• ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 29 11:05:50 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP17
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 17 ARLP017
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA April 29, 2022
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    At 0206 UTC on April 28 the Australian Space Forecast Centre issued
    a Geomagnetic Disturbance Warning: "The Earth is currently under the
    influence of moderately elevated solar wind speed associated with a
    southern coronal hole. On late UT day April 29, solar wind
    conditions are expected to enhance further due to possible arrival
    of the 27 April CMEs. G0-G1 conditions are likely for next three
    days with a chance of G2 on April 29 due to both coronal hole
    effects and impending impact of the CMEs. Aurora may be visible from
    Tasmania, southern coastline Victoria and southwest Western
    Australia."

    On Wednesday and Thursday, I am seeing sunspot groups threaded
    across the Sun from southeast to northwest. Daily sunspot number
    peaked at 126 on Tuesday, and average daily sunspot number for the
    week was 109.3, up from 64.4 last week. Daily solar flux peaked at
    164.4 on Thursday, April 21 and the average for the week was 156, up
    from 133.9 in the previous week.

    Predicted solar flux is 125, 115 and 110 on April 29 through May 1,
    105 on May 2-4, 102 on May 5-6, then 130 and 128 on May 7-8, 130 on
    May 9-10, 135 on May 11-12, 140 on May 13-15, 160 on May 16-21, 135
    on May 22, 132 on May 23-25, 125 on May 26-27, 130 on May 28-31, 125
    on June 1, and 130 on June 2-3.

    Predicted planetary A index is 18, 10 and 8 on April 29 through May
    1, 5 on May 2-5, then 8, 15, 12 and 8 on May 6-9, 5 on May 10-12,
    then 8, 10, 8 and 8 on May 13-16, 5 on May 17-19, then 10 and 8 on
    May 20-21, 5 on May 22-25, then 18, 12 and 8 on May 26-28, then 5 on
    May 29 through June 1, and 8, 15, 12 and 8 on June 2-5.

    OK1HH says:

    "Last week we witnessed higher solar activity. Large active areas
    passed through the central meridian and produced medium-sized
    eruptions (class M) and occasionally large eruptions (class X).
    While at the end of the period these areas in the northwest were
    sinking, other and slightly smaller areas in the southeast of the
    disk emerged.

    "There have been two increases in geomagnetic activity - one was
    expected on the night of April 20-21, second one, rather unexpected,
    by afternoon of April 27. The gradual increase in solar radiation
    has significantly improved the propagation conditions of decameter
    waves. Its improvement was supported by the positive storm phase
    during the afternoon of April 27, when the critical frequencies of
    the F2 ionospheric layer in mid-latitudes exceeded 10 MHz and MUF on transatlantic routes rose above 30 MHz. The negative storm phase
    followed on April 28."

    Decameter waves is another term for HF radio, at 3-30 MHz.

    Watching sunspots on the sidewalk in New York City:

    https://evgrieve.com/2022/04/seeing-sun-spots-today.html

    A story on how to watch sunspots (safely, of course) without a
    telescope:

    https://bit.ly/39qJnuQ

    Bill, KD9KCK wrote:

    "On Wednesday, April 27 around 2100 UTC 10m was having some
    propagation I have never dreamed of. I was tuning around looking for
    a spot to call CQ for Parks On The Air and came across EA2K and
    another station in Spain talking to ZL1ACE in New Zealand. And I was
    able to hear both sides here near Chicago with just a short 36 inch
    10m hamstick on the roof of my car with my IC-718. I didn't try to
    contact the EA stations once they called QRZ though because they
    were looking for just Pacific Stations at the time."

    Here is a story of a "Tornado of Fire" on the surface of the Sun:

    https://cnet.co/3Krc9Iy

    K4ZOT wrote on Tuesday, April 26:

    "Just wanted to drop you a quick line about today's unusual
    propagation on 17M to Eastern Europe - Kosovo and Croatia, Central
    Asia - Kyrgyzstan, Japan, far NT in Canada, SA - Brazil, North
    Atlantic - Faroe Island, etc. - well really all over the world.
    This was quite unusual in my book and unexpected. Worked two ATNO -
    Republic of Kosovo and Faroe Island. I am running a TS-590SG into a
    mini-beam at only 20 feet with an amp at 300 watts. All contacts
    were on FT8. It was quite an experience!"

    NN4X reported from Florida on April 26:

    "I experienced some amazing conditions on 10m
    over-the-north-pole-or-darn close propagation today, all using FT8.

    "9N7AA 1220 UTC (20 degree heading; the others were within a few
    degrees of 0)

    "YC1KQV 1222 UTC
    9M2TO 1613 UTC
    9W2TED 1633 UTC
    9V1ZV 1714 UTC
    E20EHQ 1818 UTC

    "There was at least one other 9W2 that I missed, and other YBs which
    I did not call.

    "Also, in there was BD9BI/0 (Zone 23). I'd worked him previously,
    so did not pursue him.

    "I am not sure I've ever seen such an extended period of this kind
    of propagation on 10m."

    Here is some information on flares and radio blackouts:

    https://bit.ly/3EWuPij

    I (K7RA) noticed plenty of odd propagation this week, possibly due
    to flare activity. I use FT8 mainly as a tool for observing
    propagation on various bands, and on Tuesday April 26 at 1652 UTC
    K7HAM in Arizona answered my CQ on 17 meters. But we did not
    complete the contact. Pskreporter.info showed broad coverage of my
    signal, from Southern California to Florida at the south, and South
    Dakota to Maine at the north. But at 1700 UTC coverage began to
    fade.

    By 1720 UTC my coverage on the map was all gone, with a couple of
    odd exceptions.

    WZ7I in Pennsylvania and AF7KR in Arizona were the only stations
    reporting my signal. Then suddenly NH6V on Hawaii's Big Island
    reported. That was it, but then I observed F1EYG and DL0PF on my
    screen.

    After 1721 UTC my coverage began coming back. I stopped calling
    K7HAM at 1730 UTC, 38 minutes after he responded to my CQ, and by
    1735 UTC my signal was being received again all over North America.

    On Wednesday, April 27 at 1730 UTC checking for any FT8 signals on
    10 meters from my grid square (CN87), they were only being received
    in Florida! Nowhere else, anywhere, and the cluster of Florida
    stations reporting was quite thick, stretching all over the state.
    But nowhere else was reporting signals from my area.

    More on radio blackouts:

    https://bit.ly/38z8c7b

    Don't know what they mean by "sunspot activity score of 80," the
    average of daily sunspot numbers for the past four weeks is 68.2:

    https://bit.ly/3km9AwX

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

    https://youtu.be/kYv8CsSot-U

    If you would like to make a comment or have a tip for our readers,
    please email the author at, k7ra@arrl.net.

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

    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/.

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

    Sunspot numbers for April 21 through 27, 2022 were 119, 101, 118,
    112, 94, 126, and 95, with a mean of 109.3. 10.7 cm flux was 164.4,
    162.5, 159.8, 158.5, 156.6, 148.9, and 141.5, with a mean of 156.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 10, 7, 13, 5, 5, 3, and 21, with
    a mean of 9.1. Middle latitude A index was 9, 7, 12, 5, 4, 3, and
    16, with a mean of 8.
    NNNN
    /EX

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  • From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 28 12:20:31 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP17
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 17 ARLP017
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA April 28, 2023
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    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 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, then 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. 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, 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. 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. 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

    Aurora in Iowa:

    https://bit.ly/3Nlvy2S

    An article explaining aurora:

    https://bit.ly/3n7ROm2

    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

    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 and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals . For an
    explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-Earth-the-ionosphere .

    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/ .

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

    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.
    NNNN
    /EX

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  • From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 26 10:49:45 2024
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP17
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 17 ARLP017
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA April 26, 2024
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP017
    ARLP017 Propagation de K7RA

    "ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING ISSUED AT 0733 UTC/26 APRIL
    2024 BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

    "A coronal hole wind stream has moderately enhanced the solar wind
    speed and been associated with several hours' worth of southward IMF
    parameter Bz. For this reason, it is possible that periods of G1-G2
    geomagnetic storm conditions may be observed.

    "INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED DUE TO CORONAL HOLE HIGH
    SPEED WIND STREAM FROM 26-27 APRIL 2024:

    "GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST
    26 Apr: G0, slight chance G1-G2
    27 Apr: G0, slight chance G1

    "Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre."

    After a big jump in solar activity, conditions continued to improve
    in the past week.

    Twelve new sunspot groups emerged, two on April 18, three more on
    April 19, five more on April 21, another on April 22 and one more on
    April 24.

    Average daily sunspot number jumped from 142.7 to 265.9, and average
    daily solar flux from 177.4 to 216.

    The Sun set another sunspot number record this week when the numbers
    were 283, 283, 282 and 283 on April 21-24. The last time we saw a
    higher daily sunspot number was 296 on April 17, 2014, 3,661 days
    ago.

    April 2014 was the peak of Solar Cycle 24.

    Predicted solar flux over the next month shows values peaking at 215
    from May 15-16 and again on May 19-20.

    We see solar flux at 155, 145 and 135 on April 26-28, 130 on April
    29 through May 2, 160 on May 3-6, then 165, 170, 180, 185, 190, 195,
    200, and 210 on May 7-14, then 215 on May 15-16, 212 on May 17-18,
    215 on May 19-20, then 200 and 190 on May 21-22, 170 on May 23-24,
    165, 160 and 155 on May 25-27, then 160 on May 28 through June 2.

    Predicted planetary A index is 15 on April 26-27, then 12, 10, 8 and
    5 on April 28 through May 1, 10 on May 2-3, 5 on May 4, 8 on May
    5-7, 5 on May 8-18, then 10, 15, 10 and 12 on May 19-22, 15 on May
    23-24, 12, 8 and 7 on May 25-27, and 10 on May 28-30, 5 on May 31,
    and 8 on June 1-3.

    There is no report from OK1HH this week due to problems with the
    Czech electric power grid.

    Steve, NN4X wrote on April 26:

    "The SFI and SSN have been very high lately, as you are more than
    well aware. Sadly, no F2 has been noted on 6m, but on the evening
    of Wednesday, 4/24/2024 at around 10:00 pm ET.

    "10m: Noted BY still being received here in EL98 FT8. Also, received
    multiple decodes from CS7AUT in IM67!

    "Not bad for 10:00pm!"

    In another message, on the evening of April 25 he sent a long list
    of 10 and 12 meter FT8 decodes at 11:42 PM EDT.

    Signals from all over North America, plus Brazil, New Zealand,
    Australia, Russia and China.

    New report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW:

    https://youtu.be/MIB_OnxhpLk

    From Weather.com, a cluster of sunspots:

    https://bit.ly/3UAF9Wo

    An article from The Sun about four flares:

    https://bit.ly/3WftxJG

    A Super Explosion about four flares:

    https://bit.ly/3waYEeY

    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 and the ARRL Technical Information
    Service web page at, http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals . For
    an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere .

    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/ .

    Also, check this QST article about Solar Indices:

    https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt

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

    Sunspot numbers for April 18 through 24 2024 were 247, 243, 240,
    283, 283, 282, and 283 with a mean of 265.9. 10.7 cm flux was 226.9,
    213.4, 209.5, 217.1, 226.8, 219.1, and 199.1, with a mean of 216.
    Estimated planetary A indices were 4, 41, 12, 19, 9, 8, and 4, with
    a mean of 13.9. Middle latitude A index was 5, 21, 10, 14, 10, 9,
    and 4, with a mean of 10.4.
    NNNN
    /EX

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