[DX] 20/17 Meters
Tomas
[email protected]
Sat, 05 Oct 2002 10:42:48 -0700
Hi,
WA1TJB wrote:
> I have been on 20 and 17 meters late in the evening
> for the past couple of nights and the bands seems like
> it's almost dead. I have a brand new IC-746 pro and
> I'm wondering if it's the band or my radio? Have
> there been any geomagnetic disturbances in the past
> few days?
The propagation of radio signals over the last week has been fair to poor, as a
result of a continual solar wind with just the right magnetic orientation to
cause geomagnetic storminess. This solar wind has mostly originated in coronol
hole "mass ejections." A lot of folks might think that these conditions were a
result of high solar flare activity. But that is not really the cause. The CME
- coronal mass ejection - activity has been very active.
The atmosphere above the Sun's surface is called the "corona," under which is
the chromosphere and the photosphere. On the photosphere exist several types of
features. Sunspots are the most obvious. Using a certain type of instrument
called a coronagraph, we can see the corona, and other features like the CME.
The coronagraph is a man-made eclipse aboard a space vehicle (satellite), that
allows us to see the pearly white crown surrounding the Sun. Features seen using
these eclipes include the coronal holes, solar flares, and popping bubbles
called coronal mass ejections.
Coronal holes are regions where the corona is dark. It is not a real "hole" as
in a dip in some surface. The corona is not part of the sun's surface. The
corona, again, is part of the sun's atmosphere (like our troposphere,
stratosphere, and so on). These features were discovered when X-ray telescopes
were first flown above the earth's atmosphere to reveal the structure of the
corona across the solar disc. Coronal holes are associated with "open" magnetic
field lines and are often found at the Sun's poles. A coronal hole simply means
an area where a break-down in the magnetic fields in the solar corona have
occurred. It is not part of the sun "burning out" or anything close to this. It
is a normal part of the way the sun's corona acts. Often, high-speed solar wind
is known to originate in coronal holes. This escape of solar plasma and energy
streams outward away from the sun. When this outward stream, or solar wind, is
directed toward Earth, we see an increase in the Solar Wind speed and intensity.
More on this in a bit.
When a bubble of plasma (formed by the strong magnetic fields of the sun)
originating in the break-down of the corona (the coronal hole) bursts, and spews
outward away from the sun the huge cloud of plasma, we call it a "Coronal Mass
Ejection." It once was thought that Coronal Mass Ejections were initiated by
solar flares. Although flares accompany some CMEs, it is now known that most
CMEs are not associated with flares. CMEs can occur at any time during the solar
cycle, but their occurrence rate increases with increasing solar activity and
peaks around solar maximum. Since the Sun completes a full rotation every 27 to
28 days, the same CMEs may recur every month. The exact processes involved in
the release of CMEs are not known, but we do know a lot about how they affect
the Earth.
Anyway, the result of a well-placed CME is a bombardment of plasma into our
magnetosphere (the magnetic force field that in part protects us from lethal
doses of solar energy), as well as an increase in the density, power level, and
speed of the solar wind.
When the solar wind, which contains magnetic field lines, reaches the
magnetoshere, one of two thing can happen. If the magnetic lines in the solar
wind are orientated just right, or in a southerly orientation, they will combine
in a way that nullifies the magnetosphere at that point, causing a "window" to
open, allowing for solar plasma to enter into our atmosphere. If the magnetic
lines in the solar wind are NOT orientated this way, then they will combine with
the magnetosphere in a way that enhances the magnetospere in a way that
strengthens the force field. So, when plasma makes it through, the geomagnetic
fields as well as the ionosphere become highly disturbed. When the plasma and
radiation is blocked, we have more quiet geomagnetic conditions.
A solar flare, on the other hand, will impact us in two ways (where the CME only
imacts us in one way: The shock wave of the plasma cloud and the increase of
the solar wind); the immediate x-ray and ultraviolet radiation, which directly
causes increased ionization of the D- and E-layers, and therefore an increase in
the absorption of radio signals, and the later (two to three days out) impact of
the solar plasma and increased solar wind speed, much as is seen from a CME.
In the last week, we have had more CME activity than solar flare activity.
Solar flares have been minor in stength, so radio blackouts (the result of the
immediate arrival of x-ray and ultraviolet radiation from a solar flare) have
been infrequent. But, CME activity has been ongoing and moderate in strength,
with a predominant southern component of the solar wind's magnetic orientation.
Expect a few more days of this, at least. You may see these current conditions
at
http://prop.hfradio.org/
73 de Tomas, NW7US // AAR0JA
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