SB PROP @ ARL
$ARLP039
ARLP039 Propagation de K7RA
ZCZC AP39
QST de W1AW
Propagation Forecast Bulletin 39
ARLP039
From Tad Cook, K7RA
Seattle, WA September 30, 2022
To all radio amateurs
SB PROP ARL ARLP039
ARLP039 Propagation de K7RA
Sunspot activity rose this
reporting week, September 22-28, with
average daily sunspot numbers
increasing from 68 to 105.1. But solar
flux? Not so much. Average daily
solar flux rose from 134.3 to
138.4.
So, the sunspot average rose 55%
and solar flux only 3%. I usually
expect the numbers to track more
closely.
New sunspots appeared on
September 22 and 23, and one more on
September 27. On Thursday night
(September 29) NOAA reported the
daily sunspot number at 56,
little more than half the average for
the previous seven days, which is
105.1.
Tuesday September 27 had lots of
geomagnetic activity, with the
planetary A index at 24 and
middle latitude at 33. Spaceweather.com
blamed an unexpected CME. They
also report a huge sunspot beyond the
Sun's eastern horizon with a
helioseismic image at,
https://bit.ly/3ftpTIN .
The Australian Space Weather
Forecasting Centre issued a geomagnetic
warning at 2146 UTC on September
28:
"Geomagnetic 27 day recurrence
patterns indicate that G1 geomagnetic
activity is likely during the
interval 30-Sep to 02-Oct.
"INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY
EXPECTED DUE TO CORONAL HOLE HIGH
SPEED WIND STREAM."
Predicted solar flux from the
Thursday night forecast appears much
more optimistic than the
Wednesday numbers, which were in the ARRL
Letter on Thursday.
Instead of 135 and 130 for the
next few days, they are 148 on
September 30, 146 on October 1-4,
140 on October 5-7, then 135, 130,
128 and 132 on October 8-11, then
136 on October 12-13, then 138,
140, 138 and 135 on October
14-17, then 132, 130, 128 and 125 on
October 18-21, then 130, 140, 142
and 145 on October 22-25, and 140,
135, 130, 125, 128 and 130 on
October 26-31, then 132 on November
1-3, and 135, 130 and 128 on
November 4-6.
Planetary A index is predicted at
20, 60 and 40 on September 30
through October 2, then 20, 18,
16 on October 3-5, 12 on October
6-7, then 8 on October 8-14, 10
on October 15-16, 8 on October
17-19, 12 on October 20-21, 8 on
October 22-23, 10 on October 24-25,
8 on October 26-27, then in a
recurrent disturbance as sunspots
rotate into the same position as
weeks earlier, 25, 50, 30, 20, 12
and 10 on October 28 through
November 2, and back to 8 on November
3-10.
Of course, a planetary A index of
50 or 60 is huge, indicating an
expected major geomagnetic
disturbance.
From OK1HH:
"Weekly Commentary on the Sun,
the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's
Ionosphere - September 29, 2022.
"Free continuation of predictions
of the Earth's magnetic field
activity, published in the years
1978 - 2021.
"The following text is very brief
as I am traveling around Europe
without a computer. I will add
more next time.
"An unexpected and unpredicted
surprise was the rise of geomagnetic
activity during the night of
September 24-25.
"Further developments did not
take place according to assumptions.
Which, by the way, is a precursor
to the next increase in solar
activity.
"Nevertheless, I present a
forecast of further disturbances:
September 30 and especially
October 1!
"http://ok1hh.nagano.cz/ - F.K. Janda,
OK1HH"
Wow, Frantislav manages to submit
his report without a computer!
I've never been to Europe
(unfortunately), but I imagine him ducking
into some sort of Internet kiosk
to file his report.
Here is Dr. Tamitha Skov's,
WX6SWW, the Space Weather Woman, report
from last weekend:
https://youtu.be/A8flrmnAqQQ
An article on solar research:
https://bit.ly/3dPm40p
Newsweek is at it again:
https://bit.ly/3CmpW2e
I continue to see unusual
propagation using FT8, such as my signal
only being received in a narrow
band 100-200 miles wide on the East
Coast of North America.
You do not need to be an FT8 user
to use it to check out the bands.
Just go to the pskreporter map
page at
https://pskreporter.info/pskmap.html and select the
band you are
interested in (they even have 11
meters!).
Next, select the default
"Signals" and "Sent/Received by" and change
"the callsign" to "grid square,"
entering your own four-character
grid (or one near you with a
larger ham population) and in the
"Using" field select FT8.
Hit "Go!" and you will see where
stations in your area are being
received, including signal
levels.
You can enter your own call
instead of the grid, and select "Country
of Callsign," and you will see
activity all over your nation. I find
it interesting early in the day
to use this on 10 meters, and what I
usually see is activity all over
the East Coast, and especially in
the southeast U.S. but not here
on the west coast.
But I know that the 10 meter
openings will advance across the
country with the movement of
Earth relative to our Sun.
Explore the "Display options"
link just to the right of the time
listed in the "over the last"
field, and you can customize this
tool. I like to select "Show time
text in black always," "Show
connecting lines always," and
"Show SNR."
The "Show logbook" link is very
useful, once you have done a search.
Often, I will use this, searching
for the callsign of an FT8 station
who has mysteriously disappeared
after connecting to me. I can sort
the entries by Time to find out
if anyone has received that station
since I last saw that station's
signal.
The default "over the last"
setting is 15 minutes, but when
searching for a callsign you can
vary the time over the past 24
hours.
Have fun!
Send your tips, reports,
observations, questions, and comments to
[email protected].
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 for September 22
through 28, 2022 were 99, 111, 128,
96, 120, 110, and 72, with a mean
of 105.1. 10.7 cm flux was 136.7,
146.3, 146.5, 134.7, 135.1,
134.5, and 134.8, with a mean of 138.4.
Estimated planetary A indices
were 6, 12, 13, 7, 6, 24, and 5, with
a mean of 10.4. Middle latitude A
index was 5, 12, 10, 5, 5, 33, and
3, with a mean of 10.4.
NNNN
/EX