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   LS_ARRL      Bulletins from the ARRL      3,036 messages   

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   Message 1,388 of 3,036   
   mark lewis to all   
   ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA   
   21 Jan 14 12:46:38   
   
   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, 2014   
   To all radio amateurs   
      
   SB PROP ARL ARLP003   
   ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA   
      
   Solar activity suddenly weakened during this bulletin's reporting   
   period, January 9-15, and the lower activity and expectations   
   continue. Average daily sunspot numbers declined from 188.1 to   
   111.4, and average daily solar flux went from 201.6 to 155.4. Those   
   drops compare the January 9-15 period to the January 2-8 week. Daily   
   sunspot numbers dipped below 100, to 95, 87 and 77 on January 14-16.   
      
   The latest prediction doesn't look promising, at least if we are   
   hoping to sustain the recent increased activity of January 4-7. It   
   shows solar flux at 120 on January 16, 118 on January 17, 115 on   
   January 19-20, 112 on January 21-23, then 115, 130, 135 and 145 on   
   January 24-27, and 155 on January 28-29. It then climbs to a peak of   
   180 between February 2-5, and declines to a minimum of 125 February   
   17-20. By minimum, this does not mean that solar flux is predicted   
   to be at least 125 on those dates, but rather another low point   
   before rising again to around 180 about six weeks from now.   
      
   Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 10 on January 17-18, 5 on   
   January 19-23, 8 on January 24, 5 on January 25-27, then 10, 18 and   
   8 on January 28-30, 5 on January 31 through February 6, then 8, 8   
   and 6 on February 7-9, then back to 5 for the following nine days.   
      
   The geomagnetic activity forecast from OK1HH calls for quiet   
   conditions on January 18-21, mostly quiet January 22, quiet to   
   unsettled January 23, mostly quiet January 24, quiet January 25,   
   mostly quiet January 26, quiet January 27, quiet to active January   
   28, active to disturbed January 29, quiet to unsettled January 30,   
   mostly quiet January 31, quiet February 1, quiet to unsettled   
   February 2-3, mostly quiet February 4-6, quiet February 7-9, quiet   
   to unsettled February 10-11, and mostly quiet on February 12.   
      
   Regarding lowered expectations, note that on January 4-7 the daily   
   solar flux values were 215, 217.5, 203.9, and 237.1. But compare   
   that with the lowered expectations, declining over time, for   
   yesterday's solar flux. In the 45 day forecast, the predicted solar   
   flux for January 16 beginning on December 2 was 125, and this   
   prediction continued until December 9 when it jumped way up to 170.   
   That prediction continued in the daily forecast until December 16,   
   when it dropped to 150, where it stayed through January 2. On   
   January 3, 2014 the forecast for January 16, went down 5 points to   
   145, then rose to 155 on January 6-9, then a very optimistic 175 for   
   a single day's forecast on January 10, then to 165 on January 11,   
   140 on January 12-13, 135 on January 14, and 125 on January 15. The   
   next day, the actual number was 121, fairly close to the original   
   estimate of 125 back 40-45 days earlier.   
      
   Note that these numbers are only the values predicted for January   
   16, as they varied over time.   
      
   On January 14, Don Bush, WA2TPU sent a message concerning an   
   unusually strong and short opening to South Africa on 20 meters he   
   experienced recently around midnight his local time (New York). He   
   runs just 5 watts and talks to his friends Mike, ZS1RJQ and Peter,   
   ZS1PZ on 14.233 MHz around 0430-0500 UTC.   
      
   Don writes, "Both Mike and Peter are using tri-band beams on 40 foot   
   towers and 100 watts. I'm using a 300 feet per side Vee beam about   
   35 feet off the ground sloping to 25 feet and 45 feet. The Vee beam   
   has one leg going NW and the other leg going W - fed with   
   ladder-line to a 4 to 1 balun and then a 100 foot run of RG-8 to my   
   KX-3.   
      
   "We start calling each other about 0425 UTC. Both Mike and Peter   
   build out of the noise and are usually Q5 S8-9 here by 0435 UTC. I'm   
   usually a 5 by 3-5 there in ZS land with my 5 watts. Again, this has   
   been on a week long basis and we have made contact every night.   
      
   "Why I'm dropping you an email is that last night I experienced   
   something talking to Mike and Peter I have only had happen to me on   
   6 meters. Mike and Peter peaked last night both having solid 5 by 9   
   signals from 0445 to 0500 UTC. What was so interesting about the QSO   
   last night is that both their SSB signals were bursting 15-20 dB   
   over 9 like meteor scatter does on 6 meters. It truly was that   
   pronounced of bursting, like scatter.   
      
   "I realize that my NW/W Vee Beam radiates bi-directionally to ZS   
   Land and parts of Asia. I also know that midnight here is dawn there   
   in South Africa. Might I have been picking-up both long and short   
   paths at the same time to get that bursting effect in their signals   
   from ZS Land? Never heard of gray-line doing this either on 20   
   meters."   
      
   Don, that's an interesting story. I doubt there is a long path   
   component in this, and if there was, I don't think it would produce   
   that bursting effect. I would think the effect might be muddied by   
   out of phase and multiple phase arriving signals at the New York   
   end. 0500 UTC is about an hour after their sunrise in Cape Town.   
   Also, a conventional MUF model shows at this time of year 0430-0500   
   UTC might be near the end of a possibly strong signal period, but   
   the odds of making contact at that time show as fairly low. W6ELprop   
   estimates less than 25%. Probably this propagation is not modeled   
   very well with a simple propagation program such as W6ELprop.   
      
   I am not clear if this 0500 UTC period was on the early part of   
   January 14 or not, but at 0300 UTC the planetary K index had jumped   
   from 1 to 4, which is on the verge of being somewhat geomagnetically   
   unsettled or disturbed.   
      
   KB4FP received another surprise from South Africa recently. On   
   January 10, Jerry wrote: "I turned the 940s on yesterday around 1900   
   UTC, expecting very little from my tangle of wires called antennae!   
   On the lower parts of 17 meters, I heard a very loud signal, way   
   over S-9. Thinking it was a local here, near Lexington, Virginia I   
   was surprised that it was a ZS, which is not often that strong in my   
   shack! I worked him and a few other strong stations remembering the   
   early 1980s. Today, same time, same station but if anything,   
   stronger. So much so that the signal was almost distorted!  I loved   
   it!   
      
   "Wonderful moments in Ham Radio!!"   
      
   If you would like to make a comment or have a tip for our readers,   
   email the author at, k7ra@arrl.net.   
      
   For more information concerning radio propagation, see the ARRL   
   Technical Information Service web page at   
   http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals. For an explanation of the   
   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/.   
      
   Monthly propagation charts between four USA regions and twelve   
   overseas locations are at http://arrl.org/propagation.   
      
   Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL   
   bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins.   
      
   Sunspot numbers for January 9 through 15 were 106, 138, 134, 118,   
   102, 95, and 87, with a mean of 111.4. 10.7 cm flux was 184.1,   
   175.1, 166.1, 155.3, 144.3, 137, and 126.2, with a mean of 155.4.   
   Estimated planetary A indices were 10, 5, 4, 9, 7, 11, and 4, with a   
   mean of 7.1. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 7, 4, 3, 7, 6, 8,   
   and 3, with a mean of 5.4.   
   NNNN   
   /EX   
      
      
   )\/(ark   
      
   Not only is the Universe stranger than we think, it is stranger than we can   
   think. - Werner Heisenberg   
      
   --- FMail/Win32 1.60   
    * Origin:  (1:3634/12.71)   

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