[SFDXA] ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA

Bill bmarx at bellsouth.net
Fri Jan 17 13:27:28 EST 2025


SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP003

ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA

ZCZC AP03

QST de W1AW

Propagation Forecast Bulletin 3 ARLP003

 From Tad Cook, K7RA

Seattle, WA January 17, 2025

To all radio amateurs

SB PROP ARL ARLP003

ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA

Sorry to say this is the last ARRL Propagation Forecast Bulletin I will 
write. I took over in 1991 from Ed Tilton, W1HDQ when he was too ill and 
weak to continue, and now with ALS I have similar problems.

Geomagnetic influencers were more stable this week (planetary A index 
shifted from 16.9 to 10.7) and solar indicators were weaker. Average 
daily sunspot number changed from 159.1 to 103.3 and average daily solar 
flux from 184.3 to 161.9.

Predicted activity indicates solar flux at 210 on January 17-18, 215 on 
January 19, 220 on January 20-21, 215 on January 22, 220 on January 
23-24, 170 on January 25-26, 175 on January 27-28, 170 on January 29-30, 
then 165 and 160 on January 31 through February 1, 155 on February 2-3, 
150 on February 4-6, 145 on February 7-8, 150 on February 9, 145 on 
February 10-12, 150 on February 13, 155 on February 14-15, 160 on 
February 16, and 165 on February 17-20.

The forecast for planetary A index is 15, 12 and 8 on January 17-19, 8 
on January 20-21, 5 on January 22-30, then 20 on January 31 through 
February 2, then 15, 12, 12 and 10 on February 3-6, then 5 on February 
7-9, 8 on February 19-11, 5 on February 12, 8 on February 13-16 and 5 on 
February 17-26.

Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's 
Ionosphere, January 16, 2025, from F. K. Janda, OK1HH:

"There is no indication that the prediction of an upsurge in solar 
activity starting in mid-January will come to pass. The development is 
quieter, with no major solar flares occurring. The sunspot groups that 
are currently observable from Earth have stable magnetic fields. More 
important flares are therefore rather unlikely.

"The geomagnetic field, while not calm, is not disturbed. Intervals of 
quiescence alternate irregularly with slight upswings in activity. 
Ionospheric shortwave propagation conditions are therefore not as good 
as we had hoped based on the predicted rise in solar activity, but they 
are not bad either. This type of development is likely to continue."

The latest from the Royal Observatory of Belgium:

https://www.sidc.be 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3MQ/index.html>

For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, 
seewww.arrl.org/propagation 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3Mg/index.html>and 
the ARRL Technical Information Service web page 
at:www.arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3Mw/index.html>. 
For an explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, 
seewww.arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3NA/index.html>.

An archive of past propagation bulletins are 
atwww.arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3NQ/index.html>. 
More good information and tutorials on propagation are athttp://k9la.us 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3Ng/index.html>.

Also, check this QST article: "Understanding Solar Indices" from 
September 2002 QST.

https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt 
<https://arrlinformz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3Nw/index.html>

Instructions for starting or ending email subscriptions to ARRL 
bulletins are atwww.arrl.org/bulletins 
<https://arrl.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zMjMyNjg5JnA9MSZ1PTU1NTg0MDIyMiZsaT0zNjU1NzI3OA/index.html>.

Sunspot numbers for January 9 through 15, 2025 were 126, 105, 85, 99, 
100, 106, and 102 with a mean of 103.3. 10.7 cm flux was 162.2, 156.9, 
156, 158.4, 159.7, 166.4, and 173.5 with a mean of 161.9. Planetary A 
index was 10, 12, 7, 7, 11, 12 and 16, with an average of 10.7. Middle 
latitude A Index was 9, 11, 5, 6, 9, 10, and 11, with a mean of 8.7.

NNNN

/EX
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