• ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 28 10:49:44 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP04
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 4 ARLP004
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA January 28, 2022
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    A new sunspot group appeared on January 20 and another on January
    24, two more on January 25 and one more on January 26. But overall
    solar activity declined from the previous week, January 13-19.
    Average daily sunspot number declined from 94.4 to 39.6, and average
    daily solar flux went from 112 to 97.6.

    On January 27 the daily sunspot number was 85, much higher than the
    average of 39.6 of the previous seven days, always a good signal for
    increasing activity.

    Predicted solar flux is 105 on January 28 through February 4, 108 on
    February 5-6, 110 on February 7-8, 108 on February 9-10, then 106,
    105, 103, 101, 100 and 95 on February 11-16, 92 on February 17-18,
    90 on February 19-21, then 88, 87, 92 and 94 on February 22-25, 96
    on February 26-28, 98 and 100 on March 1-2, 105 on March 3-4, then
    110 on March 5, and 108 on March 6-7.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5, 12 and 10 on January 28-30, 5 on
    January 31 through February 3, then 15 and 10 on February 4-5, 5 on
    February 6-9, then 12, 15 and 12 on February 10-12, 5 on February
    13-19, 8 on February 20-23, then 5, 12 and 10 on February 24-26, 5
    on February 27 through March 2, then 15 and 10 on March 3-4, and 5
    on March 5-8.

    F.K. Janda, OK1HH wrote:

    "Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - January 27, 2022 (Free continuation of my Earth's
    magnetic field activity predictions, published between 1978 - 2021.)

    "Since the end of last November, fluctuations in the level of solar
    activity within the twenty-seven-day periodicity have been more
    regular, which contributes to the success of the forecasts. This
    also applies to the occurrence of coronal holes, so predictions of
    the Earth's magnetic field activity are also more accurate
    (including the next recurrent geomagnetic disturbance, which we
    expect on/about February 4). The overall level of solar activity is
    rising faster than long-term forecasts suggest, so it can be assumed
    that the maximum of the current 11-year cycle will be higher than
    the previous one."

    "Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period January 28 to February
    03, 2022:

    "Quiet: Jan 28, Jan 31-Feb 3
    Unsettled: Jan 29-31
    Active: Jan 28-29, Feb 3-4
    Minor storm: Feb 4
    Major storm: 0
    Severe storm: 0

    "Geomagnetic activity summary:

    "Friday, January 28, we expect quiet conditions. Then, starting
    Saturday, January 29, we expect an unsettled to active period ending
    by January 31. At the start of February, we expect quiet conditions
    to Thursday, February 3. About February 3-4, we expect a new active
    episode which can reach a minor storm level.

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

    On January 16 a local Seattle ham reported:

    "Amazing Aurora opening on 10m Friday at 2100-2230 UTC, CW and SSB.
    Northern Europe only, GM, DL, SP, UA1, EW, OZ, LA, SM, and best
    signals were from OH. VERY unusual and first time Western Washington
    big opening to EU in years, and it was worked by several W7s. DX
    Maps showed lots of lines over the North Pole, very late night in
    Scandinavia."

    I often ignore stories from British tabloids, but this one seems to
    be not overly alarmist:

    https://bit.ly/3s0kThs

    WB8VLC, from Salem Oregon reported:

    "At 2353 UTC on Jan 22 on 10 meter CW at 28.066 MHz I was hearing
    KFS, a non-ham which was at once a Maritime station in California
    calling CQ CQ for the past 10 minutes, then he faded away or he shut
    down at 2400 UTC.

    "I was just in QSO with FK8IK in New Caledonia on 10 meter CW after
    which I saw another fast but weak CW station above us and it was KFS
    calling CQ, very weak at first until I moved my beam south and then
    he was strong 569 with some QSB sending about 25 WPM on 28.066 MHz.

    "Aside from typical South America on 10 SSB not much today except
    for FK8IK on both 12 and 10 CW but he was 599 on both bands.

    "2022-01-22 2314 UTC 24.902 MHz CW FK8IK 599 both ways
    2022-01-22 2337 UTC 28.010 MHz CW FK8IK 599
    2022-01-22 2353 UTC 28.066 MHz CW KFS

    "The KFS activity was legitimate."

    Regarding rising activity versus forecasts, back in Propagation
    Forecast Bulletin ARLP002 we included this link:

    https://bit.ly/3GsbuFI .

    WA7AA responded (edited):

    "They went on to say sunspot counts exceeded predicted values for 15
    straight months, and the monthly value at the end of December 2021
    was the highest in 5 years and more than twice the value forecast by
    the NOAA/NASA prediction panel.

    "This isn't the first place I've seen this claim from the NOAA/NASA
    prediction panel and I am wondering if you have any contacts in that
    group to ask them for some clarification and explanation. There are
    several problems with this 'over-performance' claim they excitedly
    show in the link above. The first is that the graph on that link
    places the last solar minimum several months after the actual
    minimum that occurred in November 2019. That alone can skew any
    subsequent analysis and make it prone to a misinterpretation.

    "The next thing is the graph shows the length of their predicted
    Solar Cycle 25 as 14 years long! This is nowhere near any cycle
    length in recorded history that, as we all know, averages to around
    11 years. No one can even predict a cycle length, so where did they
    get this from?

    "And finally, their predicted cycle graph is a smooth one peak cycle
    (slow rising slopes as a result), while most cycles so far have been
    dual peak cycles (steeper slopes and a sort of a plateau as a
    result).

    "Once you add all three of these errors into the observation, it is
    easy to make a claim that Solar Cycle 25 is over-performing the
    predictions ('twice the value') made before it started, that
    generally placed it in the same strength as Solar Cycle 24 within
    the 5-10% margin.

    "However, when the curve is adjusted to start in November 2019, when
    it's compressed to the average 11 years length and tweaked to a
    double peak graph (in other words, more or less carbon-copied the
    Solar Cycle 24 graph), it quickly becomes obvious that Solar Cycle
    25 is so far following the last cycle curve almost exactly,
    insignificantly higher at 3-4 spots per month.

    "A recent cycle comparison at, http://www.solen.info/solar/images/comparison_recent_cycles.png
    confirms this observation.

    "I am by no means an expert in propagation predictions in any way,
    but it just seems weird that anyone connected to NOAA and/or NASA
    would make such an error and proceed to stick to it for so long. Am
    I missing something here? Was this a bad case of wishful thinking on
    their part? I would like to know what their explanation is."

    N0JK reported:

    "A major sporadic-E opening on 6 Meters took place in the 2022 ARRL
    January VHF Contest on Saturday afternoon January 15. Starting
    around 2100 UTC, stations in Florida appeared in Kansas. The opening
    grew and spread and by 2300 UTC 6 Meters was open to the entire
    southeast part of the country.

    "I received a PSK flag from ZF1EJ and logged XE2X (EL06). The
    opening then spread east to Ohio and north to Minnesota (N0JCF
    EN35). KF0M (EM17) worked Cuba and almost completed with HI3AA. The
    opening faded at 0046 UTC with K3VN (EL98) last in my log. I was
    operating single operator portable 10 watts with MFJ-9406 and a 2 el
    Yagi. Cold and windy! The next morning a short 6 Meter Es opening
    to Mexico with XE2YWH (DL92) worked at 1435 UTC. All contacts FT8.

    "The sporadic-E was a real treat for the January VHF Contest."

    Here is a report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW.

    https://youtu.be/vsLIY2Y0xQs

    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 January 20 through 26, 2022 were 60, 23, 22, 22,
    26, 53, and 71, with a mean of 39.6. 10.7 cm flux was 99.3, 97.3,
    95.2, 93.5, 95.2, 100.9, and 101.8, with a mean of 97.6. Estimated
    planetary A indices were 5, 8, 10, 8, 4, 13, and 10, with a mean of
    8.3. Middle latitude A index was 5, 5, 7, 7, 3, 10, and 8, with a
    mean of 6.4.
    NNNN
    /EX

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  • From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 27 10:28:36 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP04
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 4 ARLP004
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA January 27, 2023
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    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

    An article about Starspots:

    https://bit.ly/3Hxoywn

    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

    Here is a prediction that was WAY off:

    https://bit.ly/3Jn9UJl

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

    https://youtu.be/Vuv3fRUD1Mo

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

    Check https://www.cq160.com for details.

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

    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 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.
    NNNN
    /EX

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  • From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 26 10:22:53 2024
    XPost: rec.radio.shortwave, rec.radio.info

    SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    ZCZC AP04
    QST de W1AW
    Propagation Forecast Bulletin 4 ARLP004
    From Tad Cook, K7RA
    Seattle, WA January 26, 2024
    To all radio amateurs

    SB PROP ARL ARLP004
    ARLP004 Propagation de K7RA

    Just four new sunspot groups emerged this reporting week, January
    18-24, one on each day, January 18-21.

    But it looks like we may see flares, CMEs and geomagnetic storms
    over the next few days. Spaceweather.com identified sunspot group
    AR3561 as "hyperactive."

    Sunspot numbers and solar flux declined, and geomagnetic indicators
    rose, but only slightly.

    Average daily sunspot number dropped from 167.3 to 130.6, and
    average solar flux from 184.1 to 173.3.

    Average planetary A index rose from 5 to 7.4, and middle latitude
    numbers from 3.9 to 5.1.

    Looking ahead, we may see a short term peak in solar flux centered
    around February 11, and another about six weeks from now.

    Predicted solar flux is 160 on January 26-27, 150 on January 28 to
    February 1, 170 on February 2, 175 on February 3-4, 180 on February
    5-8, then 190, 190 and 195 on February 9-11, then 190 and 185 on
    February 12-13, 180 on February 14-15, then 175. 170, 175, 175, 170,
    175, and 170 on February 16-22, then 165, 160, 165, 160 and 165 on
    February 23-27, 170 on February 28-29, and 175 on March 1-2, then
    180 on March 3-6.

    Predicted planetary A index is 25, 30, 18, 10 and 8 on January
    26-30, then 5 on January 31 through February 16, and 8 on February
    17-18, then 5 on February 19-24, then 10, 12 and 10 on February
    25-27, and 5 on February 28 through early March.

    Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
    Ionosphere - January 25, 2024, from OK1HH:

    "At the present stage of the 11-year solar cycle, there are five to
    thirteen groups of spots (or active regions) on the Sun. In three of
    them, we can observe such magnetic configuration that allows the
    development of a larger flare, possibly with a CME.

    "On the other hand, there are relatively few coronal holes on the
    Sun, reducing the likelihood of Earth being hit by an enhanced solar
    wind and then geomagnetic disturbances. Therefore, the evolution is
    quieter, and the level of shortwave propagation is a little calmer
    than we might otherwise expect."

    Glenn Packard, K4ZOT reported from Atlanta, Georgia on January 22
    that he worked New Zealand on 6 meter FT8 at 0257 UTC:

    "I just happened to tune to 6M tonight after being disappointed on
    6M for the Winter season. Then Bloom, ZL4TT, comes through at R-19
    and me at -08. Just WOW. Called once and he came right back to me.
    Band then went dead after the contact. Amateur Radio still has
    surprised this Olde Man."

    Solar Cycle 25 nearing its peak?

    https://bit.ly/3Sv70GF

    Articles about recent Solar activity:

    https://bit.ly/4b6n48Z

    https://bit.ly/3OiSL5r

    https://bit.ly/3Ohoy6L

    A NOAA article about Solar Cycle Progression:

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

    The latest report from Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW, for January 22:

    https://youtu.be/41LGqYbxsvk

    Did you know she has about 84,500 subscribers?

    New, long program from Dr. Skov for January 25:

    https://youtu.be/wQ7VFh_D2Mw

    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 January 18 through 24 2024 were 113, 137, 144,
    150, 139, 123, and 108, with a mean of 130.6. 10.7 cm flux was
    162.3, 157.4, 166.3, 178.5, 196.1, 180.3, and 172, with a mean of
    173.3. Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 8, 6, 6, 9, 7, and 10,
    with a mean of 7.4. Middle latitude A index was 4, 5, 4, 5, 6, 5,
    and 7, with a mean of 5.1.
    NNNN
    /EX

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