February 2nd at 0041 UTC.ÿ He gave me a +04 and I gave him
    a -13 dB report.ÿ Great reports and tried calling one other LA, but
    no luck. I confirmed the QSO with his ClubLog.

    "For the past month or so, European openings are from about
    1500-1730 UTC here in California.

    "Have no clue to the method of propagation on this late afternoon's
    QSO. LP?

    "I was just using a wire Delta Loop at 30' feedpoint, part of my
    inverted Vees all common feedpoint.

    "You know in this hobby you just got to be in the right place at the
    right time!"

    Toivo Mykkanen, W8TJM in Liberty Lake, Washington wrote:

    "Just had the best Aurora Path into Scandinavia since we last spoke
    last year. Today, 1 Feb, I was able to work 4 stations on SSB in
    Finland from Eastern Washington and all of them were 10-15 dB over
    S9 with a slight bit of flutter. It was 10 PM in Finland, well after
    15 meters usually shuts down there.ÿÿ Was great to connect with my
    heritage as my parents are from Finland. The Finnish stations were
    working stations all across the USA and Canada."

    Bil Paul, KD8JUI, recalling television reception at the peak of
    Solar Cycle 19, wrote:

    "We were in Wisconsin, around '58 or '59, and we could usually only
    pick up with good reception two TV stations. One Sunday morning I
    got up and switched on the TV. I started getting good reception from
    the SE U.S., Georgia and Florida.

    "As time went on, the skip gradually changed to receiving Alabama
    and Mississippi, and finally ended with Texas. I'm not sure what
    frequencies were being used for those channels (2 through 13) back
    then."

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[2].

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[3] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[4] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[5] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[6] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[7] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[8] .

    Sunspot numbers January 26 through February 1, 2023 were 104, 84,
    76, 80, 67, 65, and 89, with a mean of 80.7. 10.7 cm flux was 150.6,
    144.9, 137.6, 137, 135.9, 137, and 133.5, with a mean of 139.5.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 11, 9, 10, 5, 5, 9, and 6, with a
    mean of 7.9. Middle latitude A index was 9, 6, 8, 5, 4, 6, and 3,
    with a mean of 5.9.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/40DEzsj
    [2] k7ra@arrl.net
    [3] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [4] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [5] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [6] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [7] http://k9la.us/
    [8] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, February 10, 2023 16:05:38
    02/10/2023

    A period of rising solar activity returned this week.

    Ten new sunspot groups appeared this reporting week (February 2-8),
    two on February 3, one each on February 4-5, four more on February
    6, and two more on February 8.

    On February 9, three more sunspot groups emerged.

    Early on February 9 Spaceweather.com reported a large emerging
    sunspot over our Sun's southeast horizon.

    Average daily sunspot number this week rose from 80.7 to 95.1, and
    average daily solar flux from 139.5 to 155.9.

    On Thursday, February 9 both the sunspot number and solar flux were
    above the average for the previous seven days. Sunspot number at 150
    compared to the average 95.1 and solar flux at 214.9 compared to the
    average of 155.9. Both indicate an upward trend.

    Geomagnetic indicators rose, planetary A index from 7.9 to 11.7,
    middle latitude numbers from 5.9 to 7.6.

    The rise in geomagnetic activity was related to solar wind late in
    the reporting week.

    The solar flux prediction on Wednesday was 192 for February 9 (the
    actual noon solar flux was 214.9), then 195 on February 10-13. As
    you can see below, the Thursday prediction is more optimistic for
    the next few days.

    Predicted solar flux is 214 on February 10, 212 on February 11-13,
    then 208, 205 and 202 on February 14-16, 150 on February 17-18, then
    145, 140, 135, 130 and 135 on February 19-23, 130 on February 24-26,
    125 on February 27, 130 on February 28 through March 3, then 135,
    150 and 160 on March 4-6, 155 on March 7-8, 160 on March 9, and 155
    on March 10-12, then 150 on March 13-17.

    Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 8ÿ on February 10-11, then 5
    on February 12-17, 8 on February 18-19, 5 on February 20-21, 10 on
    February 22-24, then 5, 5 and 8 on February 25-27, and 5, 5, and 8
    on February 28 through March 2, then 5, 5, and 10 on March 3-5, then
    15, 15, 12 and 8 on March 6-9, then 5 on March 10-16, 8 on March
    17-18, 5 on March 19-20 and 10 on March 21-23.

    F.K. Janda, OK1HH wrote:

    "Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - February 9, 2023.

    "Solar activity was lower between 26 January and 6 February, as
    expected. Two weeks ago, large sunspot groups AR3190 and AR3192,
    fell behind the Sun's western limb. They have now appeared near the
    eastern limb as AR3217 and AR3218. In particular, the region of
    AR3217 was already letting us know of its activity with plasma
    bursts before we could observe it.

    "Thereafter we observed moderate flares in it. AR3217 and AR3218
    will now move through the solar disk, and the increase in solar
    activity will continue.

    "On February 7, rapidly developing sunspot group AR3213 suddenly
    appeared, where at most only two small spots could be observed
    shortly before. Medium-sized flares were observed in AR3213 in the
    following days.

    "Another new activity was the increase in the Earth's magnetic field
    activity starting on February 6.

    "The subsequent increase in the MUF (highest usable frequencies of
    the ionospheric F2 layer) has been slow and irregular so far. We
    will have to wait a few more days for its higher values."

    Check out Scott Craig, WA4TTK and his Solar Data Plotting Utility.
    He wrote it several decades ago back in the days of MS-DOS, and the
    Windows version still works today. It displays sunspot numbers and
    solar flux all the way back to January 1, 1989:

    http://www.craigcentral.com/sol.asp[1]

    Click the "Download SOL313W.ZIP" file to install the program, then
    download the updated GRAPH.dat file for the latest data. It is
    updated to last week, so you can try out the data insertion on this
    bulletin.

    He posted a new copy of the data file, provided by N1API.

    The utility will update the data every week by pointing it toward a
    copy of our bulletin in .txt format.

    The GRAPH.dat file is in text format and can be imported into a
    spreadsheet program to display the data any way you want.

    Tech Times and Weather.com articles on a Radio Blackout:

    https://bit.ly/40J3g6m[2]

    https://bit.ly/3lojTnY[3]

    KB1DK sent this article about something occurring on our Sun:

    https://bit.ly/3Xju0r9[4]

    Larry, W0OGH in Cochise County, Arizona wrote:

    "Who says you can't have fun running QRP?

    "I started playing with QRP on CW, my KX3 at 10W and 10M 4 element
    Yagi just after February 1.

    "Why so late in the game? I don't know but maybe it was because the
    signals took such an upturn in strength.

    "Have been working some POTA stations QRP but no DX until February 1
    when I worked E77DX, OK9PEP, PA1CC, DS2HWS, UA1CE, YL3FT, UY2VM, HB0/HB9LCW, OT4A, ON4KHG, S01WS, ZX89L, CX5FK, 9A/UW1GZ, LZ1ND, PA3EVY, YU1JW, F6IQA, EA6ACA, ON5ZZ, GM4ATA, OP4F, EI0CZ and many more, all on 10 meters.

    "But the kicker and best of all was working EP2ABS on the morning of
    2/6/23 at 1654 UTC on 28.0258 MHz.

    "First time ever in 65 years that I have ever worked an Iran station
    much less heard one. He was really strong and calling CQ getting no
    answers. At the same time I called him, another station called as
    well but he came back to me.

    "Thereafter he had a pileup, but his signal started dropping off, so
    I caught him at the right time. Maybe a duct? Yep, the DX is out
    there on 10M and when the band is hot, you gotta be there.

    "I have even worked some AM stations on and above 29.000 MHz with
    QRP. Lots more fun than high power which in my case is 100W from my
    K3."

    A friend here in Seattle worked him on the same day, was very
    surprised, and mentioned a friend in California who worked EP2ABS
    with 100 watts and an 18 foot wire.

    Another "news" source reporting rising solar activity as some sort
    of existential threat:

    https://bit.ly/3YiRcXP[5]

    https://bit.ly/3RQ8CZz[6]

    A more reliable source:

    https://bit.ly/3YAAIu4[7]

    Dr. Tamitha Skov's, WX6SWW, latest report from February 5:

    https://youtu.be/1Bcmzj7h_mY[8]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[9] . When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[10] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[11] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[12] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for February 2 through 8, 2023 were 56, 74, 66, 79,
    139, 110, and 142, with a mean of 95.1. 10.7 cm flux was 134.9,
    134.5, 139, 144, 156.7, 184.7, and 197.6, with a mean of 155.9.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 9, 6, 5, 18, 20, and 18, with
    a mean of 11.7. Middle latitude A index was 2, 6, 5, 3, 13, 12, and
    12, with a mean of 7.6.

    ÿ


    [1] http://www.craigcentral.com/sol.asp
    [2] https://bit.ly/40J3g6m
    [3] https://bit.ly/3lojTnY
    [4] https://bit.ly/3Xju0r9
    [5] https://bit.ly/3YiRcXP
    [6] https://bit.ly/3RQ8CZz
    [7] https://bit.ly/3YAAIu4
    [8] https://youtu.be/1Bcmzj7h_mY
    [9] k7ra@arrl.net
    [10] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [11] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [12] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, February 24, 2023 17:32:24
    02/24/2023

    Solar activity plunged this reporting week, although there was great
    the excitement when the solar flux on February 17 was reported as a
    record breaking 343.1.

    Because it was the noon reading, it is still reported by NOAA as the
    solar flux, but this was a false reading when the observatory at
    Penticton, British Columbia was swamped by energy from a solar
    flare.

    So, in this report, I have chosen the 1800 UTC flux value, which was
    165.

    Average daily sunspot number plunged from 182.4 to 107, while
    average solar flux dropped from 196.4 to 162.4. If I had not changed
    the 343.1 to 165, solar flux average would have been 187.9, more
    than 25 points higher than what we report here.

    Six new sunspots emerged over the week, one on February 16, one each
    on February 18 and 19, and three more on February 20, then one day
    after the end of the reporting week, on February 23, two more
    sunspot groups appeared.

    The solar flux prediction for the next month shows a peak value of
    180 for March 7-13.

    Predicted values are 148 on February 24, 146 on February 25-27, 142
    on February 28, 140 on March 1-2, 145, 150, 155, and 165 on March
    3-6, 180 on March 7-13, then 175 and 170 on March 14-15, 160 on
    March 16-17, then 155, 160, 150, 140 and 135 on March 18-22, 125 on
    March 23-24, 130 on March 25, then 140 on March 26-28, 145 on March
    29-30, then 150, 155 and 165 on March 31 through April 2. Beginning
    on April 3, predicted flux values are back to 180, continuing into
    the following week.

    Predicted planetary A index is 10 on February 24-25, then 12, 18,
    20, 16 and 10 on February 26 through March 2, 5 on March 3-4, then
    15, 18, 15 and 8 on March 5-8, 5 on March 9-14, 15 on March 15, 8 on
    March 16-17, 5 on March 18-20, 10 on March 21-23, 5 on March 24-25,
    and 8 on March 26-27, then 5, 8, 5, 5, 15, 18, 15 and 8 on March 28
    through April 4.

    F.K. Janda, OK1HH wrote:

    "A week ago, on February 17, we vainly awaited the arrival of a CME,
    and at least a weak G1-class geomagnetic storm. Instead, on February
    17 at 2016 UTC, we were treated to a strong X2.2-class solar flare
    in the newly emerging sunspot group AR3229. X-ray and UV radiation
    as well triggered the Dellinger Effect over the Americas.ÿ The
    Dellinger Effect is a Sudden Ionospheric Disturbance.

    "Frequencies up to 30 MHz were attenuated for more than an hour
    after the flare. The arrival of the CME affected the Earth's
    magnetic field at 1039 UTC on February 20. However, most of the
    particle cloud passed outside the Earth, therefore there was no
    geomagnetic storm, but only an increase in geomagnetic activity.

    "The new AR3234 produced M-class flares in the following days.
    Dellinger events could only affect radio wave propagation up to 20
    MHz (as long as we had the Sun overhead, of course).

    "Thereafter no significant flares were observed, so no CMEs were
    directed toward us. But that may change when AR3234 turns toward
    Earth. In other words, when the Sun's rotation moves it to the
    central meridian, which will happen by the end of the week.
    Primarily, the overall activity of the Sun and most likely the
    Earth's magnetic field will depend on its activity."

    Jon Jones, N0JK wrote:

    "There was a nice 6 meter F2 opening on February 16.

    "I logged HC1MD/2 in grid FI57 on 50 MHz FT8 at 1916 UTC. I found
    this opening by checking the DX Maps website. HC1MD/2 had a strong,
    steady signal. I operated from home using an attic dipole antenna.
    Also logged HC2FG.

    "Other area 6 meter operators such as WQ0P (EM19) and KF0M (EM17)
    also worked stations in Chile. The K index was 4, which I suspect
    may have helped.

    "On February 18 a number of North American stations worked Robert,
    3B9FR around 1600 UTC on 6 Meter FT8.

    "3B9FR is on Rodriguez Island in the Indian Ocean off the southeast
    coast of South Africa.

    "Conditions were great in the ARRL International DX CW Contest on 10
    meters. I operated a couple of hours Sunday morning running 5 watts
    and a quarter wave whip fixed mobile. Worked over a hundred stations
    in Europe, the Caribbean, South America and Africa. Many of the
    Europeans were over S-9."

    Dick, K2KA wrote:

    "February 21 at 1544 UTC on 6 meters I worked FR4OO and then at 1558
    UTC I worked 3B9FR. Both were FT8. I happened to be at the radio at
    the right time. It was an amazing albeit brief opening here. They
    were obviously new countries for me on 6 meters. They were #120 and
    #121, respectively.

    "My station here is IC-7610, ACOM 700s, antenna is a M2 6M7JHV 7el
    on 30 ft. boom at 40 ft."

    A story about a Solar Tsunami:

    https://yhoo.it/3EyYOxJ[1]

    A time-lapse video of a Flare:

    https://bit.ly/3Ikc0aQ[2]

    Aki, JQ2UOZ wrote:

    "Last weekend I participated in the ARRL International DX CW Contest
    using an output power of 500 mW and a dipole antenna.

    "The band conditions on 10m and 15m were amazing. I worked 9 East
    Coast stations (VT, ME, DE, CT, NY, NH, PA, VA and FL) on 10m and 6
    East Coast stations (MA, 2 NH, 2 PA and MD) on 15m. Usually, the
    band conditions on 10m in February are not so good even at the
    sunspot cycle maximum. This is the first time I worked East Coast
    stations on 10m in the ARRL International DX CW Contest using 0.5W
    and a dipole. Thanks to good-ears stations who worked me."

    Scott Hower wrote:

    "With the exception of Thursday the 16th, 10 meters was hot this
    week. On Wednesday February 15th I decoded 3A2MW in Monaco around
    1233 to 1300 UTC using FT8 with his signal level as high as -13 dB.
    This is the first time I have ever been able to receive Franco's
    signal after years of trying on 10 meters. Unfortunately, he could
    not receive me. 9N7AA has also been coming in every morning (except
    the 16th) with levels as high as -1 dB using FT8 F/H. I finally
    logged him on Friday the 17th."

    Scott did not mention his call sign, but I think he may be K7KQ.

    Here is the latest report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/wm7tXN2EUCY[3]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[4]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[5] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[6] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[7] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[8] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[9] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[10] .

    Sunspot numbers for February 16 through 22, 2023 were 101, 86, 109,
    112, 135, 106, and 100, with a mean of 107. 10.7 cm flux was 163.2,
    165, 167.2, 169, 159.8, 160.9, and 151.9, with a mean of 162.4.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 24, 6, 6, 7, 8, 17, and 6, with a
    mean of 10.6. Middle latitude A index was 21, 4, 5, 4, 6, 15, and 4,
    with a mean of 8.4.

    ÿ


    [1] https://yhoo.it/3EyYOxJ
    [2] https://bit.ly/3Ikc0aQ
    [3] https://youtu.be/wm7tXN2EUCY
    [4] k7ra@arrl.net
    [5] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [6] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [7] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [8] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [9] http://k9la.us/
    [10] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, March 03, 2023 19:45:52
    03/03/2023

    This was a busy week for geomagnetic storms. A solar wind stream
    from an equatorial hole and a CME blew geomagnetic numbers seemingly
    off the scale, with the planetary A index on Monday hitting 94.
    Aurora was visible as far south as 40 degrees latitude. Imagine a
    line running from Reno, Nevada through Provo, Utah then Denver, then
    the Kansas-Nebraska state line, Quincy, Illinois, Dayton, Ohio and Philadelphia.

    This week the source of the 10.7 cm solar flux, the DRAO observatory
    at Penticton, British Columbia, was again saturated by solar wind on
    February 25 and the measurement was 279.3. NOAA corrected this to
    152, which I thought was a bit too low. The other recent saturation
    was on February 17 at 343.1, but for some reason NOAA let this
    stand.

    I corrected it in this bulletin to 165, which was that morning's
    1800 UTC reading:

    https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/text/daily-solar-indices.txt[1]

    This week we saw two new sunspot groups appear on February 23,
    another on the following day, another on February 27, on February 28
    one more, two more on March 1, and another on March 2.

    Average daily sunspot number rose from 107 to 126.3, but average
    daily solar flux declined from 162.4 to 158.2.

    Average daily planetary A index rose from 10.6 to 27.7.

    Over the next few weeks it appears that solar flux values should hit
    a peak around March 17-18.

    Predicted solar flux is 165 March 3-5, 170 and 175 on March 6-7, 180
    on March 8-9, 165 on March 10-12, 170 on March 13-15, 175 on March
    16, 180 on March 17-18, then 175, 170 and 165 on March 19-21, 160 on
    March 22-23, 155 on March 24-26, 150 on March 27-28, then 145 on
    March 29-30, then 140, 145, 150, 155 and 160 on March 31 through
    April 4, then 165 on April 5-8, and 170 on April 9-11.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 12, 20, 18, 16 and 8 on March 3-8,
    5 on March 9-14, then 15, 8, 8, 5, 8 and 15 on March 15-20, 5 on
    March 21-23, then 12, 16, 56, 32, 16 and 10 on March 24-29, 8 on
    March 30-31, then 16, 18, 15 and 8 on April 1-4, and 5 on April
    5-10.

    Note the predicted A index of 56 and 32 on March 26-27, suggest a
    return of this week's disturbance in the next solar rotation.

    Here is a Newsweek report about radio blackout:

    https://bit.ly/3YsJREJ[2]

    A story from Sky & Telescope:

    https://bit.ly/3ZbC1As[3]

    Click past all the offers and pop-ups to view this article:

    https://bit.ly/3ymZrqR[4]

    That report is from Western Washington, where I live. Unfortunately
    the sky was overcast, but observers in Eastern Washington were able
    to see the aurora. Remember that many of the aurora images you see
    were from cameras with a long exposure time, which makes them much
    brighter than what you see with unassisted vision.

    Thanks to spaceweather.com for this NASA movie of sunspot group
    AR3234 growing as it comes over our Sun's eastern limb:

    https://bit.ly/3J1IIiJ[5]

    Spaceweather.com[6] also reported that the average sunspot number for
    February was among the highest of the last 10 years.

    Here is data on Solar Cycle 25 progress:

    https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/solar-cycle-progression[7]

    Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period March 3-9, 2023:

    "Quiet: March 3-5, 9
    Unsettled: March 4-6, 8-9
    Active: March 6-7
    Minor storm: possible March 6-7

    "At February 27, we recorded the highest geomagnetic activity since
    2008. At Budkov observatory, the three last K indices of this day
    were at level 6. Over the next few days we expect geomagnetic
    activity decrease. Until Sunday, March 5, we expect mostly quiet
    conditions. More unsettled conditions are expected between Sunday,
    March 5, and Thursday, March 9.

    "Between March 6-7, active conditions with likely storming event is
    possible. Wednesday, March 7, we expect unsettled conditions.

    "Tomas Bayer, Institute of Geophysics of the ASCR, Prague, Budkov
    observatory (BDV)."

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere March 3-9, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH:

    "A week ago, we observed an increase in the size and flare activity
    of sunspot group AR3234 in the northeast of the solar disk. But more interesting was the activity in the northwestern quadrant, where a
    magnetic filament associated with the relatively little noticeable
    sunspot AR3229 erupted on February 24. It set off a chain reaction
    in which the filament lifted off and cut through the solar
    atmosphere at 1949 UTC.

    "In AR3229 a long-duration M3-class solar flare (LDE) at 2030 UTC,
    with a CME, partially directed toward Earth. At the same time,
    gaseous material flowed from an equatorial coronal hole in the solar atmosphere. Earth was hit by two CMEs on February 27 and 28. The
    arrival of the first one was followed by a G1 to G2 class
    geomagnetic storm, while the second was followed by a G3 class
    storm.

    "In the ever-growing sunspot group AR3234, already in the
    northwestern solar disk, an M8.6-class solar flare with a possible
    weak CME was observed at 1750 UTC on 28 February.

    "Simultaneously, the Dellinger effect knocked out shortwave links at frequencies up to 30 MHz around the Pacific Ocean with a duration up
    to one hour.

    "The CME is expected to arrive at Earth perhaps as late as March 4,
    delivering only a glancing blow to the Earth's magnetic field.
    Starting on March 4, a minor G1-class geomagnetic storm is likely.
    Solar activity will not decrease, as another active region in the
    southeastern solar disk will emerge in the meantime."

    Here is a conversation about 6 meters:

    "Gents, some 6M DX to report here at KM0T.

    "Last few days, February 25-27, there was some DX worked locally so
    I was trying to keep an eye on things. Then we got some aurora from
    some flare impacts, and sure enough on the 27th got a few ZL and VK
    decodes, lots of the Midwest worked some, but too scattered for me.
    Also decoded FK8CP, who I have been chasing a card from a 2014 CW
    contact.

    "So Tuesday afternoon the 28th, was at the radio doing other shack
    items when I saw a FT8 decode from VK4HJ at 2306 UTC working a W9
    station. Proceeded to call him and worked at 2309 UTC with his -10
    signal. Worked VK4WTJ at 2315 UTC with him coming in at -15.

    "I then started to see decodes from FK8CP and FK8HA on and off for
    the next 15 minutes. I worked FK8HA in RG37 with his -18 digs at
    2344 UTC, I received a -20 report, took about 4 minutes once I got
    his attention.

    "During this whole time, I was calling FK8CP on and off between
    trying others when they popped up. VK4MA came in at 2351 UTC with
    his -09 digs. FK8CP was calling CQ WI all the time, but with FT8 you
    can still answer, so I kept thinking why is he calling for
    Wisconsin? Then figured that it was 'West Indies' (lol). He finally
    relented and I worked him on FT8 around 0009 UTC with -13 sig report
    from him.

    "The whole thing about New Caledonia is that I worked FK8CP on 6M in
    2014 on CW, but forgot back then to try for a card. Going through my
    logs for 6M DXCC showed the errors of my ways and I started to send
    cards back around 2020 since he was not LoTW. First one got returned
    around 6 months later, the post master said he did not know why,
    perhaps a typhoon. Then I tried again, but no answer for a long
    time. Got returned again, about a year later. I thought perhaps he
    was a SK, but his web page on QRZ did not leave any other contact
    info other than regular mail.

    "I forgot about it for a long time until I decoded him a few days
    ago. I checked his QRZ page and it said due to Covid-19, mail has
    been an issue for a very long time. So I got my card out and
    readdressed a new envelope, went to the post office this morning and
    mailed the card again. Wow, then I worked him that same day on FT8!
    9 years later - too funny!

    "73, Mike, KM0T.

    "PS - Definitely F2, Not strong, but in and out. No Es to the SW
    that I could tell. I worked VK and ZL on SSB 10 meters earlier,
    about 2200 UTC with 80W. That band was in good shape and quiet, had
    a 20 minute chat with a ZL with no QSB."

    I (K7RA) asked, "When there is a geomagnetic storm and we see
    openings on 6 meters, is it always due to auroral propagation?"

    The response from Mike King, KM0T, to K7RA:

    "Tad, in my experience on 6M, aurora gives your standard aurora
    propagation early on during the actual aurora. Northern latitude
    Midwest and NE - NW stations, with the typical auroral sound to SSB
    and CW.

    "Then later that same night we can get auroral-E skip, which may or
    may not sound like aurora. Very typical to work Alaska later at
    night after an aurora or auroral Es (at least from my location).

    "Then after a night of aurora, I have always been on the lookout the
    next day for F2/TEP/Chordal hop. When the flux is hovering around
    160 or so, and there is really no F2 at 50 MHz from the Midwest, an
    Aurora the previous day means that we got hit with a CME and the
    whole thing could still be charged up. Thus when we get full
    sunlight, I have seen many times F2/TEP propagation from the Midwest
    that I would not normally get. It lasts just that one day typically
    unless we get hit with more from the Sun.

    "From here in the Midwest it's East or West F2 to Caribbean, Africa,
    Indian Ocean, South America and Oceania. I don't believe I have seen
    it to EU the next day.ÿ (If you're in Texas, SW - SE, even better
    for you - but they get that TEP much more than us...location,
    location, location.)

    "I have worked Scandinavia over the pole path a few times at
    nighttime during an aurora via aurora-Es or F2, could never really
    tell. So if E-skip it would be multi hop like a summertime day, but
    had an auroral quality to those contacts. In my mind I always called
    aurora enhanced F2.

    "For me, having a decent aurora with flux being around 160, I feel
    it's one of the best clues I get for looking for when 6M might do
    wild things the next day. Throw this coming summertime auroras in
    during the 6M E-skip season, those days after an aurora might be
    crazy!

    "73 Mike, KM0T"

    Here is a response from Jon Jones, N0JK:

    "Tad, Mike:

    "Agree with Mike's comments and good summary.

    "The aurora geomagnetic activity can increase F-layer MUF,
    especially when in the sunlight. Sometimes during an aurora F2 can
    appear. The more common scenario is the one Mike describes. Aurora
    during the night and F2 propagation the next day. That is what
    happened Monday February 27.ÿ Tuesday was some left over F2, K still
    elevated.

    "Yesterday (March 1) the K index around 2. I copied Pipe, CE3SX for
    4 FT8 sequences on 50.313 MHz at 2111 UTC. No luck with a contact.
    Saw him send K0SIX (EN35) 'RR73.'

    "Yes and left over F2 the 2nd day after the aurora like yesterday,
    is normally only North South Propagation for me (Midwest) over the
    TEP zone, which I worked one CE station for fun, decoded a bunch of
    LUs, CX and CE, but had to leave for hockey practice."

    Jon Jones added at 2035 UTC on Thursday:

    "6 Meters popped open to Ecuador early in the afternoon March 2 on
    F2. I was at work, able to take a break around 1910 UTC. Set up from
    car - 1/4 wave whip and 10 watt MFJ-9406 radio. Many very loud
    decodes on FT8 from Ecuador. Called several stations. At 1925 UTC
    HC1DX called me on FT8 and we completed. Received a '-17 dB' report.
    N0LL/P was on from rare grid EN01 and worked several in Ecuador.
    Around 1900 UTC seems to be a good time frame for 6 Meter F2 to the
    south."

    The phone portion of the ARRL DX Contest is this weekend.

    http://www.arrl.org/arrl-dx[8]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net.[9] When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[10] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[11] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[12] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for February 23 through March 1 2023 were 108, 130,
    129, 120, 192, 100, and 105, with a mean of 126.3. 10.7 cm flux was
    148.2, 164.1, 152, 159, 161.2, 160.9, and 162, with a mean of 158.2.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 22, 6, 10, 26, 94, 28, and 8,
    with a mean of 27.7. Middle latitude A index was 16, 4, 9, 18, 60,
    19, and 6, with a mean of 18.9.

    ÿ


    [1] https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/text/daily-solar-indices.txt
    [2] https://bit.ly/3YsJREJ
    [3] https://bit.ly/3ZbC1As
    [4] https://bit.ly/3ymZrqR
    [5] https://bit.ly/3J1IIiJ
    [6] http://Spaceweather.com
    [7] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/solar-cycle-progression
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/arrl-dx
    [9] k7ra@arrl.net
    [10] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [11] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [12] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, March 10, 2023 16:59:23
    03/10/2023

    So far this month, two new sunspot groups appeared on March 1,
    another one on March 2, three more on March 3, one more on March 5,
    two more on March 6, and another on March 7, then two more on March
    9.

    Average daily sunspot numbers rose from 126.3 to 143.6.

    Average daily solar flux changed from 158.2 to 181.6

    Average daily planetary A index declined from 27.7 to 14.6, and
    average middle latitude numbers went from 18.9 to 10.7, reflecting
    the quieter conditions following the upset the week before.

    The Penticton observatory, the source for solar flux data is way up
    at 49.5 degrees north longitude, in eastern British Columbia. For
    much of the year the Sun is low in the sky, so all winter they do
    their thrice daily readings at 1800, 2000 and 2200 UTC. But on March
    1 they shifted over to 1700, 2000 and 2300 UTC. The local noon (2000
    UTC) reading is the official solar flux for the day.

    You can see the data and the dates here:

    https://www.spaceweather.gc.ca/forecast-prevision/solar-solaire/solarflux/sx-5- flux-en.php[1]

    The Vernal Equinox, when the northern and southern hemispheres are
    bathed in equal solar radiation is less than two weeks away.

    Predicted solar flux shows values peaking now, and again on March
    16-19.

    Flux values are expected at 178, 175, and 170 March 10-12, 172 on
    March 13-14, 170 on March 15-16, 180 on March 17-18, 175, 170 and
    165 on March 19-21, 160 on March 22-23, 155 on March 24-26, 150 on
    March 27-28, 145 on March 29-30, then 140, 145, 150, 155, and 160 on
    March 31 through April 4, 165 on April 5-8, 170 on April 9-11, 175
    on April 12, 180 on April 13-14, then 175, 170 and 165 on April
    15-17.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 8, 10 and 8 on March 10-13, 5 on
    March 14-15, 8 on March 16-17, then 5, 8 and 16 on March 18-20, 5 on
    March 21-23, then 12, 16, 26, 18 and 10 on March 24-28, then 8, 24
    and 16 on March 29-31, 20 on April 1-2, 16 and 8 on April 3-4, and 5
    on April 5-10, then 16, 8, 8, 5, and 8 on April 11-15.

    Dr. Tony Phillips of Spaceweather.com posted this animation captured
    by NASA's SDO showing sunspot AR3245 splitting:

    https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/07mar23/splitup.gif[2]

    AR3245 is seen in the SE quadrant (lower left).

    OK1HH wrote:

    "The most interesting phenomenon in the last seven days was the X2
    class solar flare in the AR3234 sunspot group. Flare peaked on 3
    March at 1752 UTC, which caused the shortwave fade over the Americas
    at frequencies up to 30 MHz.

    "The G1-class geomagnetic disturbance on 4 and 5 March was triggered
    by CMEs from the M8.6-class flare of 28 February, despite the fact
    that the particle cloud was not heading directly toward Earth.

    "Activity in the growing sunspot groups AR3242 and AR3245, as well
    as the action of a setting, long, narrow, and closing coronal hole
    in the northwestern solar disk, were key to the subsequent
    evolution.

    "Today, March 9, a CME from the M5.8-class solar flare of March 6 at
    0229 UTC appears to be arriving at Earth. This is evidenced by this
    morning's (March 9) increase in solar wind particle concentration,
    which is a fairly good precursor for a subsequent increase in solar
    wind speed and enhancement in geomagnetic activity.

    "After the disturbance subsides, quieter conditions and a
    continuation of the current level of solar activity is expected."

    Gene, N9TF in Tennessee wrote, concerning openings on March 8-9:

    "I am usually the little pistol on the sidelines watching stations,
    either on my waterfall, pskreporter, or DX Maps working the 6M DX.

    "Well, the opening to VK4 yesterday late afternoon/evening, found
    this station in the thick of things...FINALLY!

    "I was tipped off by my brother N9PGG Greg in FM05 around 2200 UTC
    in a text message, that he was receiving FK8HA on 6m FT8, and a
    little later he saw stations in Alabama working VK4MA. I decoded
    FK8HA a couple times around 2230 UTC on 3/8/2023 but only -20 and
    just a couple sporadic decodes. I was watching DX maps and saw the
    path from VK to grids just to the south of me on fire.

    "I started CQing around 2230 UTC and saw that I was hitting XE2KK
    with a +4 on pskreporter, and two other XE. That looked like a good
    E opening to the correct path to VK4 if I had enough signal to ride
    the TEP. (Was it TEP?)

    "Finally, around 2342 UTC I decoded VK4MA at -13, and Paul was now
    being decoded consistently here and getting stronger. I started
    calling him at about 2345, and at 0007 UTC 3/9/2023 I got a reply
    R-19, sent my RR73 and Paul moved on to the next caller. I thought I
    was in the log...NOT!

    "I noticed two callers after me, AB4IQ, Paul had finished with 73. I immediately hit what I thought was TX4 (a text string in WSJT-x) to
    send RRR this time but hit TX2 for a few transmissions until I
    caught that mistake. Finally, 16 minutes of sending RRR, Paul
    responded with 73. Relief and then satisfaction set in. I'm in the
    log! Paul peaked at +1 for a while during the opening.

    "Antenna is just a 3 element (A50-3S) only up 18' above ground,
    behind our backyard shed 120' from the house/shack. I have 125' of
    DXE400MAX buried from the house to the back of the shed to a coax
    distribution box with grounding and surge arrestors. Then 40' of
    LM4-400 from the box to the antenna. The rig is a K3S, and I run 85
    watts output on FT8. So, of those 85 watts out at the rig, the
    antenna is seeing about 45-50 watts, at only 18' above ground, it's
    about 7' lower than the minimum optimal 25' above ground for 6m.

    "The 6m antenna set up is temporarily permanent at this time. It is
    kluged together with a 5' tripod anchored into the ground with 2,
    24" nails in each leg. The mast is 4 sections of 4' army surplus
    tent poles. I have an eve bracket at 10' to hold the whole thing
    secure, snug but not completely tight so I can hand turn the mast
    section above. Tent poles are just slid together, and the joints are
    duct taped. Like I said...kluged together! It has just recently
    survived 75mph straight wind gusts for 2 hours straight.

    "Anyway, just wanted to give a 'successful' report from EM66IJ. It
    was fun finally being able to participate in an opening!"

    A british tabloid explains astrophysics:

    https://bit.ly/3L8NHja[3]

    Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW, releases videos to her Patreon subscribers
    12 hours before the general release.

    I got this early Friday at 0800 UTC, and since the ARRL will not
    release this more than 12 hours after the release to her
    subscribers, I am able to post it here:

    https://youtu.be/TJBsOuohrgE[4]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[5]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[9] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[11] .

    Sunspot numbers for March 2 through 8, 2023 were 103, 133, 122, 137,
    173, 191, and 146, with a mean of 143.6. 10.7 cm flux was 168.8,
    190.9, 181.6, 179.8, 188, 180.3, and 181.9, with a mean of 181.6.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 22, 15, 22, 15, 11, and 8,
    with a mean of 14.6. Middle latitude A index was 8, 16, 10, 17, 11,
    7, and 6, with a mean of 10.7.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.spaceweather.gc.ca/forecast-prevision/solar-solaire/solarflux/sx-5-flux-en.php
    [2] https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/07mar23/splitup.gif
    [3] https://bit.ly/3L8NHja
    [4] https://youtu.be/TJBsOuohrgE
    [5] k7ra@arrl.net
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [10] http://k9la.us/
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, March 17, 2023 16:20:01
    03/17/2023

    Six new sunspot groups emerged over the past week, two on March 9,
    another on March 10, one more on March 12, and another two on March
    14.

    Sunspot numbers and solar flux declined this week.

    Average daily sunspot numbers softened from 143.6 to 118.7, and
    average daily solar flux from 181.6 to 153.6.

    Predicted solar flux is 135, 140, 138, and 135 on March 17-20, then
    132, 132 and 130 on March 21-23, 155 on March 24-26, 150 on March
    27-28, 145 on March 29-30, then 140, 145, 150, 155, and 160 on March
    31 through April 4, 165 on April 5-8, 170 on April 9-11, then 175,
    180, 180, 175, 170 and 165 on April 12-17, 160 on April 18-19, 155
    on April 20-21, then 140, 150, 150 and 145 on April 22-25.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 5, 5, 12 and 8 on March 17-21,
    then 5, 5, 12, 16 and 26 on March 22-26, then 18, 10, 8, 24 and 22
    on March 27-31, then 16 on April 1-2, then 14, 12, 8 and 10 on April
    3-6, 8 on April 7-8, then 5, 8, 22 and 8 on April 9-12, 5 on April
    13-14, then 8 and 16 on April 15-16, 5 on April 17-19, then 12, 16,
    26 and 18 on April 20-23.

    Check out this propagation modeling site, sent from WB6MPH.

    https://dr2w.de/dx-propagation/[1]

    Jon, N0JK wrote:

    "On March 15 there was a CME impact. The Kp peaked at 6. 6 meters
    opened to South America. I logged HK3O in FJ24 at 2042 UTC on FT8.
    Decoded many stations in Argentina and Ecuador."

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - March 16, 2023 from OK1HH, F.K. Janda.

    "The level of solar activity is only slightly lower than during the
    last solar rotation, but this is especially true below the Sun's
    equator. There is higher activity on the far side of the Sun.

    "There was exceptional phenomenon recorded by coronagraphs on
    satellites on March 13. It was a 'halo CME' that apparently left the
    Sun at more than 3,000 km/s. Although the plasma cloud was not
    heading towards Earth, it still touched it. We can't pinpoint its
    source, but helioseismic maps show a pair of large active regions on
    the far side of the Sun. Both will emerge within days on the eastern
    limb of the solar disk.

    "The greater than 10 MeV proton flux was recorded from the morning
    of the 13th and ended on the 15th. In the next two days, the CME
    impact triggered a geomagnetic storm at G1 and G2 levels. In doing
    so, the attenuation in the polar cap - PCA - increased
    significantly.

    "Geomagnetic observatories recorded a high K index value of 6 on 15
    March at 2322 UTC. Note: this CME was ejected into space by the
    eruption of a magnetic filament on the Sun almost 4 days earlier.

    "Shortwave propagation conditions were above average until 14 March
    and deteriorated significantly on 15 March. However, due to
    sufficiently high solar activity there was an improvement from 16
    March onwards."

    KM0T wrote:

    "Finally got VP8 on 6M - Wednesday March 15.

    "Been getting at least one and maybe two decodes from VP8NO and
    VP8LP almost every day over the last week, but not enough to work,
    seems always east coast, SE and Texas, some 6 land.

    "Today, waiting in the wings, decoded a VP8 around 1700 UTC, kept
    the beam that way and VP8LP came in at 1856 with -04 sigs.ÿ I got a
    -20 report. I missed his initial CQ at 1854 which was +18!ÿ He
    dropped down to -15 right after I worked him and then was gone. He
    was in from 1854 to 1858, 4-minute window. Then one more single
    decode him calling CQ at 1900 at -10, then gone.

    "Anyway, it was short lived, then a few minutes later at 1909 UTC
    VP8NO came in with +4 to -10 sigs till about 1918 UTC. I apparently
    got his attention as Greg, W0LGQ in Council Bluffs EN21, south of me
    told me on the phone that VP8NO was calling me back with a -12
    report for a number of sequences, but I was getting no decodes by
    then from him.

    "Greg indicated as we compared notes, that WSJT FT8 signal reports
    from VP8NO were consistently +10 dB better at EN21 then EN13 - 167
    miles as the crow flies.ÿ We both run 6 over 6 so it's somewhat a
    good comparison.

    "Definitely short lived F2.ÿ From here, seems that TEP always ends
    up dropping off mid country LU or CE, CX.ÿ Never that far south to
    VP8.

    "Well, now that I look at the DX Maps snapshot, it appears there may
    have been an Es to TEP link on my side."

    Tony, WA4JQS sent a message about working some New Zealand stations on 29.6 MHz FM.

    "Rich, N8UX and I have talked about this ever since FT8 came out. We
    are seeing a lot of skewed path QSOs over the past few years. Today
    the SFI was 157. I am thinking we have some prop paths or types we
    did not know about until FT8. Of course, I could be wrong, but I
    have seen some really strange paths the past few years with FT8. I
    listened for 10 mins after I signed with the ZL2, and I was the only
    one to hear and work him other than the VK3 and they were having
    trouble getting the calls correct. While I had a pipeline, into the
    South Island but then I find it strange that I heard no other VK or
    ZL."

    WB6MPH sent this very interesting link, providing an animated visual
    rendering of predicted propagation:

    https://dr2w.de/dx-propagation/[2]

    He also is interested in possible effects of planetary positions on
    the Sun. Years ago I heard about J.H. Nelson of RCA and his work on
    this subject, but thought that this article showed his conclusions
    were affected by statistical artifacts, as outlined here:

    https://bit.ly/42mbEtg[3]

    Greg Glenn sent this:

    "Check out Frank Stefani's work.ÿ He is one of many who I read up
    on. Stefani was a peer reviewer on my paper.

    "https://www.hzdr.de/db/Cms?pOid=63352&pNid=0&pLang=en[4]

    "Recent Stefani technical paper:

    "https://bit.ly/3ZUXm18[5]

    "Basically, Stefani suggests that even a very small gravitational
    force exerted by the planets on the Sun can have an effect through
    billions of years of resonance.

    "I personally think that both gravitational, as well as
    electromagnetic forces are at play.ÿ It's a solar 'system' and there
    are multiple forces transferred between the orbiting planets and the
    Sun.

    "I write, along with Astronomer Gerald Pease, about the
    gravitational force exerted by transfer of angular momentum here:

    "https://arxiv.org/abs/1610.03553[6]

    "I then wrote about the possible Electromagnetic Connections here:

    "https://arxiv.org/abs/1901.10574[7]

    "A prediction I made that came about:

    "https://bit.ly/42kvVzp[8]

    "Thanks, Greg!"

    Latest from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/gjrvLY-RU5Q
    [9]
    Solar explosions:

    https://bit.ly/3liDO85[10]

    From news in India:

    https://bit.ly/3JMJHnu[11]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[12]. When reporting observations, don't forget to
    tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[13] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[14] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[15] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[16] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[17] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[18] .

    Sunspot numbers for March 9 through 15, 2023 were 155, 135, 126,
    135, 87, 97, and 96, with a mean of 118.7. 10.7 cm flux was 178.8,
    171.2, 157.4, 150, 143.3, 138.5, and 135.7, with a mean of 153.6.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 17, 11, 7, 8, 3, 17, and 29, with
    a mean of 13.1. Middle latitude A index was 14, 10, 5, 6, 2, 12, and
    19, with a mean of 9.9.

    ÿ


    [1] https://dr2w.de/dx-propagation/
    [2] https://dr2w.de/dx-propagation/
    [3] https://bit.ly/42mbEtg
    [4] https://www.hzdr.de/db/Cms?pOid=63352&pNid=0&pLang=en
    [5] https://bit.ly/3ZUXm18
    [6] https://arxiv.org/abs/1610.03553
    [7] https://arxiv.org/abs/1901.10574
    [8] https://bit.ly/42kvVzp
    [9] https://youtu.be/gjrvLY-RU5Q
    [10] https://bit.ly/3liDO85
    [11] https://bit.ly/3JMJHnu
    [12] k7ra@arrl.net
    [13] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [14] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [15] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [16] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [17] http://k9la.us/
    [18] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, March 24, 2023 16:36:40
    03/24/2023

    Sunspot numbers were lower again this week, with the average
    declining from 143.6 two weeks ago to 118.7 last week and now 68
    this week. Average daily solar flux sank 8 points from 153.6 last
    week to 145.6.

    Six new sunspot groups emerged over the week, one on March 17,
    another March 18, three more on March 19, one more on March 21 and
    another on March 22.

    Predicted solar flux is 150, 145 and 145 on March 24-26, 150 on
    March 27-28, 145 and 150 on March 29-30, 138 on March 31 through
    April 1, then 136, 136 and 134 on April 2-4, 132 on April 5-7, 130
    on April 8-9, then 132, 135, 138, and 140 on April 10-13, 142 on
    April 14-15, 143 on April 16, 140 on April 17-18, 142 on April
    19-21, and 144 on April 22, 146 on April 23-24, 142 and 140 on April
    25-26, 138 on April 27-28, and 136 on April 29-30.

    Predicted planetary A index is 35, 30, 20, 15 and 10 on March 24-28,
    8 on March 29-30, then 18, 12, 12, 10 and 8 on March 31 through
    April 5, 5 on April 6-9, then 15, 12, 8 and 5 on April 10-13, 8 on
    April 14-15, then 12, 10, 5 and 5 on April 16-19, then geomagnetic
    unrest returns with 10, 36, 20, 10, 8 and 5 April 20-25, then 20,
    18, 12, 12 and 10 on April 26-30.

    On Thursday, Spaceweather.com reported, "The forecast did not call
    for this. During the early hours of March 23rd, a crack opened in
    Earth's magnetic field, and stayed open for more than 8 hours. Solar
    wind poured through the gap to fuel a strong G3-class geomagnetic
    storm."

    I watch this site frequently looking for disturbances when
    propagation seems odd:

    https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index[1]

    On Thursday it showed estimated planetary K index at 7, then
    dipping, and at 2100 UTC above 7. I noticed some very odd
    propagation. At 1900 UTC I called CQ on 10 meter FT8, and
    pskreporter.info showed I was only being heard in a small area in
    east Texas. Stations were concentrated between 1739 and 1892 miles
    in an area between Houston, San Antonio, Killeen and Nacogdoches.
    That was it! Heard nowhere else. I was running low power, using a
    simple end-fed one wavelength wire that is mostly indoors.

    Over the next half hour coverage extended east to Louisiana, then
    Alabama, then Georgia and South Caroline.

    At 1950 UTC I went to 15 meters, and noticed a similar oddity, this
    time with stations in an arc between 1510-2680 miles, bordered by
    N1AC in Florida, NT5EE in Texas, KI5WKB in Oklahoma and a station in
    North Carolina.

    A check again at 0050 UTC last night on 15 meter FT8 and
    pskreporter.info[2] showed for over and hour the only stations I was
    receiving were two Cubans, and the only stations hearing me were in
    an arc from Arizona to Alabama.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - March 23, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "If we were to assess solar activity in the last seven days by the
    number and size of sunspots, or by the number of energetic flares,
    it would not seem significant. Yet it was, but we only know that
    because of satellite observations. For example, NASA's SDO
    observatory recorded a dark plasma eruption at 0630 UTC on 17 March.

    "The speed of the solar wind began to increase on 21 March. Far more
    noticeable was a large coronal hole in the southern hemisphere of
    the Sun near the central meridian. The assumption of a strong solar
    plasma flow from its borders pointed to a probable disturbance on
    March 24.

    "But the flow was faster. We saw a really strong geomagnetic storm a
    day earlier, on March 23. During the morning hours, the
    concentration of free particles around the Earth began to rise
    rapidly, as a reliable precursor of the coming storm. The
    geomagnetic disturbance reached a planetary K index of 7 in the
    afternoon, so its intensity was rated G3.

    "Earth's ionosphere responded to the storm with an increase in MUF
    during 23 March. Since the disturbance should continue, albeit with
    less intensity, we expect initially below-average shortwave
    propagation conditions and then a slow return to average."

    Another great video from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/bG0zCbXukm4[3]

    This weekend is the CQ World-Wide SSB WPX Contest. See
    https://cqwpx.com[4] for info and rules. This is a big, fun contest in
    which callsign prefixes are the multiplier.

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[5]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[9] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[11] .

    Sunspot numbers for March 16 through 22, 2023 were 84, 58, 35, 73,
    75, 70, and 81, with a mean of 68. 10.7 cm flux was 135.4, 134.2,
    140.3, 142.7, 156.1, 151.6, and 158.9, with a mean of 145.6.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 8, 7, 8, 10, 13, 8, and 17, with
    a mean of 10.6. Middle latitude A index was 6, 7, 6, 8, 10, 8, and
    14, with a mean of 8.4.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index
    [2] http://pskreporter.info
    [3] https://youtu.be/bG0zCbXukm4
    [4] https://cqwpx.com
    [5] k7ra@arrl.net
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [10] http://k9la.us/
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, March 31, 2023 14:11:44
    03/31/2023

    Solar activity increased this week. Average daily sunspot number
    rose from 68 to 112.6, and average daily solar flux changed from
    145.6 to 156.1.

    A new sunspot group emerged on March 24, two more on March 26 and
    27, and three on March 29.

    Due to solar wind and a geomagnetic disturbance at the beginning of
    the reporting week, average daily planetary A index increased from
    10.6 to 23.3, while average middle latitude A index went from 8.4 to
    13.7. Many reports of aurora came in this week, some down to lower
    latitudes in North America.

    Predicted solar flux is 135 on March 31, 130 on April 1-6, 132 on
    April 7-8, then 130, 132, 135 and 135 on April 9-12, then 140, 145
    and 148 on April 13-15, then 150, 150, 155, 155 and 158 on April
    16-20, 160 on April 21-23, then 155, 145 and 145 on April 24-26, and
    135 on April 27 through May 1, then 132 on May 2-5, then 130, 132,
    135 and 135 on May 6-9.

    Predicted planetary A index is 18, 16, 12, 10 and 8 on March 31
    through April 4, then 5 on April 5-9, then 15, 12, 8 and 5 on April
    10-13, 8 on April 14-15, then 12, 20, 15 and 5 on April 16-19, then
    20, 15 and 10 on April 20-22, 8 on April 23-24, 5 on April 25-26,
    then 12, 15, 10 and 8 on April 27-30, and 5 on May 1-6, then 15, 12
    and 8 on May 7-9.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - March 30, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "The strong geomagnetic storm on 23-24 March was not expected.
    Moreover, it was classified as a G4, making it the most intense in
    almost 6 years. The source of the solar wind was not identified with
    certainty, but a large coronal hole in the south, near the central
    meridian, could not be missed.

    "As a consequence of the disturbance, the ionosphere first
    experienced a rise in the critical frequencies of the F2 layer on 23
    March, followed by a significant drop on 24-25 March. Their normal
    values started to be registered again only after 26 March.

    "Energetic flares are a reliable indicator of the increase in solar
    activity. On March 29, the seventh X-class flare of the year was
    registered. Yet a total of seven were registered in 2022 and only
    two in 2021.

    "Most of the sunspots are now on the western half of the solar disk.
    As they gradually set, total solar activity will first decrease over
    the next week before rising again."

    Here are articles about solar activity as an existential threat:

    https://bit.ly/3M28RQv[1]

    https://bit.ly/42W7xo4[2]

    https://bit.ly/40Qf6Lc[3]

    Nice sunspot video, before the aurora:

    https://bit.ly/3K2alHX[4]

    AA7FV wrote on March 25:

    "There was a 6-meter opening from Arizona to VK on March 24.ÿ I
    received VK7HH in Tasmania at 2028 UTC on WSPR; he was using just
    0.2 watts (200 mW)."

    VK7HH responded:

    "Yes, that WSPR spot was from my remote station running 200 mW from
    a Zacktek WSPR TX into a 1/2 wave vertical antenna. HASL 931m."

    AA7FV wrote:

    "For reference, my 50 MHz antenna is a Cushcraft 1/2-wave vertical,
    the Ringo AR6, with its base at about 10 feet above ground. The
    location here is 870m asl but I'm in the valley, just outside
    Tucson. The receiver is an ancient Icom PCR1000, but with a preamp.
    I monitor 6m 24/7, but rarely hear any signals at all, and when I do
    hear something it's usually from someone else in Arizona."

    On March 25, Jon, N0JK wrote:

    "Worked VP8NO in GD18 today on 6 Meter FT8 at 1905 UTC.ÿ de N0JK
    EM28 in Kansas."

    Jon was using a portable 2 element Yagi and running 50 watts.

    Here is an article about a "Hole" in the Sun:

    https://www.space.com/solar-flare-coronal-hole-space-weather[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[6]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[7] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[8] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[9] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[10] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[11] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[12] .

    Sunspot numbers for March 23 through 29, 2023 were 73, 108, 105,
    125, 128, 114, and 135, with a mean of 112.6. 10.7 cm flux was 151,
    157.5, 160.3, 159.4, 158.2, 158.7, and 147.8, with a mean of 156.1.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 60, 66, 15, 8, 3, 5, and 6, with
    a mean of 23.3. Middle latitude A index was 28, 40, 12, 6, 2, 4, and
    4, with a mean of 13.7.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3M28RQv
    [2] https://bit.ly/42W7xo4
    [3] https://bit.ly/40Qf6Lc
    [4] https://bit.ly/3K2alHX
    [5] https://www.space.com/solar-flare-coronal-hole-space-weather
    [6] k7ra@arrl.net
    [7] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [8] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [9] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [10] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [11] http://k9la.us/
    [12] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, April 07, 2023 23:38:34
    04/07/2023

    ÿAverage solar flux and sunspot numbers were way down this week. Sunspot numbers were down by half, from 112.6 last week to 53.4.ÿ Average daily solar flux declined from 156.1 to 132.5.ÿ

    Geomagnetic indicators were lower too.ÿ Average daily planetary A index from 23.3 last week to 15 in this bulletin, and average daily middle latitude A index from 13.7 to 11.7.

    The April 1 middle latitude A index of 11 is my guess.ÿ The middle latitude A index for April 1 was not available.

    Predicted solar flux is 140 on April 7 and 8, 135 on April 9 to 11, 140, 145 and 130 on on April 12 to 14, 130 on April 14, 135 on April 15 to 17, 140 on April 18 to 20, 135 on April 21 to 23, then 130, 125 and 120 on April 24 to 26, 115 on April 27 to 29, 125 on April 30, 120 on May 1 and 2, 115 on May 3 and 4, then 110 on May 5 to 7, and 115, 120, 125 and 130 on May 8 to 11, then 135 on May 12 to 14, and 140 on May 15 to 17.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5 on April 7 to 10, then 8, 8 and 5 on April 11 to 13, 8 on April 14 and 15, then 12, 10 and 15 on April 16 to 18, then 5, 20, 15 and 10 on April 19 to 22, 5 on April 23 to 25, then 15 and 18 on April 26 and 27, 15 on April 28 and 29, 8 on April 30, 10 on May 1 and 2, 8 on May 3, then 5 on May 4 to 6, then 12, 10, 8 and 5 on May 7 to 10, 8 on May 11 and 12, then 10, 12, 15, 5 and 20 on May 13 to 17.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere -- April 6, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "On March 29, another solar flare of category X1.2 was observed.ÿ It came from the AR3256 sunspot group near the southwestern limb of the Sun.

    This year, in just three months, we've already seen seven X-class flares, the same as all of last year.ÿ There are still about two years to go before the cycle peak.

    On the morning of March 31, a solar wind stream hit Earth, triggering a minor G1-class geomagnetic storm.ÿ A relatively quiet weekend followed.

    Then new sunspot group AR3270 emerged in the southern part of the solar disk.ÿ It grew rapidly, its two dark cores, larger than Earth, indicating an unstable magnetic field.ÿ If they merge an eruption would likely follow.ÿ It would probably be a geoeffective eruption because the sunspot was directly opposite the Earth.

    After the AR3270 sunspot group dips behind the southwestern limb of the solar disk this weekend, there should be a temporary drop in overall solar activity, accompanied by a string of geomagnetically quieter days.

    As the irregular occurrence of higher geomagnetic activity results in irregular changes in shortwave propagation conditions, the subsequent evolution should be more regular and predictable."

    This video from Tamitha Skov came out right after last week's bulletin:

    https://youtu.be/F8ERhLiOK88[1]

    More sun fun: ÿ

    https://youtu.be/VWhhSWjDJtw[2] ÿ

    https://bit.ly/41aolq2[3] ÿ

    Don't worry: ÿ

    https://bit.ly/3zCtg74[4]

    On April 5 from 1723 to 1746 UTC, Tom, WA1LBK in Fall River, Massachusetts copied HC1MD/2 in Ecuador on 6 meter FT8.ÿ Check HC1MD on QRZ.com for some beautiful photos by Rick, NE8Z.

    https://bit.ly/3zBm5wa[5] ÿ

    This weekend is the CW portion of the Japan International DX Contest.

    See http://jidx.org/[6]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[7] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[8] and the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[9] .ÿ For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[10] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[11] .ÿ More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[12] ÿ

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins .

    Sunspot numbers for March 30 through April 5, 2023 were 99, 61, 23, 54, 56, 44, and 37, with a mean of 53.4.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 140.3, 129.3, 125.3, 126.9, 133.6, 135.7, and 136.6, with a mean of 132.5. Estimated planetary A indices were 17, 21, 13, 15, 15, 13, and 11, with a mean of 15.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 11, 17, 11, 13, 11, 10, and 9, with a mean of 11.7.


    [1] https://youtu.be/F8ERhLiOK88
    [2] https://youtu.be/VWhhSWjDJtw
    [3] https://bit.ly/41aolq2
    [4] https://bit.ly/3zCtg74
    [5] https://bit.ly/3zBm5wa
    [6] http://jidx.org/
    [7] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [9] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [10] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [11] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [12] http://k9la.us/

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, April 14, 2023 16:49:48
    04/14/2023

    Solar activity was up for this reporting week, April 6-12.

    Seven new sunspot groups appeared, one on April 6, another on April
    9, two more on April 10, another on April 11, and two more on April
    12. Then on Thursday, April 13, three new sunspot groups emerged.
    The sunspot number rose to 154, the highest value in the past month.

    Average daily sunspot number rose from 53.4 to 70.6, and average
    daily solar flux increased from 132.5 to 141.

    On Thursday, the noon solar flux reading was 159.5 and was well
    above the average for the previous seven days, perhaps indicating an
    upward trend.

    Geomagnetic conditions were calm, with average daily planetary A
    index dropping from 15 to 7.6, and the middle latitude average from
    11.7 to 6.4.
    ÿ
    Predicted solar flux was 155 and 160 on April 13-14, and 165 on
    April 15-16.

    The Thursday prediction was well above that.

    Predicted solar flux is 168 on April 14-16, 165 and 160 on April
    17-18, 155 on April 19-22, 158 on April 23, 155 on April 24-25, then
    152, 148, 145 and 142 on April 26-29, 140 on April 30 and May 1, 142
    and 140 on May 2-3, 135 on May 4-5, then 130, 140, 145, 150, 152,
    155 and 158 on May 6-12, then 160 on May 13-15, and 150 and 152 on
    May 16-17, 155 on May 18-19, then 158, 155 and 155 on May 20-22.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 12, 10 and 8 on April 14-17, 5 on
    April 18-20, then 8 and 10 on April 21-22, 5 on April 23-25, then 15
    and 18 on April 26-27, 15 on April 28-30, then 12 and 10 on May 1-2,
    8 on May 3-4, 5 on May 5-6, then 8, 10 and 8 on May 7-9, and 5 on
    May 10-13, then 10, 15 and 5 on May 14-16, 20, 15 and 10 on May
    17-19, and 5 on May 20-23.

    Spaceweather.com[1] released this news on Wednesday:

    "Evidence is mounting that Solar Cycle 25 might peak much earlier
    than expected. New research by a leading group of solar physicists
    predicts maximum sunspot activity in late 2023 or early 2024 with a
    peak that could be twice as strong as the previous solar cycle."

    Look in the Spaceweather archive for April 12-13 to read more.ÿ It
    is all explained in this scientific paper:

    https://bit.ly/41gZnW4[2]

    I noticed some very odd 10 meter propagation at 2000 UTC on April
    11. Running FT8 and a one wavelength end fed wire at my home in
    Seattle, the only stations that heard me according to
    pskreporter.info were one in New Zealand, another in Hawaii, and in
    North America, only 5 stations (NK5B, AD4ES, K4RMM, KB4FB and AA4CB)
    in Florida, all within a 200 mile strip from 2,512 to 2,712 miles
    from me. Checking again at 2015 UTC, it was still the same. It
    looked quite dramatic on the pskreporter.info map.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - April 13, 2023, from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "Relatively frequent C-class solar flares, sporadic M-class flares
    in one or two sunspot groups, and the appearance of two or three
    relatively small coronal holes - that's how the Sun looked between
    April 6 and 13.

    "The solar wind speed dropped to 340 km/s by April 9, rose
    significantly to 550 km/s on April 10, and then slowly dropped
    again. The Earth's magnetic field was unsettled on April 10, then
    mostly calm on the other days.

    "MUF values were slightly higher on 10 April. This was followed by
    11 April with irregular daily MUF and irregular occurrences of
    attenuation. Since 12 April onward there was a transition to a
    regular daily course of ionospheric parameters.

    "Now we can expect higher solar activity in the southern hemisphere.
    The rise should continue in the coming days at first. A slight
    decrease will follow after the weekend.

    "A slight increase in geomagnetic activity with consequent
    fluctuations in shortwave propagation conditions can be expected
    rather since the middle of next week."

    Here is a video about the Termination Event:

    https://youtu.be/wcJdNBow_5s[3]

    A story on NASA using AI to predict geomagnetic storms:

    https://bit.ly/3mws16y[4]

    Here is a story about Radio Blackout:

    https://bit.ly/3UCz8ar[5]

    Mike Mason, WB4MM in Daytona Beach, Florida wrote:

    "On April 9 2023 FT8 mode 12 meters beginning at 2254 UTC and ending
    at 2328 UTC I worked 12 JA stations plus 2 South Korean stations in
    a row. I was calling CQ AS WB4MM EL99.

    "My station has 100 watts to an attic 15M dipole. I believe the SFI
    at the time was 135. Not sure of the type of prop. This occurred
    within an hour of sunset at my QTH."

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[6]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[7] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[8] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[9] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[10] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[11] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[12] .

    Sunspot numbers for April 6 through 12, 2023 were 33, 38, 49, 52,
    92, 103, and 127, with a mean of 70.6. 10.7 cm flux was 137.1,
    136.3, 135.9, 140.3, 139.8, 143.4, and 154, with a mean of 141.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 8, 6, 6, 14, 6, and 4, with a
    mean of 7.6. Middle latitude A index was 7, 7, 5, 5, 11, 6, and 4,
    with a mean of 6.4.
    ÿ


    [1] http://Spaceweather.com
    [2] https://bit.ly/41gZnW4
    [3] https://youtu.be/wcJdNBow_5s
    [4] https://bit.ly/3mws16y
    [5] https://bit.ly/3UCz8ar
    [6] k7ra@arrl.net
    [7] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [8] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [9] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [10] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [11] http://k9la.us/
    [12] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, April 21, 2023 18:04:00
    04/21/2023

    Again this week sunspot numbers and solar flux were higher than the
    week before.

    Average daily sunspot numbers more than doubled, from 70.6 to 146.9,
    and average daily solar flux increased from 141 to 164.5. Both
    figures represent a substantial increase in solar activity.

    Planetary A index averages went from 7.6 to 8.1, while middle
    latitude A index advanced from 6.4 to 7.3.

    Three new sunspot groups emerged on April 13, one more on April 16,
    and another on April 17.

    Predicted solar flux over the next few weeks is 145, 140 and 135 on
    April 21-23, 130 on April 24-25, 125 on April 26-27, 160 on April
    28-29, 165 on April 30, 172 on May 1-3, 170 on May 4, 172 on May
    5-7, 178 on May 8, 182 on May 9-12, then 175, 178 and 170 on May
    13-15, 168 on May 16-17, 175 on May 18, then 172 on May 19-21, then
    168 and 162 on May 22-23, 160 on May 24-26, 165 on May 27, and 172
    on May 28-30.

    Predicted planetary A index is 20, 16, 12 and 8 on April 21-24, 5 on
    April 25-27, 15 on April 28-30, then 12 and 10 on May 1-2, 8 on May
    3-4, 5 on May 5-6, 12 on May 7, 5 on May 8-10, then 8 on May 11-12,
    5 on May 13-18, then 10, 8, 5 and 5 on May 19-22, 15 and 18 on May
    23-24, 15 on May 25-27, then 12 and 10 on May 28-29.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - April 20, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "Of the fifteen sunspot groups observed over the past week, AR3272
    and AR3282 were the source of most of the flares. Both had a
    beta-gamma magnitude configuration. 61 C-class flares and 4 M-class
    flares were observed.

    "The partial halo CMEs on 15 and 16 April were the source of
    particles that reached Earth on 18 April, when the solar wind speed
    increased abruptly at 1308 UTC and a geomagnetic disturbance
    developed.

    "A positive phase of the ionospheric disturbance was recorded on the
    afternoon of 18 April, followed by a negative phase on 19 April.
    This was followed on 20 April with a significant increase in f0F2
    and improved shortwave propagation conditions before noon UTC.

    "The outlook looks promising for the first half of May, when solar
    activity should increase further."

    Dan Handa, W7WA commented on the news last week about the current
    solar cycle reaching a peak earlier than predicted, perhaps by the
    end of this year.

    I told him I hoped it would not peak early, because I wanted to see
    several more years of increasing activity.

    Dan sent a very detailed graph of Solar Cycle 19 from 1954 to 1966,
    and wrote: "I have read, and more than once, a slow rise means a low
    sunspot max. The previous Solar Cycle 24 took five years to reach a
    relatively low maximum. A rapid increase can mean a high sunspot
    maximum. The granddaddy of our lifetime, Solar Cycle 19 peaked in
    three years!"

    I did not know this.

    In a subsequent message, Dan further commented:

    "There was a lot of short term variation in the Solar Cycle 19
    sunspot number, just like we're seeing now. From the graph the
    timing of the Solar Cycle 19 peak can be defined three different
    ways: the daily peak, the smoothed monthly peak or the smoothed
    yearly peak, take your pick."

    Another Solar Cycle 19? Many hams have dreamed of this for the past
    six decades.

    Dale, WB6MMQ reported that the solar images in the ARRL Letter with
    a preview of our Friday bulletin show a blank Sun. I wasn't sure
    what he was talking about, but now I realize this must be a stock
    image (not from me!) used in the Letter.

    I sent Dale links to some recent images from Spaceweather.com[1]:

    https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/20apr23/hmi1898.gif[2]

    https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/19apr23/hmi1898.gif[3]

    https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/18apr23/hmi1898.gif[4]

    https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/17apr23/hmi1898.gif[5]

    I hope this clears up the confusion.

    An odd correlation between an ancient epidemic and solar activity:

    https://bit.ly/3Lsqfxf[6]

    A story about a possible early Solar peak:

    https://www.space.com/sun-solar-maximum-may-arrive-early[7]

    A story about possible M-class solar flares:

    https://bit.ly/3KVc1n1[8]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[9]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[10] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[11] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[12] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for April 13 through 19, 2023 were 154, 153, 151,
    155, 162, 140, and 113, with a mean of 146.9. 10.7 cm flux was
    159.5, 171.3, 175.8, 177.8, 166.6, 153.2, and 147, with a mean of
    164.5. Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 7, 9, 4, 6, 13, and 12,
    with a mean of 8.1. Middle latitude A index was 5, 10, 8, 4, 6, 9,
    and 9, with a mean of 7.3.
    ÿ


    [1] http://Spaceweather.com
    [2] https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/20apr23/hmi1898.gif
    [3] https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/19apr23/hmi1898.gif
    [4] https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/18apr23/hmi1898.gif
    [5] https://www.spaceweather.com/images2023/17apr23/hmi1898.gif
    [6] https://bit.ly/3Lsqfxf
    [7] https://www.space.com/sun-solar-maximum-may-arrive-early
    [8] https://bit.ly/3KVc1n1
    [9] k7ra@arrl.net
    [10] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [11] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [12] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, April 28, 2023 16:18:02
    04/28/2023

    At 0134 UTC on April 27, The Australian Space Weather Forecasting
    Centre issued a geomagnetic disturbance warning:

    "An equatorial coronal hole is currently elevating solar wind
    speeds. Combined with the anticipated impact from a recent CME on
    April 27, geomagnetic activity is expected to be at G0-G1 levels
    over April 27-28, with a slight chance of an isolated period of G2."

    Solar and geomagnetic indicators moved in opposite directions this
    week. Average daily sunspot numbers over April 20-26 made a dramatic
    drop from 146.9 to 91.4, and average daily solar flux from 164.5 to
    139.4.

    Average daily planetary A index more than tripled from 8.1 to 26.9,
    while average middle latitude A index more than doubled from 7.3 to
    15.6.

    Solar wind and explosions caused all this grief.

    Spaceweather.com[1] reported that on April 21, a large magnetic
    filament on the Sun exploded, hurling debris toward Earth.

    Later they reported that on April 23 at 1737 UTC a CME hit Earth,
    sparking a severe G4-class geomagnetic storm. Aurora was visible as
    far south as southern New Mexico and Texas.

    The planetary K index went as high as 8 over April 23-24.

    Predicted solar flux over the next month is 135 on April 28-30, 140
    on May 1-2, 135 on May 3-4, 140 on May 5-6, thenÿ 145, 150, 155, 160
    and 165 on May 7-11, 170 on May 12-13, then 165, 160, 155, 150, 145
    and 140 on May 14-19, 135 on May 20-21, 130 and 125 on May 22-23,
    120 on May 24-25, then 125, 130 and 135 on May 26-28, 140 on May 29
    through June 2, then 145, 150, 155, 160, and 165 on June 3-7.

    Predicted planetary A index is 25, 16 and 12 on April 28-30, 8 on
    May 1-5, 12 and 10 on May 6-7, 8 on May 8-9, then 5, 5 and 12 on May
    10-12, 5 on May 13-15, 8 on May 16-17, 5 on May 18-22, then 15 and
    18 on May 23-34, and 15 on May 25-27, then 12 and 10 on May 28-29, 8
    on May 30-31, then 5, 5 and 12 on June 1-3, and 5 on June 4-6.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - April 27, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "The most important event of the last seven days was the solar flare
    on 21 April with a maximum at 1812 UTC (1744 - 1857 UT). It was a
    long duration event (LDE), accompanied by the ejection of a cloud of
    coronal plasma into space, at a location on the Sun where there is a
    high probability of the cloud hitting the Earth. It is therefore not
    surprising that all forecast centres agreed in predicting the
    impending disturbance.

    "The speed of the solar wind jumped up on 23 April at 1703 UTC,
    after which a geomagnetic disturbance began to develop. It was much
    stronger than expected (max K=8 and G4 instead of the expected K=6
    and G1-2). Auroras were observed with two maxima - in Europe on 23
    April mainly between 1900-2100 UTC and in North America on 24 April
    between 0300-0400 UTC.

    "Thereafter, propagation conditions deteriorated significantly,
    especially on 24-25 April, with one interesting variation of the
    evolution: the calming of the geomagnetic field on the morning of 25
    April UTC was followed by a further development of the disturbance
    with an albeit shorter but significant improvement. The return of
    the critical frequencies of the F2 layer and the improvement of
    shortwave propagation conditions toward the mean continued only
    slowly in the following days, as intervals of increased geomagnetic
    activity occurred daily. The lowest f0F2 were observed on the night
    of 23-24 April. The following night was slightly better."

    Rocky Riggs, W6RJK in Truckee, California wrote:

    "I was not very active until recently when I was introduced to POTA.
    The park I frequent the most would typically give me 40-60 contacts
    in a 2 hour period.

    "On Monday, the 24th, I went to the same park, and in 30+ minutes
    had no contacts and couldn't hear anyone either. I later found out
    that the solar storm was causing most of our radio problems. Until
    then, I had never considered much about solar flares, or how the Sun
    influences radio propagation. Now, finally, I'm trying to learn as
    much as I can. The K7RA Solar Update in the ARRL Newsletter is
    FANTASTIC, and will be my source going forward to help me learn and
    understand.

    "Here's my question.ÿ Is there a 'real time' place where I can go to
    determine if a particular band has good propagation (I typically use
    20m and 40m)?

    "You know, like before I go out and get all set up and it's a 'goose
    egg.'"

    I replied:

    "I recommend pskreporter.info[2], and look on the map screen for FT8
    signals from your grid square and where they are heard. You don't
    have to use FT8 to use this.

    "You can also check for the 'country of callsign' option with your
    own or any callsign.ÿ When I do this for 10 meters, this week it has
    been showing no propagation from my area, but lots of 10 meter
    propagation in the south and across the east coast.

    "I use FT8 a lot to study propagation."

    Angel Santana, WP3GW in Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico wrote:

    "Been doing a lot of FT8 these months. More DXpeditions are
    including its operation.ÿ Just last week on April 16th at 1939 UTC
    worked VU7W and in WARD April 18th T30UN at 0721 on 40m and 0735 on 30m, the two ATNOs."

    (I think WARD refers to World Amateur Radio Day, and of course ATNO
    refers to All Time New One, something I did not know until a few
    years ago. -K7RA)

    "But on the 20th, at 0800 UTC, saw stations on 10 meters, normally
    you do not hear them on any mode at that time. Then I began to call
    them and a few from Europe contacted me. Then at about 0845 UTC,
    'poof' they disappeared.

    "These are the things that make me say that it is because of the
    'crazy prop' (la propa loca)."

    Tomas Hood, NW7US has a monthly propagation column in CQ Magazine,
    which is a great resource. In the March issue he writes about the
    promising progress of Solar Cycle 25.

    Another great resource is Chapter 19, the "Propagation of Radio
    Signals" in the 2023 100th edition of the ARRL Handbook. It contains
    the most comprehensive treatment of radio propagation I have ever
    seen and goes on for 38 pages.

    Aurora observed in China:

    https://bit.ly/41KyY3w[3]

    Aurora in Iowa:

    https://bit.ly/3Nlvy2S[4]

    An article explaining aurora:

    https://bit.ly/3n7ROm2[5]

    A Science & Tech article about Sun science:

    https://bit.ly/429Sqq9

    From 2017, a NASA sunspot video:

    https://www.exploratorium.edu/video/nasa-life-sunspot[6]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[7]. When reporting observations, don't forget to
    tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[8] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[9] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-Earth-the-ionosphere[10] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[11] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[12] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[13] .

    Sunspot numbers for April 20 through 26, 2023 were 97, 114, 87, 86,
    88, 87, and 81, with a mean of 91.4. 10.7 cm flux was 147, 151.2,
    141.2, 135.2, 133.9, 130.7, and 136.5, with a mean of 139.4.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 5, 9, 7, 66, 76, 10, and 15, with
    a mean of 26.9. Middle latitude A index was 5, 8, 6, 32, 39, 7, and
    12, with a mean of 15.6.
    ÿ


    [1] http://Spaceweather.com
    [2] http://pskreporter.info
    [3] https://bit.ly/41KyY3w
    [4] https://bit.ly/3Nlvy2S
    [5] https://bit.ly/3n7ROm2
    [6] https://www.exploratorium.edu/video/nasa-life-sunspot
    [7] k7ra@arrl.net
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [9] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [10] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-Earth-the-ionosphere
    [11] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [12] http://k9la.us/
    [13] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, May 12, 2023 23:53:54
    05/12/2023

    We saw a modest increase in solar activity in this reporting week, May 4-10.

    Average daily sunspot numbers nudged up from 114 to 119.3, and average daily solar flux from 151.5 to 167.1 ÿ

    Average daily planetary A index changed from 13.6 to 15.1, and average middle latitude A index remained the same, 11.9.

    Predicted solar flux is 160 on May 12-13, then 155, 150 and 150 on May 14-16, 145 on May 17-18, 155 on May 19-21, 150 on May 22, 145 on May 23-25, then 140 and 145 on May 26-27, 155 on May 29-30, 160 on May 31 through June 1, 155 on June 2-3, 160 on June 4-7, then 165, 160, 150, 145 and 150 on June 8-12, and 155 on June 13-17. ÿ

    Predicted planetary A index is 30, 12 and 8 on May 12-14, 5 on May 15-22, then 12 and 20 on May 23-24, 15 on May 25-26, 10 on May 27-28, 8 on May 29, 5 on May 30 through June 1, then 16, 12, 16 and 12 on June 2-5, 8 on June 6-8, and 5 on June 9- 18, then 12 and 20 on June 19-20.

    Stormy space weather: ÿ

    https://www.space.com/sun-reverse-sunspot-auroras-supercharge[1] .

    BBC on viewing aurora: ÿ

    https://www.sciencefocus.com/news/northern-lights-may-2023-backward-sunspot/[2]

    More: ÿ

    https://bit.ly/44Rruxk[3] ÿ

    Jon, N0JK wrote on May 9: ÿ

    "Good 6 Meter Es, TEP May 7 FT8 from northeast Kansas. ÿ

    I worked CX2AQ and LU5FF from home with an attic dipole on FT8. This around 2115 UTC. Not strong, but solid contacts. I then set up portable.

    Worked CE2SV and CE3SX. CE3SX called me, also FT8. Had difficulty keeping yagi up due to gusty winds. On ON4KST Dale, CE2SV noted: ÿ

    00:11:46 N0JK Jon, A struggle on my side, wind blew antenna down several times and broke director. Duct tape to the rescue. ÿ

    00:11:07 N0JK Jon (CE2SV) Dale - Thank you for the contact. ÿ

    22:42:46 CE2SV Dale (N0JK) Finally Jon ... TU ÿÿ

    Gary, N0KQY observes there is a 'consistent time frame' for Es -- TEP to South America from the Midwest. Best seems to be 2000-0000 UTC." Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere May 12-18, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH. ÿ

    "The more vivid and complex solar activity is, the less predictable it is. The same is valid for its effects in the Earth's magnetosphere and ionosphere. ÿ

    This was particularly true of the solar flares of May 4 and 5, and also of the G2 class geomagnetic storm with auroras. The CMEs overlapping each other were difficult to separate. ÿ

    Another CME that struck the Earth on May 7 (1544 UTC) was expected but, contrary to predictions, did not cause a significant storm. Another Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) hit the Earth on May 9 at 2310 UTC. ÿShortly before, AR3296 (with reversed magnetic polarity and thus violating Hale's law) released a double solar flare. ÿ

    The consequence was the Dellinger effect (a shortwave fade) up to 25 MHz from 1900-2100 UTC. Another CME followed with a velocity of over 1,000 km/s (2.24 million mph). Shock waves at its leading edge accelerated protons to nearly the speed of light, making them 'relativistic particles', for which time passes more slowly. They can reach the Earth and affect the ionosphere. ÿ

    These lines are written on the afternoon of 11 May UTC, when the particles from the eruption of 9 May with a maximum at 1858 UTC are expected to arrive. ÿ

    Large AR3296 and AR3297 will set behind the northwestern edge of the solar disc in a few days. In the meantime, AR3301 and AR3302 emerged in the northeast. ÿ

    Helioseismological observations indicate another large sunspot group will follow them out. Therefore, the current variable nature of the evolution with numerous disturbances will continue." ÿ

    Five days ago from Dr. Tamitha Skov: ÿ

    https://youtu.be/E1lBqqWEa5Q[4] ÿ

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[5] . When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating. ÿ

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] and the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] .ÿ For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see

    http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[9] ÿ. More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10] . ÿ

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[11] . ÿ

    Sunspot numbers for May 4 through 10, 2023 were 139, 90, 99, 99, 103, 151, and 154, with a mean of 119.3. 10.7 cm flux was 162, 161.9, 151.8, 157.2, 171.9, 194.7, and 170.1, with a mean of 167.1. Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 5, 30, 9, 16, 14, and 26, with a mean of 15.1. Middle latitude A index was 7, 4, 21, 8, 13, 11, and 19, with a mean of 11.9.


    [1] https://www.space.com/sun-reverse-sunspot-auroras-supercharge
    [2] https://www.sciencefocus.com/news/northern-lights-may-2023-backward-sunspot/
    [3] https://bit.ly/44Rruxk
    [4] https://youtu.be/E1lBqqWEa5Q
    [5] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [10] http://k9la.us/
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, May 19, 2023 19:08:07
    05/19/2023

    This reporting week, May 11-17, average daily sunspot number was
    nearly the same as last week, 118.6 compared to 119.3, only
    marginally lower.

    But average daily solar flux dropped from 167.8 to 143.2.

    Geomagnetic indicators were quieter, both planetary and middle
    latitude A index at 9.6. Last week the two numbers were 15.1 and
    11.9, respectively.

    What is the outlook for the next few weeks?

    10.7 cm solar flux is forecast to have a peak of 165 on June 8.

    The predicted numbers are 145 on May 19, 140 on May 20-21, 135 on
    May 22-24, 140 on May 25-26, 145 on May 27, 155 on May 28-30, 160 on
    May 31 and June 1, 155 on June 2-3, 160 on June 4-7, then 165, 160,
    150, 145, and 150 on June 8-12, then 155 on June 13-17, 150 on June
    18, 145 on June 19-21, 140 and 145 on June 22-23, and 155 on June
    24-26 then 160 on June 27-28.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 8, 12, 15 and 5 on May 19-23, 12
    on May 24-25, 15 on May 26, 10 on May 27-28, 8 on May 29, 5 on May
    30 through June 1, then 16, 12, 16 and 12 on June 2-5, 8 on June
    6-8, then 5 on June 9-18, 12 and 20 on June 19-20, 15 on June 21-22,
    10 on June 23-24, 8 on June 25, and 5 on June 26-28.

    These numbers are updated daily here:

    https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/text/45-day-ap-forecast.txt[1]

    Thanks to reader David Moore for this:

    "How 1,000 undergraduates helped solve an enduring mystery about the
    Sun:

    "https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/05/230509122026.htm[2]

    "For three years at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, a group of
    students spent an estimated 56,000 hours analyzing the behavior of
    hundreds of solar flares. Their results could help astrophysicists
    understand how the Sun's corona reaches temperatures of millions of
    degrees Fahrenheit."

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - May 18, 2023, from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "On May 12, we expected a CME impact from the flare on the evening
    of May 9. It was indeed registered - at 0635 UTC the geomagnetic
    storm began. However, it was weaker than expected, of G1 class.

    "On 13 May at 1915 UTC, an unexpected CME impact followed for a
    change, which again triggered another G1 class geomagnetic storm.

    "On 16 May, we expected another smaller CME. The particle cloud has
    been slowly approaching Earth since the magnetic filament eruption
    in the southern hemisphere of the Sun on 12 May.

    "The next solar flare on May 16, with a maximum at 1643 UTC, was
    M9.6 class. It came from a sunspot group still hiding behind the
    southeastern limb of the Sun. In fact, it may have been an X flare,
    partially obscured by the solar horizon. Yet it caused the strong
    Dellinger effect (shortwave fade) over North America. After the
    sunspot group came out on the solar disk, we could observe it as AR
    3310. It's about three times wider than Earth, and its magnetic
    configuration promises more flares.

    "Not only was solar flare activity quite high, but the Sun was
    hurling so many CMEs into space that hardly a day went by without
    one hitting Earth. Therefore, the frequency of geomagnetic storms
    was also higher, followed by frequent deterioration of shortwave
    propagation conditions. In summary, the 25th solar cycle continues
    to evolve nicely."

    Frank, VO1HP sent this from St. Johns, Newfoundland:

    "On May 12 1957-2113 UTC, there was a strong 6M Es opening into mid
    South America. Logged 20 stations using FT8. No CW or SSB heard.
    Stations worked at VO1HP remote station: LU3CQ, CE3SX, 2SV, LI7DUE,
    9AEA, 9DO, 1FAM, 8EX, CX3VB, PP5BK, LU2DPW, CX1VH, PU3AMB, CX6VM, LU3FAP, XQ3SK, XQ3MCC, CE3VRT, 3SOC, and LU5FF.

    "Antenna 4el Yagi at 35ft overlooking ocean. K3 + PR6, KPA500
    KAT500. Other VO1s seen: VO1CH, VO1SIX, and VO1AW."

    On April 24, Rocky Riggs, W6RJK in Truckee, California wrote:

    "I was not very active until recently when I was introduced to POTA.
    The park I frequent the most would typically give me 40-60 contacts
    in a 2 hour period.

    "On Monday, April 24th, I went to the same park, and in 30+ minutes
    had no contacts and couldn't hear anyone either. I later found out
    that the solar storm was causing most of our radio problems. Until
    then, I had never considered much about solar flares, or how the Sun
    influences radio propagation. Now, finally, I'm trying to learn as
    much as I can. The K7RA Solar Update in the ARRL Newsletter is
    FANTASTIC and will be my source going forward to help me learn and
    understand.

    "Here's my question.ÿ Is there a 'real time' place where I can go to
    determine if a particular band has good propagation (I typically use
    20m and 40m)?

    "You know, like before I go out and get all set up and it's a 'goose
    egg.'"

    As I first reported in Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP017, I told
    him that a very useful tool (to use) is to check real time
    geomagnetic indices with this:

    https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index[3]

    Nice quiet conditions show a planetary A index at 1 or 2, unsettled
    conditions at 3, then above 3 conditions are disturbed. The scale is logarithmic, so each point in either direction is important.

    Another approach is to use pskreporter at https://www.pskreporter.info/pskmap.html[4] which is handy if you live
    in a grid square that has many active hams, or a nearby grid that is
    more populated.

    You can check FT8 activity on any band. There is also a "Country of
    Callsign" selection so you can check activity across your nation of
    choice. Recently when I have raised nobody on 10 meter FT8 this
    option showed no activity here in the Pacific Northwest but plenty
    of 10 meter activity in the southeast United States.

    Here is a new video from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/xSQYjH6D_YA[5]

    NASA sunspot picture:

    https://bit.ly/458DrPw[6]

    A video of a recent eruption:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rm7M5pqjCgY[7]

    Here are articles about Radio Blackout:

    https://bit.ly/434c5bw[8]

    https://bit.ly/3pWId2e[9]

    https://bit.ly/45hXTxh[10]

    https://bit.ly/3MEkCwa[11]

    NASA warning of a Solar Storm threat:

    https://bit.ly/3pSK4p2[12]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[13]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[14] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[15] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[16] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[17] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[18] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[19] .

    Sunspot numbers for May 11 through 17, 2023 were 152, 134, 120, 109,
    103, 106, and 106, with a mean of 118.6. 10.7 cm flux was 163.4,
    149.1, 143.8, 139.7, 134.5, 134.3, and 137.9, with a mean of 143.2.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 19, 13, 8, 6, 8, and 4, with a
    mean of 9.6. Middle latitude A index was 10, 15, 12, 9, 6, 10, and
    5, with a mean of 9.6.

    ÿ


    [1] https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/text/45-day-ap-forecast.txt
    [2] https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/05/230509122026.htm
    [3] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index
    [4] https://www.pskreporter.info/pskmap.html
    [5] https://youtu.be/xSQYjH6D_YA
    [6] https://bit.ly/458DrPw
    [7] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rm7M5pqjCgY
    [8] https://bit.ly/434c5bw
    [9] https://bit.ly/3pWId2e
    [10] https://bit.ly/45hXTxh
    [11] https://bit.ly/3MEkCwa
    [12] https://bit.ly/3pSK4p2
    [13] k7ra@arrl.net
    [14] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [15] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [16] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [17] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [18] http://k9la.us/
    [19] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, May 26, 2023 22:50:42
    05/26/2023

    Both average daily sunspot numbers and solar flux increased this week.ÿ Average daily sunspot numbers rose from 118.6 to 133.4, while average solar flux went from 143.2 to 161.2.

    Geomagnetic indicators were more active.ÿ Average daily planetary A index went from 9.6 to 17.1, while average middle latitude A index rose from 9.6 to 14.4.

    Predicted solar flux is 150 on May 26, 155 on May 27 and 28, then 150, 145, 140 and 135 on May 29 through June 1, 155 on June 2 to 4, then 160, 165, 160, 155, and 150 on June 5 to 9, 145 on June 10 and 11, 150 on June 12, 155 on June 13 and 14, 160 on June 15, 165 on June 16 and 17, then 160, 155 and 150 on June 18 to 20, 155 on June 21 and 22, then 160, 165 and 160 on June 23 to 25, 155 on June 26 and 27, 150 on June 28, and 155 on June 29 to July 1, then 160, 165 and 160 on July 2 to 4.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15, 8, 5, 12 and 10 on May 26 to 30, 5 on May 31 through June 1, then 16, 8, 10 and 8 on June 2 to 5, 5 on June 6 to 15, then 12, 10, 5, 18, 22, 15 and 10 on June 16 to 22, 5 on June 23 to 28, then 16, 8, 10 and 8 on June 29 through July 2, and 5 through the first week of July.

    "Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere - May 25, 2023

    We've seen another seven days of turbulent developments on the Sun and around the Earth.ÿ The large, seen even without binoculars (e.g., eclipse glasses) visible sunspot group AR3310 in the southern hemisphere was the source of the strongest flare on May 16 with an X-ray event maximum of M9.6.

    Another group AR3311 in the north, due to its unstable magnetic field configuration "beta-gamma-delta", produced almost all the other flares.ÿ The stronger ones were the cause of Dellinger events (SWF = Shortwave fadeout, in the case of M9.6 it was registered in the whole shortwave range in the region where the Sun was high).

    Moreover, the eruptions, combined with sporadic E layer, often significantly affected the propagation in the lower shortwave bands by deep and irregular fadeouts.

    SOHO recorded a rare conjunction on May 21, when a filament near the Sun's north pole was ejected as a CME in direction to the Pleiades, Seven Sisters star cluster.ÿ Coronagraph on SOHO has been operating since 1995 and was the first to operate in real time.ÿ No one had ever seen anything like it before.

    Since May 24, we observed a new and rapidly growing group of spots, AR3315, in which we can expect more major solar flares as time goes on.ÿ So the turbulent evolution with changing and often worsening shortwave propagation conditions continue.

    F. K. Janda, A.R.S. OK1HH"

    K7EG wrote:

    "I have been in the DX hobby since 1950 and seem to see an increasing, alarming recent trend in solar and geomagnetic activity impacting trends in radio disturbances.ÿ Tell me I am wrong and it's just a 'blip' but solar activity seems beyond the norm and worsening."

    I replied that with greater solar activity we should expect more flares, solar wind, and disturbances.ÿ I think the disturbances are normal and expected with the rising solar cycle.

    When I suspect conditions are disturbed, this is where I check to see what is happening in real time:

    https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index[1]

    Beautiful aurora:ÿ https://tinyurl.com/2zxdmpu6[2]

    Sunspot images:ÿ https://tinyurl.com/muaakxn9[3]

    https://www.popsci.com/science/sun-images-powerful-solar-telescope/[4]

    https://bit.ly/3MCqAwm[5]

    Thanks to NO6ED for this story about an undersea volcano disrupting the ionosphere.ÿ https://bit.ly/428OAwM[6]

    This weekend is the CQ World Wide WPX CW Contest.

    https://www.cqwpx.com/rules.htm[7]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[8]. ÿÿWhen reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[9] ÿand the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[10] . For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[11] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[12] ÿ.ÿ More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[13]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[14] .

    Sunspot numbers for May 18 through 24, 2023 were 121, 155, 138, 140, 97, 130, and 153, with a mean of 133.4.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 150.6, 164.6, 169.6, 163.4, 161.5, 154.9, and 164.1, with a mean of 161.2. Estimated planetary A indices were 3, 9, 35, 28, 21, 12, and 12, with a mean of 17.1.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 8, 10, 26, 19, 17, 11, and 10, with a mean of 14.4.


    [1] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index
    [2] https://tinyurl.com/2zxdmpu6
    [3] https://tinyurl.com/muaakxn9
    [4] https://www.popsci.com/science/sun-images-powerful-solar-telescope/
    [5] https://bit.ly/3MCqAwm
    [6] https://bit.ly/428OAwM
    [7] https://www.cqwpx.com/rules.htm
    [8] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [10] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [11] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [12] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [13] http://k9la.us/
    [14] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, June 02, 2023 18:14:10
    06/02/2023

    Average daily solar flux values dropped over the past week, but
    sunspot numbers were nearly the same, comparing May 25 to 31 to the
    previous week.

    Average daily solar flux declined from 161.2 to 155.3. Geomagnetic
    indicators were quieter, with average daily planetary A index
    declining from 17.1 to 7.3, and middle latitude numbers from 14.4 to
    7.9.

    Predicted solar flux is 160 on June 2, 155 on June 3-4, 150 on June
    5-8, 130 on June 9-11, then 135, 140, 143, 145, and 150 on June
    12-16, 155 on June 17-20, 150 on June 21-25, then 145, 140 and 135
    on June 26-28 and 130 on June 29 to July 8.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15, 12, 10 and 8 on June 2-5, 5 on
    June 6-17, then 22, 15, 12 and 10 on June 18-21, 5 on June 22-24, 12
    and 10 on June 25-26, then 5 on June 27-28, then 15, 12, 15, 10 and
    8 on June 29 through July 3, then 5 on July 4 through the middle of
    the month.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - June 1, 2023 from OK1HH:

    "The Sun still surprises us, it has been in the habit for billions
    of years, but we only observe it for a few hundred years. So, we
    have a right to be surprised by what it is doing and what we can
    observe with instruments on satellites and powerful solar telescopes
    on Earth, including the largest four-metre one on the island of Maui
    in Hawaii, which can see the very fine structures of sunspot nuclei.

    "What's more, we're seeing spots on the far side of the Sun that are
    so big, they affect the vibration of the whole Sun. But we can only
    see their structure and predict possible flares after they appear on
    the eastern limb of the solar disk, which was not at all the case
    with the current most active AR3315, which did not appear there. It
    emerged later, thereafter began to grow rapidly.
    ÿ
    "Conversely, the source of the next big flare was hidden behind the southeastern limb, and we only saw the prominence above it.

    "Meanwhile, the larger groups of sunspots have mostly moved to the
    western half of the solar disk. A large coronal hole in the southern
    hemisphere now crosses the central meridian. This increases the
    likelihood of geomagnetic disturbances starting on June 2."

    Mike, AK7ML wrote:

    "I recall in a movie about Pearl Harbor that they could not reach
    Hawaii from stateside on HF and then they sent the message by cable
    telegraph in routine status, so Pearl was not informed of the attack
    in time.

    "For years I have been able to work Australia in the morning and now
    it is Indonesia that is workable instead!"

    A story about a big sunspot:

    https://www.fox9.com/news/giant-sunspot-ar3310-visible-earth[1]

    I've added information from this resource to the text appearing at
    the bottom of every propagation forecast bulletin (this resource
    comes from September 2002 QST):

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[2]

    I was sad to learn that old friend Chip Margelli, K7JA became a
    Silent Key on May 25. Chip was from the Seattle area, and first came
    to my attention when he became proficient in the Japanese language
    during high school, then specialized in running JA stations at the
    old Rush Drake, W7RM contest station on Foulweather Bluff in Puget
    Sound.ÿ At one time he may have been the most famous American ham in
    Japan, or so I heard at the time.

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[3]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[4] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[5] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[6] .

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[7] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[8] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[9] .

    Sunspot numbers for May 25 through 31, 2023 were 121, 127, 125, 119,
    153, 144, and 147, with a mean of 133.7. 10.7 cm flux was 152.1,
    149, 156.9, 151.3, 154.4, 162, and 161.4, with a mean of 155.3.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 11, 6, 4, 11, 4, 5, and 10, with
    a mean of 7.3. Middle latitude A index was 11, 6, 5, 11, 5, 6, and
    11, with a mean of 7.9.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.fox9.com/news/giant-sunspot-ar3310-visible-earth
    [2] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [3] k7ra@arrl.net
    [4] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [5] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [6] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [7] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [8] http://k9la.us/
    [9] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, June 09, 2023 18:29:02
    06/09/2023

    Solar activity was up this week, with the average daily sunspot
    number increasing from 133.7 to 139, and average daily solar flux
    from 155.3 to 166.8.

    Average daily planetary A index stayed the same at 7.3, and average
    middle latitude A index went from 7.9 to 8.6.

    Predicted solar flux doesn't show any improvement, with peaks at 170
    on June 23-25 and July 20-21.

    The forecast shows solar flux at 168, 163, 157, 160, 157, 153, 160
    and 150 on June 9-16, 155 on June 17-20, then 160 and 165 on June
    21-22, 170 on June 23-25, then 168, 165 and 162 on June 26-28, 160
    on June 29 through July 4, then 155, 150 and 145 on July 5-7, then
    140, 135, 140, 143, 145 and 150 on July 8-13, and 155 on July 14-17.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 5, 10 and 8 on June 9-12, 5 on
    June 13-17, then 22, 15, 12 and 10 on June 18-21, 5 on June 22-26,
    then 10, 12, 5 and 5 on June 27-30, then 8, 12 and 8 on July 1-3,
    and 5 on July 4-7, then 10, 12 and 8 on July 8-10, and 5 on July
    11-14, then 22. 15. 12 and 10 on July 15-18.

    In some previous bulletins I was reporting 10 meter propagation
    observed with FT8 only into Florida from my QTH in Seattle, and also
    into Mexico at a similar distance.

    Recently on 10 meters I am seeing propagation into VK/ZL, and in
    North America mostly into Southern California, Nevada, Utah and
    Arizona. Some seasonal variation, I suppose.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - June 8, 2023 from OK1HH:

    "In the last seven days, solar activity has remained at a slightly
    elevated level, with daily C-class flares and a few M-class flares.
    This, together with the decrease in geomagnetic activity, has
    resulted in a gradual increase in the daily maximum of the highest
    usable frequencies of the F2 ionospheric layer. At the same time,
    however, the attenuation in the lower ionospheric layers grew, which
    manifested as earlier morning closures and later evening openings of
    the longer shortwave bands.

    "Particle clouds from CMEs during solar flares mostly did not reach
    Earth - with one exception: on 7 June at 2224 UTC, the solar wind
    speed jumped from 340 to 380 km/s. For a short time, the Earth's
    magnetic field activity increased, usually only to K=3.

    "The situation was further complicated by the sporadic-E layer,
    whose season is approaching its peak.

    "Inhomogeneities (non-uniformities) in the sporadic-E layer appeared
    quite frequently and extended reflections were observed in the
    ionograms.

    "As a consequence, the scattering of electromagnetic waves was as
    well manifested as attenuation. We are talking about the ionosphere
    of the northern hemisphere of the Earth. Here we will wait for the
    improvement when Summer ends there -ÿ which fortunately will be much
    earlier than Summer ends in the troposphere."

    While searching for something else, I ran across this article from
    the RSGB:

    http://bit.ly/45TjWuA[1]

    Mike, W9NY wrote:

    "Having lived through multiple sunspot cycles since I was first
    licensed in 1955, I cannot believe that 10 meters is nearly dead,
    and 15 meters is minimally open. Nothing on 6 meters either.

    "I discussed this with my cousin who is an astrophysicist at Oxford
    who basically said, 'there are a lot of factors.' I'm just wondering
    what our ham radio gurus think. I would have expected phenomenal
    propagation but there is very little. Might this be related to
    atomic/chemical changes in the Earth's ionosphere?"

    I offered the WA4TTK Solar Data Plotting Utility as a record of
    sunspot and solar flux data going back to 1989.

    It can be updated weekly with a plain text file of the latest
    propagation bulletin.

    The data file can then be imported to any spreadsheet program for
    analysis and custom graphing.

    http://www.craigcentral.com/sol.asp[2]

    A new video from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/-ElKuld9xW8[3]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[4]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[5] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[6] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[7] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[8]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[9] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins
    [11]
    Sunspot numbers for June 1 through 7, 2023 were 143, 147, 112, 110,
    151, 133, and 177, with a mean of 139. 10.7 cm flux was 163.9,
    162.3, 164.6, 168.3, 169.2, 171.8, and 167.2, with a mean of 166.8.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 13, 5, 5, 11, 5, 7, and 5, with a
    mean of 7.3. Middle latitude A index was 14, 8, 5, 11, 6, 10, and 6,
    with a mean of 8.6.

    ÿ


    [1] http://bit.ly/45TjWuA
    [2] http://www.craigcentral.com/sol.asp
    [3] https://youtu.be/-ElKuld9xW8
    [4] k7ra@arrl.net
    [5] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [6] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [7] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [8] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [9] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [10]
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, June 16, 2023 15:00:01
    06/16/2023

    At 2256 UTC on June 16 the Australian Space Weather Forecast Centre
    issued a geomagnetic warning: "The solar wind speed on UT day 15-Jun
    has increased as the Earth entered a coronal hole wind stream after
    15/0545UT. Increased geomagnetic activity is expected for 16-Jun
    with isolated periods of G1-Minor level activity."

    Earlier in the day I checked the NOAA planetary K index page, and it
    showed a jump from K index of about 1.8 at 1200 UTC to about 4.1 at
    1500 and again at 1800 UTC, then about 4.5 at 2100 UTC and 5.5 at
    0000 UTC on June 16. At 0300 UTC it was down a bit to 5.

    See, https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index[1] .

    Solar activity declined this week, with average daily sunspot
    numbers dropping from 139 to 122, while average daily solar flux
    decreased from 166.8 to 154.8. This compares the current reporting
    week of June 8-14 against the previous seven days.

    Average daily planetary A index decreased from 7.3 to 5.7, and
    average daily middle latitude A index from 8.6 to 6.7.

    On June 14 Spaceweather.com[2] reported two new sunspot groups emerging across the Sun's southeastern horizon.

    Forecasters Cundiff and Trost of the U.S. Air Force 557th Weather
    Wing predict solar flux at 155 on June 16-17, 160 on June 18-19,
    then 155, 160 and 165 on June 20-22, 170 on June 23-25, then 168,
    165 and 162 on June 26-28, 160 on June 29 through July 4, 165 on
    July 5, 170 on July 6-8, then 155, 157, 153 and 160 on July 9-12,
    150 on July 13-14, 155 on July 15-17, then 160 and 165 on July
    18-19, and 170 on July 20-22.

    Predicted planetary A index is 18, 12 and 8 on June 16-18, 5 on June
    19-20, 8 on June 21-22, 5 on June 23-26, 12 on June 27-28, 5 on June
    29-30, then 12 and 8 on July 1-2, 5 on July 3-7, 12 on July 8-10,
    then 5, 5, and 12 on July 11-13, and 10 on July 14-15, and 5 on July
    16-23.

    These predictions look great for ARRL Field Day, which is June
    24-25. Why? Solar flux peaks at 170 on June 23-25, and the predicted
    planetary A index is a nice quiet 5 on June 22-26. Next week we will
    present an updated forecast just prior to Field Day weekend.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere June 16 - June 22, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "The first half of June was quieter than May, both on the Sun and in
    the Earth's magnetosphere and ionosphere.

    "However, helioseismic maps of the far side of the Sun showed a
    number of large active regions, probably sunspots. We therefore
    expected an increase in activity. But that's not likely to happen
    until a week from now.

    "Even so, there were some rather unexpected eruptions of moderate
    magnitude during the local midday, which triggered a SWF (Shortwave
    Fading) that could have broken the QSO in the longer half of the
    shortwave band.

    "Meanwhile, we observed a coronal hole in the solar equator region
    that crossed the central meridian on June 12.

    "Associated with it is the co-rotating interaction region (CIR),
    which are the transition zones between the slow and fast solar wind
    streams. Since the accumulation of solar plasma in the solar wind
    results in structures that are similar to the arrival of a CME, we
    expected a geomagnetic storm on the evening of 15 June UTC. The
    estimate was quite accurate - the disturbance began at 1500 UTC.

    "We can expect the geomagnetic field to be active for a few more
    days, including smaller storms."

    K6LMN wrote:

    "It was great on 6m last weekend. I was only on SSB on 6m, but I
    understand it was open all over on FT8. I believe the openings were
    caused by summer E-skip, not F2. I worked many, many stations in
    your grid square. Roger K6LMN in DM04sb Los Angeles."

    He sent this to N0JK:

    "We on the West Coast were finally treated to some decent E-skip on
    6 meters SSB and CW (do not know about FT8). The June VHF Contest
    was just great Saturday and Sunday afternoons into early evening,
    Pacific Daylight time. Before this contest the band out here has
    been fairly quiet.

    "So briefly, I was K6LMN/Limited Rover in DM03ÿ DM04 all around LA.
    I had a tight schedule with many social engagements plus two
    funerals to attend. I could not get too serious with heavy artillery
    or going to 5,000+ ft. mountaintops. For 6m I simply used my Larsen
    5 ft. magmount on the car roof. The rig was my old IC-706IIG with
    only 90 watts SSB. I was also on 2m, 1-1/4m, and 70 cm.

    "Most DX contacts were on both days up to Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
    Montana, BC, and Alberta. But the surprise was Sunday early evening.
    Best 2 way DX was N9XG in EN60 (Indiana) and K9CT in EN50 (Illinois)
    with 1 hour to go before contest close. They were like 5 by 5 on
    peaks on SSB. I am sure all this big DX was double hop summer
    E-skip.

    "A surprise was VA6AN way up in Canada popping in/out on SSB with
    peaks up to 5 by 5 Sunday eve about 6:30 pm local time. However, the
    QRM was horrible (my whip is omnidirectional) so he did not work me.

    "I worked K7YO up in CN85 (his alternate QTH) and he said he was
    getting into Florida on SSB or CW or FT8 on 6M. Maybe triple hop
    E-skip?

    "I am unhappy that us West Coasters are not getting any F2 so far on
    6m in Solar Cycle 25. I am 85 years old, licensed in 1955 and was
    lucky to enjoy the all-time best F2 openings on 10m and 6m (AM) back
    in the Golden Days in 1956-1958 in Solar Cycle 19. Incredible!"

    N0JK sent a note on June 12 that he worked IK5YJY on 6 meter FT8. He
    also wrote: "6M Es all weekend and 2M Es Sunday eve for the ARRL VHF
    contest. By the way, you had a station (W9NY) comment about poor
    conditions on 6M in last week's bulletin. Last weekend was awesome.
    I made 3 JA contacts with 10w and a 3 el yagi from KS.

    "Today A71VV (Qatar) was in to Northeast KS around 1400z."

    Check out the images on the A71VV page on QRZ.com.

    Scotty, W7PSK sent a note on June 12 listing countries worked on 6
    meter FT8: Balearic Islands, France, Spain, England and Canada.

    An image of the International Space Station over a sunspot:

    https://bit.ly/3NgsByW[3]

    A video too:

    https://bit.ly/43Em3B1[4]

    A study of the Sun's coldest region:

    https://bit.ly/3X6ErQu[5]

    More sunspots.

    https://bit.ly/3Nt5Ys6[6]

    Another breathless warning from South Asia about flares:

    https://bit.ly/42Rt2FG

    This weekend is the 64th annual CW weekend of the All Asian DX
    Contest. See the JARL web site for rules:

    https://bit.ly/43GPrXq[7]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[8]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[9] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[10] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[11] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[12]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for June 8 through 14, 2023 were 149, 152, 116, 116,
    116, 98, and 107, with a mean of 122. 10.7 cm flux was 168.5, 164.3,
    161.2, 153.8, 146.1, 146.3, and 143.5, with a mean of 154.8.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 5, 4, 5, 9, 6, 6, and 5, with a
    mean of 5.7. Middle latitude A index was 6, 6, 4, 10, 8, 8, and 5,
    with a mean of 6.7.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/planetary-k-index
    [2] http://Spaceweather.com
    [3] https://bit.ly/3NgsByW
    [4] https://bit.ly/43Em3B1
    [5] https://bit.ly/3X6ErQu
    [6] https://bit.ly/3Nt5Ys6
    [7] https://bit.ly/43GPrXq
    [8] k7ra@arrl.net
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [10] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [11] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [12] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, June 23, 2023 16:31:17
    06/23/2023

    Sunspot numbers and solar flux rose this week. There were two new
    sunspot groups on June 15, another on June 17 and one more on June
    18, three more on June 19, two more on June 20 and another on June
    21.

    Average daily sunspot number increased from 122 to 143, and average
    daily solar flux rose from 154.8 to 165.4.

    Average daily planetary A index jumped from 5.7 to 15.4, while the
    middle latitude numbers increased from 6.7 to 13.1.

    Predicted solar flux is 180 on June 23-24, 185 on June 25-27, 180 on
    June 28, 175 on June 29 through July 1, 180 on July 2-3, 175 on July
    4-5, 170 on July 6-10, then 165 on July 11, 160 on July 12-13, 165
    on July 14-15, 160 and 155 on July 16-17, 160 on July 18-19, 165 on
    July 20-24, 170 on July 25, 175 on July 26-28, and 180 on July
    29-30.

    Predicted planetary A index is 14, 10 and 8 on June 23-25, then 5,
    5, and 12 on June 26-28, then 5, 5, and 12 again on June 29 through
    July 1, 8 on July 2, 5 on July 3-7, 12 on July 8, 5 on July 9-11,
    then a dramatic increase to 20 and 30 on July 12-13, 8 on July
    14-15, and 12 on July 16-17, 10 on July 18, 5 on July 19-23, 12 on
    July 24-25, 5 on July 26-27, 12 and 8 on July 28-29, and 5 on July
    30 through August 3.

    These predictions are from forecasters Liming and Dethlefsen of the
    US Air Force 557th Weather Wing at Offutt AFB.

    See https://bit.ly/3qRNJnr[1] .

    So, what does this forecast show for ARRL Field Day, which is this
    weekend?

    Geomagnetic numbers are a bit more unsettled than what was shown in
    last week's bulletin, which had an A index of 5 for Friday through
    Sunday. The latest shows 14, 10 and 8. Predicted solar flux looks
    excellent, at 180, 180 and 185.

    Of course, Field Day does not begin until Saturday, but here we also
    include data for the day prior.

    Here is a X1.1 solar flare video:

    https://bit.ly/3CI0OCA[2]

    Another report from South Asia regarding solar flares as some sort
    of existential threat.ÿ Don't worry. Nothing terrifying about what
    they report, but there is a nice description of what the SOHO
    observatory does.

    https://bit.ly/444VhSk[3]

    https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov[4]

    Reader David Moore shared this video:

    https://www.space.com/earth-sunlight-dance-solstice-video[5]

    Don't know why, but no weekly report from OK1HH this time around.

    On Thursday I attended an online event, the "Space Weather
    Enterprise Forum," thanks to a tip from K6PFA.

    Most of the sessions concerned threats from solar flares, but there
    was great commentary from Bill Murtaugh of NOAA's Space Weather
    Prediction Center.

    He noted that the current solar cycle should peak in summer 2024
    instead of 2025 and will peak much stronger than the consensus
    forecast from earlier in the cycle. He also noted that increased
    flare activity always occurs in the years following a sunspot cycle
    peak.

    John Dudley, Managing Director of Flight Operations at American
    Airlines gave an interesting presentation about how space weather
    affects routing of international flights.

    He mentioned their expert on space weather at the airline, and I
    looked him up. Yes, a ham, KC1ENP. Could not find an email address
    for him, so I sent a QSL card to make contact.

    Thanks to https://spaceweather.com/[6] for this fascinating article about setting up a personal space weather station.ÿ It is under the
    heading, "A New Way To Detect Solar Flares":

    https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/15/1403/2023/[7]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[8]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[9] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[10] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[11] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[12]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for June 15 through 21, 2023 were 112, 120, 110,
    133, 181, 155, and 190, with a mean of 143. 10.7 cm flux was 153.1,
    157.2, 158.1, 164.1, 168.8, 180.1, and 176.4, with a mean of 165.4.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 24, 38, 8, 10, 10, 10, and 8,
    with a mean of 15.4. Middle latitude A index was 17, 24, 8, 12, 9,
    13, and 9, with a mean of 13.1.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3qRNJnr
    [2] https://bit.ly/3CI0OCA
    [3] https://bit.ly/444VhSk
    [4] https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov
    [5] https://www.space.com/earth-sunlight-dance-solstice-video
    [6] https://spaceweather.com/
    [7] https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/15/1403/2023/
    [8] k7ra@arrl.net
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [10] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [11] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [12] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, June 30, 2023 17:01:40
    06/30/2023

    Space Weather News sent this alert on June 29:

    "BIG SUNSPOT ALERT: One of the biggest sunspots in years is directly
    facing Earth. AR3354 is 10 times wider than Earth and about 1/3rd
    the size of the historical Carrington sunspot. It's so big,
    observers in Europe and North America are seeing it naked eye
    through the smoke of Canadian wildfires. Earth-directed flares are
    likely in the days ahead."

    See spaceweather.com[1] for continuing coverage.

    Conditions were favorable over the Field Day weekend, with the
    exception of a brief period when the planetary K index rose to 5 on
    Saturday night. This is mentioned in the commentary by OK1HH which
    follows.

    There were five new sunspot groups on June 23, two more on June 24,
    another on June 26 and another on June 27.

    Average daily sunspot numbers were up, and solar flux was down.

    Average daily sunspot number rose from 143 to 170, and average daily
    solar flux declined slightly from 165.4 to 160.3.

    This is unexpected, because we normally see these values track
    together.

    Predicted solar flux is 150 on June 30 through July 5, 155 on July
    6, 135 on July 7-8, then 145, 155, 160, 165 and 170 on July 9-13,
    175 on July 14-18, 170 on July 19-21, then 160, 150, 145, 145, 140
    and 135 on July 22-27, then 130 on July 28 through August 1, 135 on
    August 2-4, then 145, 155, and 165 on August 5-7. Flux values may
    continue to rise to a peak of 175 before mid-August.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 15 and 10 on June 30 through July
    2, 5 on July 3-7, 12 and 8 on July 8-9, 5 on July 10-11, then a
    stormy 20 and 30 on July 12-13, 8 on July 14-23, 12 on July 24-25, 8
    on July 26-27, 12 on July 28-29, 8 on July 30, 5 on July 31 through
    August 3, 12 and 8 on August 4-5, 5 on August 6-7, then 20 and 30
    again on August 8-9. Note that recurring stormy conditions are
    predicted at one solar rotation, which is about 27.5 days, following
    the July 12-13 prediction.

    The above predictions are from forecasters Thompson and Kiser at the
    USAF space weather group.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere June 30 to July 06, 2023 from F.K. Janda OK1HH.

    "In the solar X-ray field during June we could observe the most
    significant solar flare so far: X1 in the active region AR3341. It
    happened on June 20 at 1709 UTC near the southeastern limb of the
    solar disk. In the region where the Sun was high, it caused the
    Dellinger Effect, https://bit.ly/3NA61kT .

    "The same sunspot group was also the source of the M4.8 flare two
    days later. It ejected a CME, but not toward Earth.

    "Nevertheless, its passage close to Earth probably caused an
    increase in geomagnetic activity on the evening of 24 June.
    Theoretically, it could also have been a CME from the X1 eruption of
    20 June.

    "On June 26, we were surprised by sunspot group AR3354 just above
    the solar equator and east of the central meridian. It did not exist
    the day prior. Over the next two days its area grew to ten times the
    size of the Earth, making it easily observable by the naked eye.

    "Significantly, its magnetic configuration changed to
    beta-gamma-delta, which is enough energy for powerful solar flares.

    "The geomagnetic field has been quiet to unsettled so far.

    "AR3354 will be pointed directly toward Earth in the next few days,
    so it looks like the next disturbance could begin on July 1. And of
    course, a possible large flare could cause a Dellinger Effect
    throughout the whole HF spectrum."

    Pat, W5THT wrote:

    "I have been an active ham since 1956 and on the Mississippi coast
    since 1971. This year has strengthened my belief in an old
    observation.
    ÿ
    "There is/was a dome of high pressure that moved from over Texas to
    now over me. Before it moved east, I was able to take part in the 6
    meter propagation to Europe.

    "Since it moved over me, the DX Maps page shows a gap in the DX
    propagation from northern Florida to central Louisiana.ÿ This is not
    the first time I have seen it happen, but the new generation of TV
    weather persons presented a picture of the dome of high pressure
    that coincided with my propagation observations. Suspicions
    confirmed?

    "Years ago, on 2 meters I noticed that propagation followed weather
    fronts up the east coast. Thanks for reading this and perhaps
    someone younger than me has already done the research."

    Jon Jones, N0JK wrote:

    "Wow -- a surprise opening on 6 meter FT8 to Brazil June 25!

    "A CME impact at 1900 UTC may have boosted the TEP MUF Sunday
    afternoon. That and some help with sporadic-E -- opening to Brazil
    on 6 meters from North America during the summer.

    "Had been out with our dog. Saw WQ0P PSK flags for PY2XB. Turned on
    radio at home with dipole. PY2XB was loud. Really loud. Also copied
    PY5CC. He spotted me as well, but no QSO. PY2XB in for almost half
    an hour. Like a pipeline. Saw him work a few 5s and 0s. KC0CF worked
    CE2SV. With higher solar activity, the TEP zone still works even in
    our summer. This mode works for D2UY (Angola), 3B9FR (Rodrigues
    Island in Indian Ocean), and ZL."

    An article on Solar Cycle 25 peak and nice images:

    https://bit.ly/3ps6iOI[2]

    Understanding Space Weather: A Glossary of Terms:

    https://bit.ly/3XuimeQ[3]

    "Astro Bob" on that big sunspot:

    https://bit.ly/46rC3YU[4]

    Frequent contributor David Moore shared this fascinating article
    comparing the current big sunspot with the one that launched the
    infamous Carrington Event 164 years ago.

    https://bit.ly/3CUGZYC[5]

    Another Solar Cycle article:

    https://bit.ly/3XvIk1y[6]

    Yet another Carrington Event article:

    https://bit.ly/3XuSe3o[7]

    Article about Solar max:

    https://bit.ly/44jM5tP[8]

    A Houston Chronicle article on solar max:

    https://bit.ly/445vtWf[9]

    Flares and how they are measured:

    https://bit.ly/3prvtRs[10]

    A video from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW, from last week:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfXz9nk6NDs[11]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[12]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[13] and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[14] . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[15] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[16]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[17] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[18] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[19] .

    Sunspot numbers for June 22 through 28, 2023 were 176, 194, 200,
    180, 158, 141, and 141, with a mean of 170. 10.7 cm flux was 173.2,
    169.7, 160.8, 154.8, 157.7, 151.2, and 154.9, with a mean of 160.3.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 8, 9, 16, 15, 11, 8, and 8, with
    a mean of 10.7. Middle latitude A index was 8, 9, 16, 10, 11, 7, and
    8, with a mean of 9.9.

    ÿ


    [1] http://spaceweather.com
    [2] https://bit.ly/3ps6iOI
    [3] https://bit.ly/3XuimeQ
    [4] https://bit.ly/46rC3YU
    [5] https://bit.ly/3CUGZYC
    [6] https://bit.ly/3XvIk1y
    [7] https://bit.ly/3XuSe3o
    [8] https://bit.ly/44jM5tP
    [9] https://bit.ly/445vtWf
    [10] https://bit.ly/3prvtRs
    [11] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfXz9nk6NDs
    [12] k7ra@arrl.net
    [13] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [14] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [15] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [16] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [17] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [18] http://k9la.us/
    [19] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, July 07, 2023 23:41:03
    07/07/2023

    The average daily sunspot number for June, 2023 was the highest in 21 years, according to Spaceweather.com.

    From a July 3 email alert from Spaceweather.com:

    "SUNSPOT COUNTS HIT A 21-YEAR HIGH:ÿ It's official:ÿ The average sunspot number in June 2023 hit a 21-year high.ÿ Solar Cycle 25 has shot past its predecessor, Solar Cycle 24, and may be on pace to rival some of the stronger cycles of the 20th century."

    Could we see another Cycle 19, the biggest in recorded history, even back before the birth of radio?

    Not too long ago, we heard that this cycle should peak in summer 2025.ÿ Later that was revised to 2024.ÿ Now I am seeing occasional references to a cycle peak at the end of this year. ÿ

    From my own records, average daily sunspot numbers for April through June 2023 were 93.7, 125.8 and 143.9, a nice upward trend.

    Some popular news outlets seem confused by the difference between sunspot number and number of sunspots, and have quoted another higher average.

    Here is the difference.ÿ If they are just counting the total number of sunspots for the month, this is far different from average daily sunspot numbers.ÿ The sunspot number is somewhat subjective, but it gets ten points for each sunspot group, and one point for each sunspot in those groups.

    But I stand by my numbers.ÿ They are all from NOAA and appear at the end of each bulletin.

    But they may be referencing International Sunspot Number, which may be different from the SESC numbers from NOAA.

    Here is an example of confusing sunspot numbers with number of sunspots: https://bit.ly/3NCQCAl[1]

    This one is also confusing, saying there were 163.4 sunspots in June. https://bit.ly/3PMu6Ym[2]

    But what does this mean?ÿ It could be either 163 or 164 sunspots, but not a fractional number, unless it expresses an average.ÿ The minimum sunspot number is 11.ÿ This would be one sunspot group containing one spot.ÿ They are always whole, not fractional integers.

    There was one new sunspot region (group) on June 30, three more on July 1, one more on July 2, another on July 4, and one more on July 5.

    Sunspot and solar flux data again this week did not track together. Average daily sunspot number declined from 170 to 126.1, while average daily solar flux rose slightly from 160.3 to 164.5.

    Geomagnetic indicators were lower, with average daily planetary A index declining from 10.7 to 7.3, and middle latitude averages from 9.9 to 8.

    Predicted solar flux is 155 on July 7, 150 on July 8 to 10, then 155 on July 11, 160 on July 12 to 13, 175 on July 14 to 18, 170 on July 19 to 21, 160 on July 22 and 23, 155 on July 24 and 25, 160 on July 26 and 27, 165 on July 28 and 29, then 170, 170 and 165 on July 30 through August 1, 155 on August 2 to 6, then 160, 165 and 170 on August 7 to 9, and 175 on August 10 to 14.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 12 and 8 on July 7 to 9, 5 on July 10 and 11, then 20 and 30 on July 12 and 13, 8 on July 14 to 22, 5 on July 23 to 30, 8 on July 31 through August 1, then 5 on August 2 to 4, 12 and 8 on August 5 and 6, then 5, 20 and 30 on August 7 to 9, and 8 on August 10 to 18.

    Note those big numbers are about one solar rotation apart, which is about 27.5 days.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere for July 6, 2023 from F. K. Janda, OK1HH.ÿ When the current 25th solar cycle began in December 2019, solar astronomers thought it would be a weak cycle similar to its immediate predecessor, solar cycle 24.ÿ But now we have a twenty-one year peak.ÿ And we expect a continued increase for about two more years.

    The misfortune is that ongoing global changes are reducing the ionization rate of the ionosphere.ÿ Yet the current conditions for shortwave or decameter wave propagation do not match the amount of solar activity - they are worse.

    But that's not all.ÿ Not only is solar cycle 25 likely to rival some of the more powerful cycles of the 20th century, but we're likely to see even more powerful solar flares and magnetic storms.ÿ History repeats itself cyclically, and we need only think of the great Halloween storm of 2003, including the strongest solar flare ever recorded in X-ray (X45).

    The giant sunspot group AR3354 (only about four times smaller than the giant sunspot group of early September 1859) made its last appearance on July 2 with an X-class flare.ÿ Two days later it eclipsed.

    We won't lose the source of the stronger flares, however - the growing AR3359, with its Beta-Gamma magnetic configuration, crossed the central meridian toward active western longitudes on July 6 and will continue to grow.ÿ With its predicted higher activity, we could see an increase in the Earth's magnetic field activity as early as the middle of next week.

    Tamitha Skov, from July 1.ÿ https://youtu.be/HR8mm30oxOQ[3]

    Blackoutÿ http://bit.ly/46tTRT8ÿ https://bit.ly/3rhbjdz[4]

    Stormy weekend?ÿ https://bit.ly/3pDrT6R[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] and the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] .ÿ For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see

    http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[9]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive- propagation .ÿ More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[11]

    Sunspot numbers for June 29 through July 5, 2023 were 112, 187, 119, 126, 117, 121, and 101, with a mean of 126.1.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 162.2, 158.6, 165.5, 170.2, 173.2, 167.2, and 154.6, with a mean of 164.5.ÿ Estimated planetary A indices were 17, 8, 5, 5, 5, 4, and 7, with a mean of 7.3.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 13, 8, 6, 8, 7, 5, and 9, with a mean of 8.


    [1] https://bit.ly/3NCQCAl
    [2] https://bit.ly/3PMu6Ym
    [3] https://youtu.be/HR8mm30oxOQ
    [4] https://bit.ly/3rhbjdz
    [5] https://bit.ly/3pDrT6R
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [10] http://k9la.us/
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, July 14, 2023 23:35:52
    07/14/2023

    ÿ"GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING ISSUED AT 0713UT/13 JULY 2023 BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

    A glancing CME impact is expected late on 13-July and another CME impact is expected early on 15-July. These impacts present the possibility of geomagnetic storm activity over 13-15 July."

    We saw a welcome rise in solar activity this reporting week, July 6-12. Referencing the previous seven days, average daily sunspot numbers rose from 126.1 to 181.9, while average daily solar flux increased from 164.5 to 179.4. On July 13 the solar flux was 202.9, well above the average for the previous seven days.

    Geomagnetic indicators did not change much, average planetary A index going from 7.3 to 8.6 and average daily middle latitude A index from 8 to 8.1.

    The most active day was July 7 when University of Alaska's college A index was 40.ÿ The middle latitude A index on that day was only 11. The college A index is from a magnetometer in Fairbanks.

    What is the outlook for the next month?

    Predicted solar flux looks great over the next few days, at 200, 202, 198, 200, and 204 on July 14-18, 202 on July 19-21, 160 on July 22-23, 155 on July 24-25, 160 on July 26-27, 165 on July 28-29, 170 on July 30-31, 165 on August 1-4, 170 on August 5, 175 on August 6-7, 170 on August 8, then 165 on August 9-11, 170 on August 12, 175 on August 13-14, 170 on August 15-17, and 160 on August 18-19.

    Predicted planetary A index is 10 on July 14, 5 on July 15 through August 2, then 10, 8 and 5 on August 3-5, then 8, 8, 5, 8 and 8 on August 6-10, 5 on August 11 through the end of the month.

    On July 12, Spaceweather.com reported: ÿ

    "A new hyperactive sunspot is producing M-class solar flares every few hours. This is causing shortwave radio blackouts around all longitudes of our planet. If current trends continue, an X-flare could be in the offing."

    See Spaceweather.com for updates.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere July 14-20, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "Over the past week, we were surprised by two large groups of spots that appeared on the eastern limb of the solar disk.

    The first of these, AR3363, emerged in the southeast. Although it remained large, there was nothing significant going on. Its opposite was AR 3372 a few days later, which produced moderate-sized flares almost daily.

    In both cases, helioseismic echoes from the sun's far side suggested that it may be the leading edge of a large active region.

    But there was no indication that these would be areas with a diametrically different type of activity.

    The images of the two groups of spots were large enough to be observed by the Mars rover Perseverance. Because of Mars' position, it saw them a few days earlier than a terrestrial observer. For the record: Perseverance observes the Sun daily, but mainly so that it can tell from the drop in brightness that a Martian dust storm is approaching.

    AR3372 activity is increasing, while on July 11 and 12 several M-class solar flares (some with CMEs) have already occurred (X-class flare appeared to be imminent). In particular, it was almost certain that the Earth's magnetic field activity would increase in the following days. The probability of magnetic storms increased significantly as AR3372 rotated more and more toward the Earth."

    Carl, K9LA had comments on the OK1HH report from last week.ÿ "There have been many papers in recent years that have looked at the trends in ionospheric parameters over the past decades. Although the changes are small, they do show up in ionosonde data after much math to eliminate solar activity and geomagnetic field activity. These results show both positive and negative trends in the F2 region electron density, likely due to neutral atmosphere dynamics and electrodynamics that could give regional differences.

    An interesting paper in 2008 Geophysical Research Letters modeled the increased levels of CO2 (global warming) in the atmosphere versus the impact on the ionosphere.

    See: https://bit.ly/3OaThCC[1]

    They used 2000 as the baseline with 365 ppmv of CO2, and doubled the amount of CO2 for the year 2100. Their results showed that electron densities in the E and F1 region would increase a couple percent in 2100 while the height of the E region peak would decrease a couple km. In the F2 region, the electron density would decrease by several percent in 2100 while the height of the F2 region would decrease 10 or so km."

    Thanks to reader David Moore for this, on aurora hype:

    https://bit.ly/44ovzsh[2]

    Flare video (with music.)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aghiHieqCZQ[3]

    Huge sunspot:ÿ https://bit.ly/44EcqTz[4]

    Tamitha Skov reports:ÿ https://youtu.be/nwtCBH04bIg[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] ÿand the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] . For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8]

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[9]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[10] . More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[11]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[12]

    Sunspot numbers for July 6 through 12, 2023 were 149, 147, 167, 183, 181, 227, and 219, with a mean of 181.9. 10.7 cm flux was 157.6, 161.4, 160.5, 179.2, 190.6, 213.5, and 193.3, with a mean of 179.4. Estimated planetary A indices were 11, 18, 8, 4, 5, 8, and 6, with a mean of 8.6. Middle latitude A index was 11, 16, 6, 4, 6, 8, and 6, with a mean of 8.1. ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3OaThCC
    [2] https://bit.ly/44ovzsh
    [3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aghiHieqCZQ
    [4] https://bit.ly/44EcqTz
    [5] https://youtu.be/nwtCBH04bIg
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [10] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [11] http://k9la.us/
    [12] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Monday, July 31, 2023 22:10:57
    07/21/2023

    Average daily sunspot numbers declined, but average daily solar flux increased. Sunspot averages were 181.9 last week, and 130.6 this week.ÿ Average daily solar flux increased from 179.4 to 190.5.

    Two new sunspot groups emerged on July 14, three more on July 17 and another two on July 19.

    Average daily planetary and middle latitude A index were both 12.9 this week, rising from 8.6 and 8.1.

    Predicted solar flux is 185 on July 21-23, then 180, 178, 175 and 170 on July 24-27, 165 on July 28-29, 170 on July 30-31, 165 on August 1-4, then 170, 175, 175 and 170 on August 5-8, 165 on August 9-11, 170 on August 12, 175 on August 13-14, and 170 on August 15-19, 160 on August 20-23, 165 on August 24-25, then 170 on August 26-27 and 165 on August 28-31.

    Predicted planetary A index is 20, 12, 8, 12 and 10 on July 21-25, 5 on July 26 through August 2, then 10 and 8 on August 3-4, 5 on August 5-14, then 12, 8 and 8 on August 15-17, and 5 on August 18-29.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere for July 20, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "We've seen another seven days of mostly moderate solar activity, with almost daily eruptions of moderate magnitude on the Sun.ÿ Some of these have been the source of CMEs.ÿ If the Earth has been affected by them, a geomagnetic disturbance followed, with a drop in MUF and a worsening of HF propagation in the process.

    As predicted, the expected CME hit the Earth's magnetic field on the afternoon of 14 July (as part of the Bastille Day celebrations, but not nearly as strongly as in 2000).

    Another CME left the Sun on 14 July, and yet another on July 15. Because the cloud of later ejected solar plasma was faster, it cannibalized the previous CME.ÿ Together, they hit the Earth on July 18.

    But by then AR3363 had already produced a significant long-lasting M6-class solar flare, and energetic protons accelerated by this flare reached the Earth and caused a radiation storm.ÿ Although MUFs were quite high, HF conditions were adversely affected by frequent occurrences of attenuation.

    Another CME hit the Earth on 20 July, registered by the Earth's magnetic field at 1708 UTC.

    Further developments were predicted up to G1 to G2 class geomagnetic storms, with a small probability also of G3, but by then this report will have been completed and sent out.

    Finally, just a little note on the consequences of global change: it has been manifested in the last eleven-year cycles, in the Earth's troposphere it is the result of warming, but in the ionosphere it is rather the opposite.ÿ It has been the subject of a number of scientific papers in recent years.

    It is crucial for us, for amateur radio practice, that the current MUFs are lower than those calculated from sunspot counts for most of the twentieth century.ÿ Therefore, we should input Ri (or solar flux SFU) into forecast programs lower than what is currently measured and published.

    F.K. Janda, A.R.S. OK1HH http://ok1hh.nagano.cz/[1] ÿ"

    News from N8II in West Virginia.

    "The bands are in much better shape than most hams realize; activity levels are normally quite low this summer.ÿ In the IARU contest I observed 15M open to Europe through 0300 UTC and I had QSOs with Indonesia, China, Nepal, Japan, Central/Western Siberia, Kazakhstan, and the Philippines in the 2300-0300 UTC period.ÿ I copied GR2HQ (Great Britain HQ station) on 10M CW at 0140 UTC.ÿ At 1100 UTC on 15M EU and Central/West Asia were very loud and I started running a pile up on CW.

    The Far East was also in on 15M around 1400 UTC Saturday when I worked a loud Japanese station.

    During the evening/night EU signals were extremely loud on 20M.ÿ I also worked a few EU on 10M 1300-1400 UTC Saturday thanks to Sporadic E and also caught Z30HQ (Macedonia HQ) on 10M CW Sunday about 1130 UTC.ÿ I worked 697 QSOs concentrating on DX on the high bands in less than 12 hours with 100 W.

    Africa is workable on 10-15M well into our evening as are South Pacific stations.

    Sporadic E this year seems somewhat attenuated, but Es was good from here and great from the Central/Western USA during the June VHF contest.ÿ I made about 170 CW/SSB QSOs."

    CNN presented a smart piece on the sunspot cycle peaking sooner than expected. https://bit.ly/3rzNJJ6[2]

    Double peaked flare.ÿ https://bit.ly/46ZoznE[3]

    Astronomy club observes sunspots.ÿ https://bit.ly/46SaacR[4]

    Aurora.ÿ https://bit.ly/44FxM2U[5]

    Scientific American.ÿ https://bit.ly/3rHzGkB[6]

    Early peak.ÿ https://bit.ly/44Aa7AF[7]ÿhttps://bit.ly/3rEa0Wj[8]

    Cannibal eruption.ÿ https://bit.ly/3Q5dv1W[9]

    Great video of eruption.ÿ https://youtu.be/YOzHHM4B4gA[10]

    The latest from Space Weather Woman Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW.

    https://youtu.be/KsKDVOuboyw[11]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[12] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[13] ÿand the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[14] ÿ.ÿ For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see

    http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[15] ÿ.

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[16]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at

    http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[17] ÿ. More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[18]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[19]

    Sunspot numbers for July 13 through 19, 2023 were 146, 141, 96, 99, 149, 142, and 141, with a mean of 130.6.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 202.9, 180.6, 178.5, 184.3, 180, 218.5, and 188.9, with a mean of 190.5. Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 20, 8, 10, 24, 16, and 5, with a mean of 12.9.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 9, 17, 9, 13, 19, 16, and 7, with a mean of 12.9.


    [1] http://ok1hh.nagano.cz/
    [2] https://bit.ly/3rzNJJ6
    [3] https://bit.ly/46ZoznE
    [4] https://bit.ly/46SaacR
    [5] https://bit.ly/44FxM2U
    [6] https://bit.ly/3rHzGkB
    [7] https://bit.ly/44Aa7AF
    [8] https://bit.ly/3rEa0Wj
    [9] https://bit.ly/3Q5dv1W
    [10] https://youtu.be/YOzHHM4B4gA
    [11] https://youtu.be/KsKDVOuboyw
    [12] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [13] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [14] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [15] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [16] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [17] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [18] http://k9la.us/
    [19] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Monday, July 31, 2023 22:10:58
    07/28/2023

    ÿAverage daily sunspot numbers declined slightly over the past week (July 20-26) to 128.1, compared to 130.6 over the previous seven days.

    Average daily solar flux declined significantly from 190.5 to 172.2.

    The solar flux forecast sees values at 165 and 162 on July 28-29, 158 on July 30-31, then 155 on August 1-3, then 165, 170 and 175 on August 4-6, 180 on August 7-10, 175 on August 11-13, 180 on August 14-15, 175 on August 16-18, 170 on August 19, then 165, 165 and 160 on August 20-22, and 155 on August 23-26, 160 on August 27, 165 on August 28-30, 170 and 175 on August 31 through September 1, and 180 on September 2-6.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5 on July 28-29, 15 and 10 on July 30-31, 5 on August 1-3, 8 on August 4, 5 on August 5-9, 10 on August 10, 8 on August 11-13, 5 on August 14-19, then 10, 8 and 5 on August 20-22, 12 on August 23-24, 10 on August 25-26, 5 on August 27-29, 10 and 8 on August 30-31, and 5 on September 1-5.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere -- July 27, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "The likelihood of more massive solar flares has slowly decreased in recent days as large groups of spots have fallen behind the western limb of the solar disk and the magnetic configuration of the ÿremaining regions has become increasingly simple over the past few days.

    On July 20 and 21, two CMEs struck Earth's magnetic field in accordance with the prediction. However, both impacts were weak and did not produce even a minor geomagnetic storm.

    Another weak halo CME was expected to leave the Sun on 23 July at about 1530 UTC in a C5 class flare in spot group AR3376, coinciding with the outburst of a relatively nearby magnetic filament. The Earth's magnetic field detected its arrival at 0200 UTC on 26 July. The result was an increase in geomagnetic activity and a deterioration of shortwave propagation conditions. The disturbance actually started on 25 July at 2235 UTC, but it was not clear whether it was an early arrival of the same CME or another one that we did not detect.

    Note: since I will be abroad next week, I will not post the next comment on August 3, but on August 10."

    Sunspots, flares and aurora.ÿ https://bit.ly/44JxcRp[1]

    Mars Rover sees the far side of the sun.ÿ https://bit.ly/3KbRV8b[2]

    Rocket punches hole in ionosphere.ÿ https://bit.ly/3KceBFB[3]

    Nearly five decades ago I witnessed the same thing, viewed from Marin County, California. It was a huge dramatic display, My friend had seen it before, and said it was created by a rocket launch from Vandenberg AFB in Southern California.

    Another CME.ÿ https://bit.ly/44LhRjx[4]

    On July 27, Spaceweather.com sent this alert:

    "A STRONG FARSIDE CME JUST HIT SOLAR ORBITER: Europe's Solar Orbiter just got hit by the kind of CME that may have once caused a major power blackout on Earth. This time, Earth was not in the line of fire. It was a farside eruption that flew away from our planet. Maybe next time?"

    Massive flare?ÿ https://bit.ly/3Ya7OSC[5]

    Latest from Dr. Tamitha Skov.ÿ https://youtu.be/cD5VbWvBXsE[6]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[7] . When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[8] ÿand the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[9] . For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[10]

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[11]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[12] . More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[13]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[14]

    Sunspot numbers for July 20 through 26, 2023 were 131, 121, 103, 117, 141, 137, and 147, with a mean of 128.1ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 184.3, 172.8, 174.4, 172.5, 165.1, 169, and 167.4, with a mean of 172.2. Estimated planetary A indices were 10, 13, 9, 6, 7, 11, and 21, with a mean of 11. Middle latitude A index was 10, 11, 9, 5, 8, 12, and 23, with a mean of 11.1.


    [1] https://bit.ly/44JxcRp
    [2] https://bit.ly/3KbRV8b
    [3] https://bit.ly/3KceBFB
    [4] https://bit.ly/44LhRjx
    [5] https://bit.ly/3Ya7OSC
    [6] https://youtu.be/cD5VbWvBXsE
    [7] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [8] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [9] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [10] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [11] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [12] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [13] http://k9la.us/
    [14] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Saturday, August 19, 2023 00:51:09
    08/18/2023

    Eleven new sunspot groups emerged over the past week, August 10-16, but average solar indicators declined.

    There were two new sunspots groups on August 11, three more on August 13, another on August 14, two more on August 15, and three more on August 16. On August 17 another new one appeared.

    But average daily sunspot numbers declined from 108.9 to 95.7, while average daily solar flux dropped from 166.4 to 154.2.

    Predicted solar flux is 150, 155, and 157 on August 18-20, 160 on August 21-22, then 162, 165, 162, 160 and 164 on August 23-27, 168 on August 28-31, then 165, 163 and 160 on September 1-3, then 158, 155, 152 and 150 on September 4-7, and 148, 142, 140 and 130 on September 8-11, 135 on September 12-14, and 145, 150, 155, 158 and 160 on September 15-19, 162 on September 20-21, then 160 and 164 on September 22-23, and 168 on September 24-27.

    Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 8 on August 18-19, 5 on August 20-25, 12 on August 26, 5 on August 27 through September 5, then 10, 8 and 8 on September 6-8, 5 on September 9-11, then 12, 15, 12 and 8 on September 12-15, 5 on September 16-21, 12 on September 22, and 5 on September 23 through the end of the month.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere August 18-24, 2023 from OK1HH:

    "Solar activity has declined, both spot and flare. We have usually observed C-class solar flares, although the configurations of some active regions did not preclude the formation of M-class flares. We expect an upsurge in solar activity in the last five days of August, after which more sunspot groups should appear at the eastern limb of the solar disk.

    The Earth's ionosphere was quite sensitive to the increased influx of protons in the accelerated solar wind on 11 August and again on 16-17 August. Propagation improved on August 14-15 and worsened on August 16. I do not expect any other surprises before the end of the month."

    Bil Paul, KD6JUI, who often reports HF operations from his kayak, wrote:

    "I recently returned from a vacation at Lake Tahoe where I was running 10 watts into an end-fed half-wave wire vertical. The rental place was surrounded by extra-tall pine trees, but the base of the antenna was 30 feet above the ground on a high porch.

    My discovery (on the evenings of August 7 and 9, around 8 p.m. Pacific Coast time) was that CW DX was coming in on the 30-meter band. On the 7th, I contacted OV1CDX in Denmark on that band (and heard him again on subsequent nights). On the 9th, I contacted 6B2A in Egypt, who was coming in a solid S4.

    I had a couple other CW DX twilight/early-night contacts on 15 and 20 meters, but the 30 meter contacts surprised me."

    N4KZ reports from Frankfort, Kentucky:

    "Last week, I began copying SSB signals from Europe on the 10 and 12-meter bands.ÿ They were weak but readable. It was the first time I've heard SSB signals on those bands from that part of the world in many months. Then, on August 15th beginning at 1248 UTC, I worked stations across Europe and the Middle East on 12-meter SSB with strong signals.

    About 20 minutes earlier, I tuned across the 10-meter phone band and only copied one signal. It was S79VU, Ravi, in the Seychelles. He was about S5 and working Europeans who I did not copy. But he came back to me on my first call. We've worked before but this was our first 10-meter QSO. It's only mid-August, but perhaps autumn propagation is beginning to emerge and with the continuing high sunspot count, I hope this marks the start of better HF conditions this fall and winter. I run about 800 watts into a multi-band Yagi with 3 active elements on each band. The antenna is up 55 feet. I live on a hilltop with a steep slope toward the north which has proven over the years to be an advantage.

    On July 1, I once again became active on the low-end of 2 meters doing weak-signal work. I was quite active on SSB and CW on the low end throughout the 1980s and '90s and to a lesser extent until about 2010. I worked 40 states from Kentucky but eventually decided to concentrate on HF and 6 meters. But I missed 2 meters and now I have returned.

    There's less SSB and CW than there used to be but quite a few are operating FT8 on 144.174 MHz which does a nice job with weak signals. So far I have worked 15 states and Ontario. Morning propagation a couple hours after sunrise allows for 300-400 mile QSOs routinely on FT8. And I've copied stations from Colorado, Long Island, NY and Connecticut on meteor scatter while using MSK144. After a 12-year hiatus from 2-meter weak-signal work, it's good to be back."

    AA6XE in Fremont, California wrote:

    "Interesting conditions on 10 meters although not that unusual. In the last couple of days propagation into the Pacific Northwest has materialized. A bunch of Beacons have surfaced. Beacons from

    Portland to well north of Vancouver BC are coming in every afternoon. I heard Tad Cook's (K7RA) 10 meter beacon yesterday (Aug 13). Beacons out of Mexico have been coming in on 10 Meters for over a month. Some of those beacons are located as far South as Veracruz. Beacons from Australia have been coming through on most days over the last month. NCDXF beacons VK6RBP in Western Australia and 4S7B in Sri Lanka were heard on 15 Meters for a few days.

    While propagation on 10 to the Pacific Northwest may not seem like much I recognize it as a marker that the days of summer propagation are numbered. Typically this doesn't happen until the last 2 weeks in August so it appears to be early this year. So like the Crocuses popping up in late February it doesn't do much for one aside from reminding us that better times are on the way.

    As to what we can expect this Fall it looks to be much improved over last year and at the peak of Cycle 24. The 90 day mean SFI currently stands at 166. Last year at this time 90 day mean stood at 114. The 90 day Mean SFI for the peak of Solar Cycle 24 was 155.ÿ The 90 Day Mean made a significant run-up during late Spring early Summer increasing 21 points. For the last 5 weeks the Daily SFI has been sliding. It hasn't dropped enough to impact the 90 and 81 Day Mean Values just yet, but if the decline continues those numbers will sag.

    The rising phase of SC25 has its own characteristics. The solar flux rises rapidly for 4 to 8 weeks followed by an extended period of decline for 2 to 3 months. This makes it difficult to see the overall trend. It even faked out a number of heliophysicists who made the call that SC 25 had peaked in February 2023. The latest predictions call for SC 25 to peak at year-end 2023/2024. A few are calling for SC 25 to peak at mid-year 2024. It would be a pleasant surprise if the next surge kicks off a few weeks early, say by the first days of September. That would make a big impact of the conditions we can expect on 6 Meters this Fall."

    The latest from Tamitha Skov: https://youtu.be/zjldvH1NYxg[1]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[2] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.


    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation and the ARRL Technical Information Service at:

    http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[3] .

    For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see:

    http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[4] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[5]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at:ÿ

    http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[6] .

    More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[7] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[8] .

    Sunspot numbers for August 10 through 16, 2023 were 83, 105, 61, 89, 85, 107, and 140, with a mean of 95.7ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 155.7, 152.8, 148.3, 150.4, 154, 158.1, and 160.1, with a mean of 154.2. Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 5, 8, 5, 5, 4, and 8, with a mean of 6. Middle latitude A index was 8, 6, 10, 7, 6, 7, and 10, with a mean of 7.7.


    [1] https://youtu.be/zjldvH1NYxg
    [2] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [3] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [4] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [5] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [6] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [7] http://k9la.us/
    [8] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, August 25, 2023 23:57:28
    08/25/2023

    Five new sunspot groups emerged this week, one on August 17, another August 18, two more on August 21 and another on August 22. ÿ

    ÿAverage daily sunspot numbers rose slightly, while average daily solar flux declined. Average daily sunspot numbers went from 95.7 to 105.9 and average daily solar flux declined from 154.2 to 149.4.

    No big geomagnetic events this week, and average daily planetary A index changed from 6 to 8.4 while average daily middle latitude index went from 7.7 to 10.1.

    Predicted solar flux is 145 on August 25-26, 150 on August 27, 155 on August 28-29, 160 on August 30-31, then 165, 163 and 160 on September 1-3, 162 on September 4-5, 158 on September 6-7, then 160 and 162 on September 8-9, 158 on September 10-11, 155 on September 12, 152 on September 13-15, 153 on September 16-18, 155 on September 19, and 158 on September 20-23, 162 on September 24-25, 165 on September 26-28, then 163 and 160 on September 29-30.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8 on August 25, then 5, 10 and 8 on August 26-28, 5 on August 29 through September 5, then 10, 8 and 8 on September 6-8, 5 on September 9-13, 12 on September 14, 10 on September 15-17, and 5 on September 18 through the end of the month.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere August 25-31, 2023 from F. K. Janda, OK1HH.

    Although solar activity has been rated as low over the last seven days, let's not be misled by an assessment based mainly on the number and importance of flares. Solar activity continues to increase toward the peak of cycle 25, expected in two years. Projected into the highest usable ionospheric F2 layer frequencies, this means that we may finally be able to look forward to a wide opening of the ten-meter band for DX shortwave contacts. If it occurs during this fall, we can expect the 25th cycle maximum to be quite high after all.

    It was pretty quiet over the weekend as all eight sunspot groups had stable magnetic fields. Despite another large sunspot appearing in the meantime, apparently magnetically connected to another sunspot on the other side of the solar equator, there was still not much going on. Only the M1.1 0 class solar flare on August 22 at 2304 UTC was an exception. But although it lasted long enough to carry a CME out of the solar atmosphere, it evidently did not.

    On August 23, a filament erupted near the southwest limb of the Sun. If it envelops the Earth, it would likely not happen until August 27, with a possible G1 class storm.

    Max White, M0VNG sent this about solar wind: https://bit.ly/3YQToa7[1]

    Reader Jeremy Gill of Seattle, WA contributed this article on aurora and the ionosphere: https://bit.ly/44sRGgh[2] ÿ.

    Warnings about solar activity, some a bit shrill:

    https://bit.ly/3qHy6za[3] ÿÿhttps://bit.ly/3YLsoc[4]ÿ

    https://bit.ly/3QNx8w3[5] ÿÿhttps://bit.ly/3OJRCTP[6]

    A new video from Tamitha Skov:ÿ https://youtu.be/lU8s7RmlSfE[7]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[8] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[9] and the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[10] ÿ. For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[11] ÿ.

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[12]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at:

    http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] .

    More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14]
    .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[15] .

    Sunspot numbers for August 17 through 23, 2023 were 135, 112, 104, 93, 102, 96, and 99, with a mean of 105.9.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 151.9, 150.6, 150.6, 146.3, 148.7, 150.9, and 147, with a mean of 149.4. Estimated planetary A indices were 8, 11, 8, 11, 9, 8, and 4, with a mean of 8.4.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 10, 14, 8, 12, 10, 12, and 5, with a mean of 10.1.


    [1] https://bit.ly/3YQToa7
    [2] https://bit.ly/44sRGgh
    [3] https://bit.ly/3qHy6za
    [4] https://bit.ly/3YLsoc
    [5] https://bit.ly/3QNx8w3
    [6] https://bit.ly/3OJRCTP
    [7] https://youtu.be/lU8s7RmlSfE
    [8] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [10] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [11] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [12] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, September 01, 2023 23:12:35
    09/01/2023

    First, this alert from Australia.

    "ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING ISSUED AT 0706UTC/31 AUGUST 2023 BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

    A filament eruption and associated coronal mass ejection (CME) were observed on UT day 30-Aug. This CME is expected to impact Earth from 1800 UT +/- 12 hours on 02-Sep, with impacts possibly rolling into UT day 03-Sep. G1-G2 geomagnetic conditions are expected over this time, with a chance for periods of G3."

    Solar activity was down again this week, with average daily sunspot numbers dropping from 105.9 to 78.7, and average daily solar flux from 149.4 to 140.9.

    Only three sunspot groups appeared, one each on August 25, 28 and 30.

    But I have noticed a gradual transition from summer toward fall conditions, with 10 and 12 meter openings more frequent. The autumnal equinox is only three weeks from now.

    Geomagnetic indicators were a little lower. Average planetary A index went from 8.4 to 7, and average middle latitude numbers from 10.1 to 8.9.

    What is the outlook?

    Predicted solar flux shows a peak around 168 on September 18-21.

    Forecast values are 140 on September 1, then 150, 150 and 145 on September 2-4, 150 on September 5-9, 147 on September 10-11, then 145, 150, 155, 150, 155 and 160 on September 12-17, 168 on September 18-21, then 165, 160, and 148 on September 22-24, 150 on September 25-26, then 152, 150, 145,and 140 on September 27-30, then 145 on October 1, 150 on October 2-3, 152 on October 4, 156 on October 5-6, 150 on October 7. and 148 on October 8-9.

    Predicted planetary A index is 10, 12 and 35 on September 1-3, then 15, 10 and 8 on September 4-6, 5 on September 7-13, then 12, 10, 10 and 8 on September 14-17, 5 on September 18-22, then 10, 10 and 8 on September 23-25, 5 on September 26 to October 2, then 10, 8 and 8 on October 3-5, and 5 on October 6-10.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere for September 1-7, 2023 from OK1HH.

    "On 27 August, we predicted a rise in geomagnetic activity, triggered by the arrival of particles from the filament solar flares three days earlier. It did occur, but to a lesser extent than we expected. No significant solar flare (at least of M-class) was observed until 25 August, which is somewhat surprising for the current phase of Cycle 25 development.

    We did not see a major flare until August 26 at 2250 UTC, and it was an M1-class solar flare, hidden behind the Sun's eastern edge, but it was a long duration eruption (LDE). It was accompanied by a CME, which of course was not heading toward Earth, but in this case Mars (which it should hit on September 1).

    The coronal mass ejection (CME) was observed on August 29 at about 1748 UTC near the coordinates N05W35. Another major solar flare, C3, was observed on August 30 with a maximum at 2334 UTC at AR 3413.

    Prior to that, a filament of solar plasma disappeared near S18W24 at 2015 UTC.

    Still, we expect only a slight increase in Earth's magnetic field activity in the next few days.

    Ionospheric propagation has varied erratically, with partial credit due to the sporadic E layer that occurred irregularly in Earth's northern hemisphere late this summer."

    India's solar mission:ÿ https://bit.ly/3PiPJ1N[1]

    Flares:ÿ https://bit.ly/47X6gzC[2]

    Four hours of Tamitha Skov and extreme space weather events:

    https://youtu.be/_Li9wxmmbQs[3]

    This weekend is the phone portion of the All Asia DX Contest:

    https://bit.ly/43GPrXq[4]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[5] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see http://www.arrl.org/propagation[6] and the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals[7] . For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see: ÿ

    http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere[8] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf[9]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation . More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[10]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[11] ÿ.

    Sunspot numbers for August 24 through 30, 2023 were 86, 77, 75, 69, 68, 82, and 94, with a mean of 78.7.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 144.1, 138.9, 139.3, 141.5, 141.7, 142.2, and 138.6, with a mean of 140.9. Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 5, 7, 11, 6, 5, and 6, with a mean of 7. Middle latitude A index was 9, 7, 9, 13, 8, 7, and 9, with a mean of 8.9.


    [1] https://bit.ly/3PiPJ1N
    [2] https://bit.ly/47X6gzC
    [3] https://youtu.be/_Li9wxmmbQs
    [4] https://bit.ly/43GPrXq
    [5] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [6] http://www.arrl.org/propagation
    [7] http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals
    [8] http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere
    [9] https://www.arrl.org/files/file/Technology/tis/info/pdf/0209038.pdf
    [10] http://k9la.us/
    [11] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, September 08, 2023 15:28:08
    09/08/2023

    At 0046 UTC on September 8, the Australian Space Weather Forecasting
    Centre issued this alert:

    "A solar filament erupted from the north east quadrant of the Sun on
    07-Sep. Event modeling shows an edge of the associated north east
    directed CME may graze the Earth's magnetosphere on 10-Sep.
    INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED DUE TO CORONAL MASS EJECTION FOR 10 SEPTEMBER 2023."

    Eight new sunspot groups emerged this week, one on September 2, two
    on September 3, two more on September 4, and one each on September
    5-6, followed by another on Thursday, September 7.

    Average daily sunspot number was up, from 78.7 to 95.4, while
    average daily solar flux was less, from 140.9 to 137.6.

    Geomagnetic activity was higher. On September 2 the planetary A
    index was 38, when Earth moved through a high speed solar wind. In
    Alaska, the college A index at Fairbanks was 59.

    Average daily planetary A index increased from 7 to 15.4, and
    average middle latitude A index rose from 8.9 to 16.3.

    Predicted solar flux is 155, 158 and 155 on September 8-10, 150 on
    September 11-16, then 155, 150, 155 and 150 on September 17-20, 145
    on September 21-22, 150 on September 23-24, 145 on September 25, 140
    on September 26-27, 135 on September 28-30, then 130, 135, 130 and
    135 on October 1-4, then 140 on October 5-6, then 135, 135 and 140
    on October 7-9, 145 on October 10-11, 150 on October 12-13, then
    155, 150, 155 and 150 on October 14-17.

    Predicted planetary A index 10 and 12 on September 8-9, 8 on
    September 10-13, then 5, 8, and 12 on September 14-16, 8 on
    September 17-18, 5 on September 19-22, 12 on September 23, 5 on
    September 24-27, then 8, 12, 5 and 12 on September 28 through
    October 1, then 12, 10, 12 and 10 on October 2-5, and 5 on October
    6-10, then 10, 8 and 12 on October 11-13, and 8 on October 14-15,
    and 5 over the following week.

    I observed interesting 12 meter propagation using FT8 on September
    4, at 1745 UTC with https://pskreporter.info/pskmap.html[1] in which my
    signal was only received over a narrow 300 mile band hugging the East
    Coast from Maine to Florida, all signal reports between 2200 to 2500
    miles away, nowhere else.

    Three hours later at 2045 UTC, the reports along the coast expanded
    to 600 miles, 2000 to 2600 miles wide.

    Later at 2300 UTC it was the same pattern, but a 200 mile band,
    2300-2500 miles wide.

    The next day at 1700 UTC it was an arc from Virginia to South Texas,
    1700 to 2300 miles. At 1715 UTC it drifted to coverage of 1750 to
    2600 miles.

    Before FT8 and pskreporter, there was no practical way for me to
    observe any of this. Who knew?

    Rick Cochran, WO8L wrote:

    "So, despite all of the indicators being pretty good, why are the
    bands so terrible?

    "In the nearly 60 years I've been a ham this Sun cycle has
    consistently been a dud compared to past cycles, especially during
    the day.

    "So many of us would like to know why."

    I replied:

    "Good question. You aren't the only one to ask."

    There is a theory that carbon in the atmosphere or a warming climate contributes to this, but I do not understand the mechanism. K9LA
    told me that models do not support this, but at the moment I cannot
    recall what those models are. This issue was discussed in previous
    bulletins.

    Another theory is that this is a perception issue related to the
    widespread adoption of FT8, in which users of traditional modes see
    less activity on CW and SSB and perceive poorer propagation as a
    result.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - September 7, 2023, from F.K. Janda, OK1HH:
    ÿ
    "In late August, as AR3413 approached the northwestern limb of the
    solar disk, its eruptive activity began to increase, even though its
    size and magnetic configuration did not suggest it. However, we
    observed it at a very low angle, so we may have missed details.

    "Either way, it was the source of several C- and M-class flares, at
    least two of which (on August 30 and September 1) ejected CMEs. Both
    hit the Earth triggering a G2 class geomagnetic storm. For shortwave propagation, this meant a significant improvement and increase in
    MUF in the positive phase of the disturbance on 2 September
    0900-1300 UTC, followed by a deterioration for the next few days.

    "AR3413 meanwhile, continued with increased eruptive activity on the
    Sun's far side, including a massive CME on 5 September, but it no
    longer affected the Earth. It merely 'ripped off the tail' (a
    disconnection event) of comet Nishimura (C/2023 P1), which is
    approaching the Sun. Its closest approach will be on September 17.

    "A relative improvement in shortwave propagation did not occur until
    September 5, with a jump in solar wind speed at 1439 UTC. Meanwhile,
    active region AR3421 began to grow significantly around the central
    meridian.

    "The magnetic configuration points to the possibility of
    geoeffective flares. This was followed by the growth of other active
    regions in the northeast of the solar disk, so that solar activity
    remains elevated. Since we expect the Earth's magnetic field to calm
    down, shortwave propagation conditions should gradually improve.
    Seasonal changes as the equinoxes approach will also contribute to
    this."

    The Autumnal Equinox in the northern hemisphere is just two weeks
    away.

    Here is a solar cycle prediction:

    https://bit.ly/45Gxb1n[2]

    Nice video, once you get past the ads:

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8nub71[3]

    A "Solar Orbiter EUI" video from Max White, M0VNG and the European
    Space Agency:

    https://bit.ly/44JG2hr[4]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[5] . When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[6]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[7] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[8] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[9] .

    Sunspot numbers for August 31 through September 6, 2023 were 77, 83,
    77, 79, 100, 121, and 131, with a mean of 95.4ÿ 10.7 cm flux was
    139.9, 135.8, 131.2, 130.5, 136, 142.9, and 147.1, with a mean of
    137.6. Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 12, 38, 25, 8, 11, and
    8, with a mean of 15.4. Middle latitude A index was 8, 15, 25, 28,
    14, 14, and 10, with a mean of 16.3.


    [1] https://pskreporter.info/pskmap.html
    [2] https://bit.ly/45Gxb1n
    [3] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8nub71
    [4] https://bit.ly/44JG2hr
    [5] k7ra@arrl.net
    [6] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [7] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [8] http://k9la.us/
    [9] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, September 15, 2023 13:42:38
    09/15/2023

    Like last week, eight new sunspot groups emerged this reporting
    week, September 7-13.

    One appeared on September 7, another September 9, four more on
    September 10, another on September 11 and one more on September 12.

    Solar activity made a nice comeback, with average daily sunspot
    numbers rising from 95.4 to 138.1, and solar flux from 137.6 to
    159.9.

    The most active geomagnetic day was September 12, when the planetary
    A index was 25. Spaceweather.com reported a "stealth CME"
    (unexpected) that had aurora visible down as far as Missouri.

    Average daily planetary A index decreased from 15.4 to 10.4, and
    middle latitude numbers from 16.3 to 11.3.

    The Autumnal Equinox in the Northern Hemisphere is just a week away,
    on September 22.

    It seems that the next sustained short term peak in solar flux is a
    few weeks off, with values between 150 and 155 over October 12-17,
    although it is expected to reach 150 on September 23-24.

    The forecast shows solar flux at 145, 148, 145 and 145 on September
    15-18, 140 on September 19-21, 145 on September 22, 150 on September
    23-24, 145 on September 25, 140 on September 26-27, 135 on September
    28-30, then 130, 135, 130 and 135 on October 1-4, 140 on October
    5-6, 135 on October 7-8, 140 on October 9, 145 on October 10-11, 150
    om October 12-13, then 155, 150, 155 and 150 on October 14-17, 145
    on October 18-19, and 150 on October 20-21.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15 on September 15, 8 on September
    16-17, then 5, 5, and 10 on September 18-20, 5, 8 and 12 on
    September 21-23, 5 on September 24-27, then 8, 12 and 8 on September
    28-30, and 5 on October 1-8, then 15, 12, 10 and 8 on October 9-12,
    5 on October 13-19, 12 on October 20, and 5 on October 21-24.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - September 15-22, 2023 from OK1HH.
    ÿ
    "A week ago, the active sunspot group AR3414 dominated the solar
    disk. It is now on the far side of the Sun. This role has been taken
    over by AR3423, now approaching the western limb of the solar disk.
    It will be followed the next day by the slightly smaller AR3425. The
    important information is that we observe a coronal hole near both of
    them (closer to AR3425). This configuration was the likely cause of
    the surprise: Few people expected the Earth to be hit by a CME on
    September 12 at 1237 UT.

    "Then a massive disturbance of the Earth's magnetic field developed.
    Its initial positive phase increased the MUF values on September 12.
    This was followed by a negative phase, which in turn caused a
    significant decrease in MUF, with worsened shortwave propagation
    conditions on 13 September. This was followed by a gradual
    improvement on 14 September, when the magnetic filament connecting
    sunspots AR3423 and AR3425 erupted. The consequence could be a G1 to G2 class geomagnetic storm in the Earth's vicinity on 17 September."

    Jon Jones, N0JK wrote from Kansas:

    "Sunday afternoon and evening (September 10-11) strong sporadic-E on
    6 meters took place.

    "This set up links to TEP on to South America.

    "The hot spot seemed to be south Central Kansas and northeast
    Oklahoma. KF0M in EM17 worked many South American stations. From
    EM28, the Es was not lined up that well.

    "Had many strong stations in south Texas and northern Mexico.
    Around 2250 UTC LU1MQF (FF55) and CE4MBH (FF44) appeared for a few minutes on 50.313 MHz FT8.

    "Any sporadic-E is a treat in the September ARRL VHF contest (which
    was last weekend). With Solar Cycle 25 picking up, the Es can link
    to TEP."

    An article about the Sun from IFLScience:

    https://www.iflscience.com/has-part-of-the-sun-really-become-broken-70653
    [1]
    The latest from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/S2IOBwSo_LI[2]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[3] .When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[4]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[5] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[6] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[7] .

    Sunspot numbers for September 7 through 13, 2023 were 135, 123, 119,
    167, 173, 141, and 109, with a mean of 138.1.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was
    160.8, 160.9, 161.4, 163.9, 176.4, 153.5, and 142.6, with a mean of
    159.9. Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 6, 8, 4, 7, 25, and 17,
    with a mean of 10.4. Middle latitude A index was 11, 8, 12, 6, 8,
    17, and 17, with a mean of 11.3.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.iflscience.com/has-part-of-the-sun-really-become-broken-70653 [2] https://youtu.be/S2IOBwSo_LI
    [3] k7ra@arrl.net
    [4] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [5] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [6] http://k9la.us/
    [7] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, September 22, 2023 17:56:45
    09/22/2023

    ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING ISSUED AT 0249UTC on 22 SEPTEMBER 2023 BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE:

    "Solar wind streams from a pair of coronal holes are expected to
    mildly increase geomagnetic activity at times during the interval
    late 22-Sep to 24-Sep.

    "INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED FROM 22-24 SEPTEMBER 2023."

    Nine new sunspot groups appeared this week, but the averages were
    lower.

    A new sunspot group appeared every day from September 15-17, four
    more on September 18, and one each day on September 19-20.

    On Thursday, the start of the next reporting week two more sunspot
    groups appeared.

    Average daily sunspot numbers declined from 138.1 to 118.4, while
    average daily solar flux went from 159.9 to 149.3.

    The Autumnal Equinox in the Northern Hemisphere occurs on Saturday,
    September 23 at 2:50 AM EDT, or 0650z.ÿ The change in seasons has
    been evident recently with improving propagation on 10 and 12
    meters.

    A fast moving CME hit Earth on September 18, sparking dramatic
    displays of aurora across the northern tier of North America and in
    Europe as far south as France.

    Alaska's college A index was 49 and 61 on September 18-19, while the
    planetary A index was 30 and 49.

    Predicted solar flux is 162, 162 and 165 on September 22-24, 160 on
    September 25-28, 135 on September 29-30, then 130, 135, 130 and 135
    on October 1-4, 140 on October 5-6, 135 on October 7-8, then 140,
    145 and 145 on October 9-11, then 150, 150, 155 and 150 on October
    12-15, and 155, 150, 145 and 145 on October 16-19, then 150, 150 and
    145 on October 20-22, 140 on October 23-24, 135 on October 25-27,
    then 130, 135, 130 and 135 on October 28-31.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15 on September 22, 22 on September
    23-24, then 12 and 8 on September 25-26, 5 on September 27-28, 12
    and 8 on September 29-30, 5 October 1-11, 8 on October 12, then 5 on
    October 13-19, 12 on October 20, 5 on October 21-24, then 8, 12 and
    8 on October 25-27, then 5 on October 28 into the first week of
    November.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - September 21, 2023 from OK1HH:
    ÿ
    "Although the site https://solarham.net/ [1]launched on March 15, 2006,
    created and still maintained solely by Kevin,VE3EN, is primarily
    intended for amateur radio users, it is also very well regarded by
    professional astronomers. In addition to information about the Sun,
    it contains everything needed to understand the causes of changes in
    the ionosphere, and also provides an overview and forecast of the
    Earth's magnetic field activity. On Thursday, September 21, we read:
    'Solar activity is predicted to remain at low (C-Flares) to moderate
    (M-Flares) levels during the next 24 hours. AR-3435 is considered
    the most likely region to produce a moderate to strong solar flare.'

    "The information can be supplemented by saying that the level of
    solar activity has been rising in recent days, and this rise was
    accompanied by an increase in solar wind speed from 400 km/s to over
    600 km/s between 18-20 September. In particular, the solar wind
    proton influx increased significantly on 18 September; moreover, a
    geomagnetic disturbance with intensity G2 (Moderate) to G3 (Strong)
    took place on 18-19 September.

    "The Earth's ionosphere responded to these events with a significant
    decrease in MUF, especially since 18 September. Shortwave conditions
    were above average for the last time on 10-12 September, including a
    positive phase of the disturbance on the latter day. Around the
    equinox we usually expect improvement, but now it was the opposite
    as a result of disturbances.

    "As another very good source of information, I can particularly
    recommend the Space Weather Monitor (https://www.ionosonde.iap-kborn.de/actuellz.htm[2]), as it also
    contains the most important data on the Earth's ionosphere."

    From reader David Moore, on Parker Solar Probe:

    https://bit.ly/3ELWC5E[3]

    More Parker Solar Probe news:

    https://bit.ly/3EOVEpl[4]

    A new video from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/pU6i_2FVR2g[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[6]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[7]

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[8] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[9] .

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[10] .

    Sunspot numbers for September 14 through 20, 2023 were 110, 96, 88,
    94, 139, 143, and 159, with a mean of 118.4.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was
    145.2, 139.1, 140.4, 144.6, 154.5, 166.1, and 155.5, with a mean of
    149.3. Estimated planetary A indices were 18, 7, 7, 16, 30, 49, and
    16, with a mean of 20.4. Middle latitude A index was 13, 7, 5, 14,
    21, 38, and 15, with a mean of 18.1.

    ÿ


    [1] https://solarham.net/
    [2] https://www.ionosonde.iap-kborn.de/actuellz.htm
    [3] https://bit.ly/3ELWC5E
    [4] https://bit.ly/3EOVEpl
    [5] https://youtu.be/pU6i_2FVR2g
    [6] k7ra@arrl.net
    [7] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [8] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [9] http://k9la.us/
    [10] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, September 29, 2023 17:10:34
    09/29/2023

    Solar activity was up for this reporting week, September 21-27.
    Eight new sunspot groups appeared, two on September 21, two more on
    September 22, two more on September 25, another on September 26 and
    another on September 27.

    The average daily sunspot number jumped from 118.4 to 170.6, while
    average daily solar flux went from 149.3 to 168.8.

    The Autumnal Equinox was last weekend in the Northern Hemisphere, so
    our Earth is bathed in equal amounts of solar radiation in both
    hemispheres.

    The average daily planetary A index went from 20.4 to 17, while
    middle latitude numbers changed from 18.1 to 13.7. Thursday had the
    strongest geomagnetic activity, and Alaska's college A index was 68,
    triggering a geomagnetic storm with aurora visible across the
    northern tier of the United States. Activity peaked around 1200-1800
    UTC, with planetary K index at 5.33.

    Regarding solar flux predictions, the next predicted peak is at 168
    on October 20-23.

    Predicted flux values are 148 on September 29-30, then 145, 143 and
    145 on October 1-3, 148 on October 4-5, 155 on October 6, 160 on
    October 7-8, 155 on October 9, 150 on October 10-11, 145 on October
    12-14, then 150, 155, 155, 160 and 165 on October 15-19, 168 on
    October 20-23, then 164, 160, 160, 168 and 150 on October 24-28,
    then 145 and 150 on October 29-30, 155 onÿ October 31 through
    November 2, 160 on November 3-4, and 155 on November 5.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 12, and 8 on September 29 through
    October 1, then 8, 15, 12, 8 and 15, on October 2-5, then 5 on
    October 6-21, then 10 and 8 on October 22-23, and 5 on October 24
    through November 7, and 55 on November 8.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - September 27, 2023 from OK1HH:
    ÿ
    "During September we saw nearly regular fluctuations in solar and
    geomagnetic activity. M-class flares occurred nearly every day, some accompanied by plasma eruptions (CMEs). On 24-25 September, the
    fourth and strongest solar-origin proton cloud (G3) of the month
    struck Earth.

    "With such a large number of disturbances, each lasting several
    days, there was a significant decrease in MUF and a general
    deterioration of shortwave propagation (September 3-5, 13-15, 18-20
    and since 25 September).

    "After these disturbances, due to the high solar activity,
    relatively rapid improvements followed, the best of which was
    observed from 10 September onward. It culminated in a positive phase
    of disturbance during the daytime hours of UTC on 12 September, with
    the highest MUF values, and thus the best opening of the upper
    shortwave bands. This also made the following deterioration, which
    started already on the night of 13 September, even more noticeable.

    "Given the number and duration of disturbances and despite several improvements, overall propagation was below average. This pattern
    began in August and given the trend in solar activity, looks set to
    continue for the time being."

    Gregory Andracke, W2BEE sent these two articles about Aurora
    Borealis:

    https://nbcnews.to/3PUVH9q[1]

    https://bbc.in/3PQLhrj[2]

    Check out his web site:

    http://www.andracke.com/[3]

    Here are more articles and videos about aurora:

    https://bit.ly/3PEnsl4[4]

    https://bit.ly/3PU22Sy[5]

    https://bit.ly/48ASMtK[6]

    https://bit.ly/46w7CzQ[7]

    https://bit.ly/3PXAGuX[8]

    https://bit.ly/48A6Kfk[9]

    https://bit.ly/3PBgE7V[10]

    https://bit.ly/3PzOJFw[11]

    https://bit.ly/469xDFw[12]

    https://bit.ly/3rvgRBA[13]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[14]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[15] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[16] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[17]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[18] .

    Sunspot numbers for September 21 through 27, 2023 were 159, 184,
    198, 172, 164, 179, and 138, with a mean of 170.6. 10.7 cm flux was
    168.1, 175.7, 173, 173.7, 170.2, 164.9, and 156, with a mean of
    168.8. Estimated planetary A indices were 10, 8, 10, 21, 23, 32, and
    15, with a mean of 17. Middle latitude A index was 10, 7, 9, 17, 15,
    26, and 12, with a mean of 13.7.

    ÿ


    [1] https://nbcnews.to/3PUVH9q
    [2] https://bbc.in/3PQLhrj
    [3] http://www.andracke.com/
    [4] https://bit.ly/3PEnsl4
    [5] https://bit.ly/3PU22Sy
    [6] https://bit.ly/48ASMtK
    [7] https://bit.ly/46w7CzQ
    [8] https://bit.ly/3PXAGuX
    [9] https://bit.ly/48A6Kfk
    [10] https://bit.ly/3PBgE7V
    [11] https://bit.ly/3PzOJFw
    [12] https://bit.ly/469xDFw
    [13] https://bit.ly/3rvgRBA
    [14] k7ra@arrl.net
    [15] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [16] http://k9la.us/
    [17] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [18] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, October 06, 2023 23:30:25
    10/06/2023

    At 2308 UTC on October 5, the Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre issued a geomagnetic disturbance warning.

    "A recent, mild CME impact, combined with the expected arrival of a coronal hole high speed wind stream on 7 Oct, gives the chance for G1 geomagnetic conditions over 6 and 7 Oct."

    Seven new sunspot groups emerged over the past week, but overall solar activity declined.

    With consecutive dates you can initiate an animation using the back and forward buttons on your browser.

    We are currently enjoying improved HF propagation with the change of seasons after the autumnal equinox.ÿ This is particularly noticeable on 12 and 10 meters.

    Here is an optimistic news story about the current solar cycle.

    https://cdapress.com/news/2023/oct/02/were-strong-solar-cycle/[1]

    https://bit.ly/3RMPjT1[2]

    One new sunspot group appeared on September 30, three more on October 1, and one on each of the following days, October 2, 3 and 4.ÿ On October 5, two more sunspot groups appeared, and the daily sunspot number shot up to 179, the highest since September 26. Previously, a high of 219 was on July 12.

    Average daily sunspot number declined from 170.6 to 128.6, while average daily solar flux went from 168.8 to 155.6.

    Geomagnetic indicators were quieter.ÿ Average daily planetary A index went from 17 to 9.1, and average daily middle latitude A index declined from 13.7 to 8.9.

    The outlook for the next month has predicted solar flux at 158 on October 6 and 7, 155, 152, 152, 150 and 145 on October 8 to 12, 158 on October 13 and 14, 156 on October 15 to 17, 154 on October 18 to 20, 152 on October 21, 154 on October 22 and 23, 156 and 158 on October 24 and 25, 160 on October 26 to 28, 162 on October 29 to 31, then 164 on November 1 to 3, 168 on November 4, 165 on November 5 and 6, 162 and 160 on November 7 and 8, 158 on November 9 and 10, and 156 on November 11 to 13.

    Predicted planetary A index is 18, 25, 10 and 5 on October 6 to 9, 8 on October 10 and 11, 5 on October 12 to 21, then 10 and 8 on October 22 to 23, 5 on October 24 to 28, then 15, 12, 8, 15 and 8 on October 29 through November 2, and 5 on November 3 through the middle of the month.

    Flares in the news:

    https://bit.ly/46AiGMs[3]

    https://bit.ly/3PG9MX3[4]

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere -- October 5, 2023 from Frantisek K. Janda, OK1HH.

    "After witnessing a number of solar flares (though at most of moderate magnitude) during the past month, plus three solar plasma cloud impacts (CMEs), late September and early October, which were a bit quieter.

    However, the development of solar and especially geomagnetic activity was so irregular that it was difficult to make predictions for the following days.
    The geomagnetic calm on 28 September did not mean an improvement in shortwave propagation conditions, but rather a deterioration compared to the previous day, which was not calm.ÿ The improvement on 2 and 3 October was the result of a relative calm with non-declining solar activity.

    Subsequent developments were mostly quieter.ÿ Nevertheless, there were significant fluctuations in MUF on 4 October with a slight deterioration.ÿ The explanation for the causes can be found mainly in the timing of the overall development.ÿ Specifically, deterioration often occurred after geomagnetic activity increased overnight.ÿ In addition, sporadic layer E activity increased at times (especially on 4-5 October).ÿ There was also a slight increase in the concentration of protons in the solar wind on 3 October and especially still on 5 October.

    Irregular propagation conditions can be expected to continue, yet there should already be less of a difference between expectations and actual developments in October than there was in September."

    W2BEE sent this about aurora: https://bit.ly/3ZHLUGU[5]

    Time lapse animation of sunspot:

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8ofnhg[6]

    Max White M0VNG sent this, about the solar atmosphere:

    https://bit.ly/3ZJydau[7]

    Check these links for the upcoming HamSCI propagation tests during upcoming solar eclipses, the first on October 14, 2023:

    https://www.hamsci.org/eclipse[8]

    http://www.arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive/ARLX013/2023[9]

    New report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/_eWJ8THt3pM[10]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[11] .ÿ When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us which mode you were operating.

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at

    http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive- propagation ÿ.ÿ More good information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[12]

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[13]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[14]

    Sunspot numbers for September 28 through October 4, 2023 were 109, 102, 106, 136, 146, 150, and 151, with a mean of 128.6.ÿ 10.7 cm flux was 147.8, 155, 159.1, 161.1, 157.4, 153.7, and 155, with a mean of 155.6.ÿ Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 12, 10, 9, 9, 8, and 10, with a mean of 9.1.ÿ Middle latitude A index was 5, 13, 11, 9, 10, 6, and 8, with a mean of 8.9.


    [1] https://cdapress.com/news/2023/oct/02/were-strong-solar-cycle/
    [2] https://bit.ly/3RMPjT1
    [3] https://bit.ly/46AiGMs
    [4] https://bit.ly/3PG9MX3
    [5] https://bit.ly/3ZHLUGU
    [6] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8ofnhg
    [7] https://bit.ly/3ZJydau
    [8] https://www.hamsci.org/eclipse
    [9] http://www.arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive/ARLX013/2023
    [10] https://youtu.be/_eWJ8THt3pM
    [11] mailto:k7ra@arrl.net
    [12] http://k9la.us/
    [13] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [14] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, October 13, 2023 13:52:53
    10/13/2023

    The numbers looked better during this reporting week, October 5-11.

    Average daily sunspot numbers rose from 128.6 to 144.1, and average
    solar flux from 155.6 to 159.1.

    Average daily planetary A index went from 9.1 to 7.6, and average
    middle latitude A index from 8.9 to 8.3.

    For some reason the middle latitude numbers were not available from Fredericksburg, Virginia so we used the data from Boulder, Colorado.

    Nine new sunspot groups emerged this week, with two on October 5,
    one on October 7, two on October 8, one on October 9, another on
    October 10, and two more on October 11.

    HF conditions have been excellent, as the season turns deeper into
    Autumn in the Northern Hemisphere. I really notice a difference on
    10, 12 and 15 meters.

    Predicted solar flux is 156 on October 13, 155 on October 14-16, 152
    on October 17-18, then 150, 148, 150 and 152 on October 19-22, 152
    on October 23-24, 158 on October 25, 160 on October 26-28, 158 on
    October 29-30, 156 on October 31 through November 1, then 155, 156,
    156, 158 and 160 on November 2-6, 158 on November 7-8, then 156 on
    November 9-10, then 155, 154, 152 and 150 on November 11-14, 148 on
    November 15-16, then 150, 152, 154 and 154 on November 17-20.

    Predicted planetary A index is 12, 10, 8, 5, 12, 10 and 8 on October
    13-19, 5 on October 20-30, 15 and 12 on October 31 through November
    1, 5 on November 2-5, then 10, 8, and 10 on November 6-8, 15 on
    November 9-10, then 8 on November 11, and 5 on November 12 to the
    end of the month.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere October 13-19, 2023, from F.K. Janda, OK1HH:

    "Unlike most days in September, the Earth's geomagnetic activity has
    finally dropped. Solar activity is high enough that there was a
    significant improvement in shortwave propagation on a global scale.

    "Around October 7, although there was still a possibility that Earth
    would be hit by a CME that left the Sun on October 3, it did not
    happen. Whereupon, especially on quiet days in the middle of this
    week, the improvement was unmistakable.

    "Two or three sunspot groups continue to be observed on the Sun.
    They are able to produce up to moderate intensity flares. But the
    area of the spots is not large, so we do not expect a CME based on
    their magnetic configuration either.

    "Thanks to helioseismology, we know of more extensive active regions
    on the far side of the Sun. Therefore, it is safe to assume that
    solar activity will be elevated for the rest of October. Which of
    course brings with it possible increases in solar wind speeds with
    higher particle concentrations, but this is not enough to predict a disturbance, only to vaguely state the possibility of one."

    Dan, K7SS wrote:

    "Just an FYI to those of us who may know anyone new to HF, and the
    fact that 10m seems to be at a fantastic peak of conditions
    recently, it would be a great shame for anyone who is new to HF to
    miss this peak (or pre-peak?) with 10m so open during the daylight
    and well into the evening darkness. Just recall the thrill of DX you
    had early on.

    "Would like to encourage everyone [in the club] to think about who
    they might know that's pretty new and give a gentle prod to get them
    on 10m. Even with a minimal antenna and power, the band is
    supporting signals around the world right now. This may be our peak,
    or perhaps this is a bellwether of things to come and may get even
    better, but maybe not!

    "If any tech licensee can get on 10m with even a minimal signal, it
    will not disappoint. 28300 to 28500 kHz is theirs, and the
    playground is full. And no place better to get the DX BUG than by
    working some EU with low power and a small wire or vertical antenna.
    NOW IS THE TIME.

    "You don't want to have to explain in a year or two from now, that
    they SHOULD have been on working DX and if not, may have to wait for
    another cycle peak in 12-14 years.

    "Personally, I'm having the time of my life with EU openings in the
    morning around 10AM-12PM local. The THRILL IS BACK! 10m Lives."

    An article about a 15,000 year history of extreme solar events:

    https://bit.ly/3FctowT[1]

    Commercial space companies approach their first solar maximum:

    https://bit.ly/46Cx6Ma[2]

    Korean records from the 14th to 19th centuries reveal sunspot cycle
    history:

    https://bit.ly/3ZUo2Af[3]

    Safely watch the eclipse with a disco ball. (I do not know if this
    is actually safe):

    https://bit.ly/3tBhgmz[4]

    Articles about the "Ring of Fire" solar eclipse:

    https://wapo.st/3rNEHIY[5]

    https://bit.ly/3FeOQSc[6]

    An article about the Sun's polarity flip:

    https://bit.ly/3LWZ7WF[7]

    Video about Sunspot AR3038:

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oratl[8]

    Optimistic outlook on Aurora:

    https://bit.ly/46tIOcb[9]

    Don't forget the eclipse event this Saturday, October 14:

    www.hamsci.org/eclipse[10]

    And at the last minute Thursday night, a new video from Dr. Tamitha
    Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/iwp-M_i-TMw[11]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[12]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[13] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[14] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[15]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[16] .

    Sunspot numbers for October 5 through 11, 2023 were 179, 138, 145,
    149, 129, 120, and 149, with a mean of 144.1. 10.7 cm flux was
    156.1, 155.3, 157.2, 157.1, 165.5, 164.4, and 158, with a mean of
    159.1. Estimated planetary A indices were 16, 9, 5, 7, 8, 4, and 4,
    with a mean of 7.6. Middle latitude A index was 17, 8, 4, 10, 9, 6,
    and 4, with a mean of 8.3.

    ÿ


    [1] https://bit.ly/3FctowT
    [2] https://bit.ly/46Cx6Ma
    [3] https://bit.ly/3ZUo2Af
    [4] https://bit.ly/3tBhgmz
    [5] https://wapo.st/3rNEHIY
    [6] https://bit.ly/3FeOQSc
    [7] https://bit.ly/3LWZ7WF
    [8] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oratl
    [9] https://bit.ly/46tIOcb
    [10] https://www.hamsci.org/eclipse
    [11] https://youtu.be/iwp-M_i-TMw
    [12] k7ra@arrl.net
    [13] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [14] http://k9la.us/
    [15] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [16] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Friday, October 20, 2023 17:15:31
    10/20/2023

    Sunspot activity dropped dramatically this week, with only two new
    sunspot groups emerging, on October 14 and 16.

    Compared to last week, the average daily sunspot number slipped from
    144.1 to 89.4, and average daily solar flux from 159.1 to 145.1.

    Average daily planetary A index changed from 7.6 to 6.4, and average
    daily middle latitude A index from 8.3 to 5.

    Predicted solar flux is 128 and 130 October 20-21, 132 on October
    22-23, 134 on October 24-25, 136 on October 26, 145 on October
    27-28, 150 on October 29 through November 5, 140 on November 6-9,
    135 on November 10-11, 145 and 140 on November 12-13, 135 on
    November 14-15, then 140 on November 16-18, 135 and 140 on November
    19-20, 145 on November 21-24, and 150 through the end of the month.

    Predicted planetary A index is 22, 14, 12, 10 and 8 on October
    20-24, 5 on October 25-26, 8 on October 27-30, 10 and 12 on October
    31 through November 1, 5 on November 2-8, 12 and 8 on November 9-10,
    5 on November 11-12, 12 on November 13-14, then 10 and 8 on November
    15-16, 5 on November 17-22, and 8 on November 23-26.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - October 19, 2023 from OK1HH:
    ÿ
    "In the last ten days, the number of sunspot groups has dropped from
    ten to three. At the same time the solar flux has dropped
    significantly - from 166 to 135. The last two slightly larger solar
    flares were observed on 16 October. The larger of the two occurred
    in AR3467. The magnetic filament associated with it exploded and
    blew a CME into space.

    "According to NASA's models, while it didn't head directly for
    Earth, it still likely hit it on October 18 (the original estimate
    was that it would happen a day later). Which, while not enough to
    cause a geomagnetic storm, was enough to reach an 'unsettled' state.

    "This was followed by an erratic MUF from 18 October and then a
    decline on 19 October. These lines are written at a time when short
    periods of G1 (Minor) geomagnetic storms are not yet ruled out on 19
    October, with a possible duration into the first half of 20 October
    UT.

    "A return of larger sunspots and a rise in solar flux towards 150
    can be expected by the end of the month."

    Regarding 10 meter comments by K7SS in last week's Propagation
    Forecast bulletin, Angel Santana, WP3GW of Trujillo-Alto, Puerto
    Rico responded, "I second Dan's, K7SS comments on getting on the air
    even if you are a Tech on 10 meters.

    "I can attest that the band is in good shape: Can contact European
    stations with ease even if my antenna is pointing to the US and when
    it is 2pm local can still contact them when they are at their local
    8-10 pm.

    "My score in contests recently reflect more QSOs on 10 meters and
    now that we are in contest season it is a great opportunity to get
    on the air and see how many countries you can work.

    "You can also check and hear SSTV signals on 28.680 MHz as of late
    confirming that the band is truly live. And of course, the FM
    (29-29.8 MHz) segment."

    Dr. Julio Medina, NP3CW wrote:

    "Sending some information of activity in 6M band since May to
    October 2023.

    "Been copying stations from Japan, China, Africa, and many others
    such as Philippines on FT8 early in the morning from 1200-1400 UTC
    in FT8 in the 6m band."

    Jon, N0JK wrote on October 6:

    "The 6 meter sporadic-E - linking to TEP (trans equatorial
    propagation) openings usually occur in the afternoon. But there was
    a late evening Es -- TEP opening on October 6.

    "Earlier in the afternoon October 6 I had some weak TEP from South
    America to Kansas.ÿ It faded out around 0030 UTC. Then some
    sporadic-E took place. Sporadic-E is rare in October, the only month
    with less Es is March. That itself is noteworthy, and I logged
    stations in Arizona and northern Mexico starting at 0100 UTC October
    7 on 6 meter FT8. Then at 0133 UTC I began seeing a FT8 trace at
    2,500 Hz. Then it decoded, and was Dale, CE2SV (FF47) sending a
    report to W0SZ in Colorado. When they finished, I called CE2SV.
    After a couple of calls Dale came back and we completed a contact at
    0136 UTC. His signal varied from -10 dB to -17 dB.

    "What is remarkable is I was operating from home using just an attic
    dipole for an antenna. I also decoded CE3SOC and XQ3MCC. N0LL in
    EM09 also worked some South American stations. This was 'evening'
    TEP, which typically has a shorter range than afternoon TEP. The
    evening TEP signals usually have a distinctive 'TEP flutter' sound
    and sometimes don't decode with FT8.ÿ Q65 can be a better digital
    mode for evening TEP.

    "I saw on the ON4KST 6 meter chat page N9PGG in North Carolina
    worked FK8HA and VK4 stations. This was a sporadic-E link (on the
    same Es I had to the south) out to the South Pacific.

    "On another note -- stations in Central America, the Caribbean and
    northern South America have been making 6 meter Long Path contacts
    with east Asia and Malaysia from 1200 - 1600 UTC the last couple of
    mornings.

    "6 meter long path is best with high solar flux and low geomagnetic
    activity.

    "2023-10-07 15:16 9Z4Y (FK90HM) 50.313.0 FT8 YB0MZI (OI33JQ) LoTW eQSL 18626 km ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ
    "2023-10-07 15:00 9Z4Y (FK90HM) 50.313.0 FT8 YB0SAS (OI33JS) LoTW eQSL 18623 km ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ
    "2023-10-07 14:54 9Z4Y (FK90HM) 50.313.0 FT8 YB0COU (OI33IU) LoTW eQSL 18611 km ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ
    "2023-10-07 14:52 JA6GNL (PM53GO) 50.310.0 FT8 PJ4MM (FK52VE) LoTW 14545 km

    "FT8 CQ AS:

    "2023-10-07 14:38 PJ4MM (FK52VE) 50.313.0 FT8 4W/JH2EUV (PI21) LoTW 18502 km +12"

    A video about predicting Solar Flares (Helioseismology):

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oxp24[1]

    A video about a Class X2 flare:

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oxpu2[2]

    A video about a Cannibal CME:

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oumkk[3]

    A report about Solar Cycle history:

    https://bit.ly/3FpTqwN[4]
    ÿ
    The latest report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/8xHnsvBFTgE[5]

    Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to k7ra@arrl.net[6]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us
    which mode you were operating.

    An archive of past propagation bulletins is at http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation[7] . More good
    information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/[8] .

    Also, check this article from September, 2002 QST:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt[9]

    Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL
    bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins[10] .

    Sunspot numbers for October 12 through 18, 2023 were 126, 91, 100,
    92, 106, 57, and 54, with a mean of 89.4. 10.7 cm flux was 157.1,
    149, 148.2, 144.6, 144, 137.3, and 135.3, with a mean of 145.1.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 4, 13, 8, 4, 4, 3, and 9, with a
    mean of 6.4. Middle latitude A index was 3, 11, 6, 2, 3, 2, and 8,
    with a mean of 5.

    ÿ


    [1] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oxp24
    [2] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oxpu2
    [3] https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8oumkk
    [4] https://bit.ly/3FpTqwN
    [5] https://youtu.be/8xHnsvBFTgE
    [6] k7ra@arrl.net
    [7] http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation
    [8] http://k9la.us/
    [9] https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
    [10] http://arrl.org/bulletins

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS