[SFDXA] The K7RA Solar Update
Bill
bmarx at bellsouth.net
Fri Dec 4 18:14:33 EST 2020
*The K7RA Solar Update*
12/04/2020
Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Sunspot Cycle 25 is 1 year old, and
increasing solar activity continues to surprise and amaze.
Average daily sunspot numbers more than doubled every week over the past
few weeks. Two weeks ago, we reported average daily sunspot numbers of
12. Last week, the average was 27.9. This week the average daily sunspot
number at sits at 57.6.
In the past week the highest daily sunspot number was 84 on Sunday,
November 29, and solar flux also peaked that day, at 116.3, pushing the
week’s average solar flux to 108.1, up from 90.1 over the previous 7
days, and from 79.8 the week prior to that.
Geomagnetic indicators were moderate, despite several solar flares,
including a solar flare on November 29 that was the most powerful solar
flare and coronal mass ejection (CME) in the new solar cycle — a sure
sign of increasing activity. It was not Earth-directed, however. Here’s
a /Michigan Live/ *report <https://bit.ly/2JJ3veM>*, and a *report
<http://www.arrl.org/news/powerful-solar-flare-coronal-mass-ejection-occur-on-november-29>* received
from Frank Donovan, W3LPL.
Predicted solar flux over the next 45 days is 100, 95, 90, 85, and 80 on
December 4 – 8; 75 on December 9 – 11; 85 on December 12; 82 on December
13 – 16; 85, 90, and 100 on December 17 – 19; 105 on December 20 – 21;
108 on December 22; 110 on December 23 – 25; 115 on December 26 – 27;
113 on December 28 – 30; 110 on December 31; 105 and 103 on January 1 –
2; 95 on January 3 – 4; 92 and 88 on January 5 – 6; 85 on January 7 – 8;
82 on January 9 – 12; 85, 90, and 100 on January 13 – 15, and 105 on
January 16 – 17.
Planetary A index is predicted at 5 on December 4 – 17; 12, 20, and 8 on
December 18 – 20; 5 on December 21 – 22; 8, 10, and 8 on December 23 –
25; 5 on December 26 – January 13, and 12, 20, 8, and 5 on January 14 – 17.
F.K. Janda, OK1HH, reports the geomagnetic activity forecast for
December 4 – 29. The geomagnetic field will be:
* quiet on December 6 – 7, 12 – 13, (14 – 16)
* quiet to unsettled on December 8 – 11, 21, 28
* quiet to active on December 4 ( – 5), 17, 22 – 23, 26, 29
* unsettled to active December 18, 20, (24 – ) 25, (27)
* active to disturbed December 19
* Solar wind will intensify on December 4, (5 – 8, 11, 19,) 20 – 22,
(23,) 27 (28 – 29)
Parentheses mean lower probability of activity enhancement.
Jeff Hartley, N8II, reports from FM19cj in Shepherdstown, West Virginia:
“About 10 days does not make an average, but I can never remember such a
sudden sustained increase in SFI as the new cycle begins. Perhaps
October 1978 may have been similar, but I assume that flux was already
fairly high in the preceding months, and the new cycle was only about a
year from the peak.
“Conditions — or at least activity — seemed to be down a bit in the week
preceding the CQ World Wide CW contest until Friday, which seemed
better. Twenty meters was a bit disappointing at the Saturday November
0000 UTC start, with most DX coming from southern South America.
“D4Z on Cape Verde was loud and continued to be loud through most of the
weekend on 20.
“I managed a marginal scatter with Italy beaming at 150° (over Brazil).
“Moving to 40 at 0023 UTC, signals were loud from Germany and Hungary
farther south. At 0121, 7Q6M Malawi and CR3W Madeira Islands were logged
easily on 40. On 80 at 0220, I could work EU excluding Russia north of
the Black Sea area and the Baltic States, but signals were not that
loud. 160 was very tough, with large pile-ups on North American DX and
not much readable from Africa or Europe.
“I resumed on 20 at 1158 UTC about 10 minutes before sunrise, and the
band was already full of loud Europeans even open already to Russia.
Signal levels were very good with high activity. R8WF in Asia (but still
in the EU Russian Zone 16) was my best DX to the east.
“By 1309, signals from EU were building nicely on 15 from nearly all
corners. Some of my first contacts were OH3077F in Finland, RL6M
southern Russia, LY4T Lithuania, and UT7NY Ukraine. By 1430, northern EU
was mostly gone on 15, but I maintained a good EU QSO rate until about
1522. A brief visit to 10 then found Spain (very weak), Canary Islands,
Puerto Rico, French Guiana, and Cayman Islands. Then it was back to 20
with good western EU conditions until about 1700, staying there working
Europe until 1721. 5H3EE Tanzania went into my 15-meter log at 1735.
“Starting at 1741, 10 was open well into Chile and Argentina, and a bit
less so to Brazil. The 10-meter SA opening was starting to fade at 1900.
Back on 20 at 1927, there was a good auroral sporadic-E opening to
Scandinavia on 20. ZM1M New Zealand had a good long path signal at 1953,
as did VK4TS in Queensland, Australia, shortly after that.
“On 15, starting at 2015, I worked New Zealand, Australia, Hawaii, and
Alaska. A quick check of 10 at 2105 yielded five contacts with loud
Hawaiians. I worked the first Japanese station, JA1ZGO, at 2125, but the
auroral curtain was like a wall, and only big gun JAs were worked
through 2355. I heard three Chinese stations due north from here, but
didn’t make any contacts.
“At sunset 2151, southern SA was loud, and I was thrilled to work JR1GSE
at 2157. The low-band conditions were not good to northern EU on any
band during the evening, but 40 did stay open to some extent to southern
EU through 0200. Eighty-meter signals from Europe were down, and signals
on 160 very weak.
“I managed some quick QSOs on 40 to UN9L, Kazakhstan; VK3GI, Australia,
and ZM1A, New Zealand starting at 1133. Twenty was not fully open to EU
at 1152, but much better 10 minutes later.
“I logged many EU over the next 70 minutes and was thrilled to be called
by EX8MJ Kyrgyzstan who was weak, and UN0L. At 1304, I found good EU
signals on 15, and soon some incredibly loud signals 20, peaking to 30
dB over S-9. Even stations in northern and northeastern Europe were very
workable, but weaker.
“4L6QL, Georgia was my best DX to the east. At 1424, there was a weak
opening to EU on 10. I logged Italy, Slovak Republic, and France, and
CR3DX on Madeira (Africa). At 1524 on 10, I found ZD7BG, St. Helena
Island, and at 1603 Croatia, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and 7Q6M Malawi.
CR6K in Portugal was still heard at 1730, very late. The opening to EU
on 15 lasted late, still okay but fading at 1650. I was able to keep a
good EU QSO rate going on 20 through 1743, much later than on Saturday.”
On December 3, N7RP reported from New Mexico:
“This morning a little after 8 AM local time, I worked HS0ZGC (Thailand)
on 12 meters on FT8. He was working South American stations, and I did
not see any other US stations work HS0ZGC other than me. I am just
running 100 W to a vertical, so I have no idea what path it was. It was
amazing, since it must have been around midnight there. He immediately
uploaded to LoTW, so the contact is confirmed.”
N7RP’s QRZ.com profile <https://www.qrz.com/lookup/n7rp> includes a
narrative about his life in ham radio.
A 6,000-kilometer transequitorial propagation (TEP) contact between
Aruba and Argentina on 2 meter SSB was reported <https://bit.ly/2JJ3veM>.
Mike Schaffer, KA3JAW, reported from Easton, Pennsylvania (FN20jq):
“On Monday, November 30, 11-meter CB (27 MHz) was very active from coast
to coast.
“Even if you’re under heavy rain, with severe thunderstorms you still
can detect stations via sporadic E well past the 2,600-mile
(4,184-kilometer) range. Background noise levels varied between 3 to 5 dBm.
‘Here are the locations I heard, distance, and sporadic-E hops:
* AZ (Tempe) — 2,072 miles (3,334 kilometers) (2x)
* CA (Los Angeles) — 2,384 (3836 kilometers) miles (2x)
* CA (San Diego) — 2,366 miles (3,807 kilometers) (2x)
* CO (Denver) — 1,567 miles (2,521 kilometers) (1x)
* MT (Bozeman) — 1,823 miles (2,933 kilometers) (2x)
* NM (Albuquerque) — 1,749 (2,814 kilometers) (1x)
* NV (Los Vegas) — 2,167 miles (3,487 kilometers) (2x)
* OK (Oklahoma City) — 1,261 miles (2,029 kilometers) (1x)
* PR (San Juan) — 2,625 miles (4,224 kilometers) (2x)
* TX (San Antonio) — 1,524 miles (2,452 kilometers) (1x)
* TX (El Paso) — 1,839 miles (2,959 kilometers) (2x)
* UT (Salt Lake City) — 1,908 miles (3,070 kilometers) (2x)
* WA (Seattle) — 2,349 miles (3,780 kilometers) (2x)
* Canada, Alberta (Calgary) — 1,974 miles (3,176 kilometers) (2x)
* Canada, British Columbia (Vancouver) — 2,377 miles (3,825
kilometers) (2x)
* Jamaica (Kingston) — 1,569 miles (2,525 kilometers) (1x)
Sunspot numbers for November 26 – December 2 were 43, 60, 67, 84, 62,
46, and 41, with a mean of 57.6. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 105.8,
106.3, 109.6, 116.3, 109.4, 104.1, and 104.9, with a mean of 108.1.
Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 8, 10, 6, 8, 2, and 4, with a mean
of 6.4. Middle latitude A index was 5, 7, 9, 6, 6, 2, and 4, with a mean
of 5.6.
For more information concerning radio propagation, *visit*
<http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals> the ARRL Technical
Information Service, *read*
<http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere> “What the Numbers
Mean…,” and *check out* <http://k9la.us/> K9LA’s Propagation Page.
A propagation bulletin *archive*
<http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation> is available. For
customizable propagation charts, visit the *VOACAP Online for Ham Radio*
<https://www.voacap.com/hf/>website.
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