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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: The K7RA Solar Update The K7RA Solar Update June 23-24 is ARRL Field Day, and it follows a week with no sunspots. As expected, there was a mild geomagnetic upset on Thursday, June 21 when a solar wind stream pushed against Earth's magnetic field. The planetary A index went to 14, a moderate level, but the mid-latitude A index, which affects most of us more directly, was only 8. That number comes from the Fredericksburg Geomagnetic Center near Corbin, Virginia, which is at 38.2 degrees north latitude. Boulder, Colorado provides the mid-latitude A index that we hear on WWV at 18 minutes after each hour, and at 40 degrees north latitude, it produced an A index of 12 for June 21. For the weekend, we might see another sunspot appear by Sunday, so it looks like any 10 meter propagation will be sporadic-E skip, not any great openings based on a higher MUF. Predicted planetary A index for June 22-24, Friday through Sunday, is 15, 10 and 8. Predicted solar flux is 68, 68 and 70. A solar flux value below 70 implies no sunspots, which you can observe along side zero sunspot days at http://www.sec.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/DSD.txt. Geophysical Institute Prague predicts unsettled to active conditions June 22, unsettled June 23, and quiet June 24-25, quiet to unsettled June 26, and back to quiet June 27-28. The A index and solar flux predictions referenced in the previous paragraph are available at http://sec.noaa.gov/ftpmenu/forecasts/45DF.html. After 2100 UTC on Friday, check this again for a June 22 update. For visualizing propagation on each HF band for this weekend, try VOAProp, mentioned in ARLP008 this year. This is a program for visualizing worldwide propagation, and of course the Field Day focus is on the United States and Canada. Field Day is also an operating activity that doesn't give any extra points or multipliers for states, sections, DX countries or zones, so the operator just wants to work as many stations as possible. DX stations can be worked as well, but score the same as contacting a station just down the road. The program uses the predicted smoothed sunspot number, which according to the software is currently 12, but if you wish, you could try backing it down toward zero, as there have been no sunspots lately. Because it actually uses the prediction engine from VOACAP, it gives only a monthly prediction, not one keyed to a particular day of the season. An alternative would be to use W6ELprop; this gives an hour-by-hour table of predicted relative signal strengths between any two points for a particular day, although the variation from one day to the next is hardly noticeable. With VOAprop, I can set up the station location for anywhere, and if I set it for 0600 UTC for Memphis, Tennessee, for instance, I can click through the bands and see that 40 meters gives me the best coverage over North America overnight. I can select 15 meters and progress the time through the day, and see that after sunrise, there is a possibility of 15 meter openings, but it looks spotty. At 1900 UTC, I'm seeing some propagation, but south toward Central America. We received some reports of 6 meter openings on Father's Day, June 17. Jim Henderson, KF7E, of Arizona (DM43) said, "Central America was booming," and he worked three that were new for him: Costa Rica, Panama and Nicaragua. Jim said the Central America opening lasted for two hours, and then many Mexican stations were heard and worked. Later in the day, there was a "pipeline" to the San Diego area lasting 3-4 hours, and backscatter as well, that had him copying K7ICW in Las Cruces (near El Paso) for an hour. Also on Sunday, another Arizona station, Glenn Stewartm, N7NRA, reported a great 10 meter opening around 1800 local time (0100 UTC Monday) when stations from Florida, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada and Oregon checked into the local 10 meter net. On Saturday, the day prior, Terry Oldham, KH6MT, of Grand Island, Florida said he heard lots of north-south propagation on 10 meters, and the next day had a solid opening to Texas for two hours. Ken Tata, K1KT, of Warwick, Rhode Island reported a 6 meter opening the following day (Monday) to VO1DJT from 1800 UTC until at least 1820 UTC. He heard stations from 8 and 9-land calling the VO1, but that may have been backscatter. VO1DJT is way up in Lewisporte, Newfoundland and Labrador, above 49.2 degrees north latitude. Sunspot numbers for June 14 through 20 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 and 0 with a mean of 0. 10.7 cm flux was 68.5, 69.1, 68, 66.7, 66.6, 66.4, and 65.7, with a mean of 67.3. Estimated planetary A indices were 20, 8, 7, 6, 5, 7 and 4 with a mean of 8.1. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 13, 7, 4, 3, 5, 5 and 2, with a mean of 5.6.
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#1. To: Tauzero (#0)
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She's practical. |
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