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   LS_ARRL      Bulletins from the ARRL      3,036 messages   

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   Message 561 of 3,036   
   Bulletin autopost to All   
   ARLP003   
   20 Jan 12 20:09:00   
   
   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 20, 2012   
   To all radio amateurs    
      
   SB PROP ARL ARLP003   
   ARLP003 Propagation de K7RA   
      
   New sunspot groups appeared on every day over the past reporting   
   week (January 12-18), until yesterday, January 19 which had no new   
   spots.   
      
   On January 12, new sunspot group 1396 appeared, and the next day two   
   more - 1397 and 1398 - popped into view. On January 14 four new   
   sunspot groups appeared: 1399, 1400, 1401 and 1402. January 15 saw   
   group 1391 vanish and new group 1403 emerge. Two more appeared   
   January 16 - 1404 and 1405 - while 1397 vanished. On January 17,   
   1406 appeared and 1395 disappeared while 1407 emerged on January 18.   
      
   Average daily sunspot numbers rose this week from 90.6 to 116.9, or   
   29%. But solar flux was about the same, changing from 134.9 to   
   133.4.   
      
   The latest prediction from USAF/NOAA has a solar flux of 150 on   
   January 20-21, 155 on January 22, 160 on January 23-27, 140 on   
   January 28-29, and 135 on January 30 through February 6. We are   
   still looking for a solar flux peak of 165 on February 17-21. The   
   predicted flux values of 160 on January 23-27 are markedly higher   
   than the 145 predicted last week for the same dates.   
      
   Predicted planetary A index is 6, 10, 8, 10 and 8 on January 20-24   
   and 5 on January 25 through February 1, 6 on February 2-4, and 5 on   
   February 5-8.   
      
   Roger Larson, KF6IVA of Harrison, Maine wrote and referred to errors   
   in the solar article in The Atlantic which was linked from last   
   week's Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP002. I think perhaps he is   
   referring to the article's statement that "Hydrogen, the lightest   
   element and the Sun's primary constituent, fuses to become Helium,   
   releasing energy."   
      
   Roger wrote: "The Sun converts 600 million tons of hydrogen to 596   
   million tons of helium every second. The missing 4 million tons of   
   matter are converted to energy by E = mc sq. The Sun is   
   approximately 4.6 billion years old and will live another 4.6   
   billion years as a yellow main sequence star. The Sun has become   
   about 30% more luminous since it began burning hydrogen (the faint   
   Sun paradox).  Earth's early atmosphere had more greenhouse gases   
   which allowed the surface temperature to be warm enough for life to   
   form. It is also thought that in 100 million years or so the Sun   
   will become more luminous and may cause Earth's temperature to   
   become too hot to support life. Currently the green house gases   
   raise the surface temperature about 60 degrees F. In 4.6 billion   
   years the core of the Sun will run out of hydrogen, the Sun will   
   begin to swell and the helium in the core will fuse to carbon and   
   oxygen. The Sun may swallow the Earth in its giant phase which will   
   last about 1 billion years. The Sun will never go supernova (it does   
   not have enough mass) nor will it be able to burn carbon or oxygen.   
   It will puff off its outer envelope and become a white dwarf."   
      
   We mentioned Belgian website http://www.spaceweatherlive.com in   
   Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP003 on January 22, 2010. If you   
   click on the Solar Activity link toward the top and select Sunspot   
   Regions from the drop-down, it takes you to   
   http://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/solar-activity. When I see this   
   early Friday morning (1145 UTC) it lists seven regions (sunspot   
   groups) in the table and gives the number of sunspots in each.   
      
   You may recall from past bulletins that the daily sunspot number is   
   calculated by multiplying the number of regions by ten, then adding   
   one for each sunspot.  As there are 7 regions and 47 spots, the   
   sunspot number would be 70 plus 47, or 117. When I look at   
   http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/DSD.txt I see that the   
   sunspot number for January 19 is 117.   
      
   If you click on the image of the Sun to the left of the table, it   
   takes you to   
   http://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/solar-activity/sunspot-regions.   
   Here are details and recent images for each sunspot group. You can   
   also see details on these at   
   http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpmenu/forecasts/SRS.html. Note the daily   
   reports are shown with the date for the following day. So the   
   January 19 report was issued in the early part of January 20, so it   
   gets a January 20 date.   
      
   Note the Space Weather Live site offers an email aurora alert at   
   http://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/aurora-alertmail.   
      
   On Wednesday, Science Daily published a brief article on the Solar   
   Dynamics Observatory at   
   http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120118203110.htm.   
      
   Charlie Carroll, K1XX of Grant, Florida (on Florida's East Coast,   
   about 70 miles southeast of Orlando) notes that the ARRL CW DX   
   Contest is February 18-19, right in the midst of that period   
   (February 17-21) in which NOAA predicts solar flux values of 165.   
   See http://www.arrl.org/arrl-dx for details on the contest. He is   
   looking forward to operating PJ4X in Bonaire for the contest, so he   
   is watching this prediction closely.   
      
   Jon Jones, N0JK wonders if a solar flux value of 165 in February is   
   a bit too optimistic.  He also wonders if Cycle 24 will have two   
   peaks like Cycle 23, the first peak being in November 2011. Jon   
   notes there was some good 6 meter sporadic-E skip on Wednesday night   
   (Thursday January 19, UTC time) around 0420-0530 UTC from Kansas and   
   Colorado into Mexico, and "east coast stations had Es to C6 with   
   link on to PY, LU, CE."   
      
   There seems to be energy from a solar flare headed our way; however,   
   on Thursday the prediction at   
   http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpmenu/forecasts/45DF.html for January 19   
   showed planetary A index rising to 10 on Saturday (January 21), 8 on   
   Sunday, and 10 again on Monday. That doesn't seem like a large   
   effect, but perhaps Friday's forecast will be more dramatic.   
      
   MSNBC has a piece on the flare at   
   http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/19/10192639-solar-b   
   ast-heading-our   
   -way   
   and National Geographic at   
   http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/01/19/new-video-sol   
   r-flare-spied-o   
   n-candy-colored-sun/.   
   Also check Universe Today at   
   http://www.universetoday.com/92780/aurora-alert-sun-sends-cme-in   
   earths-directio   
   n/.   
      
   As always, http://www.spaceweather.com/ has frequent and timely   
   updates. On Thursday they said the flare was at 1630 UTC on January   
   19 and came from sunspot group 1401. Spaceweather.com mentioned an   
   impact centered on 2230 UTC on Saturday, January 21, with an   
   ambiguity of plus or minus seven hours.   
      
   Vic Alfonsi, WA6MCL of Corona, California was on 18.074 MHz running   
   100 watts on CW into a dipole at 1750 UTC on January 14. He said he   
   "was in QSO with Mitch NH6JC/M while he was in his vehicle watching   
   the Sun rise over the water on Kauai. He had good signal, usual 17   
   meter stuff, very strong but little signal meter reading. Very low   
   S/N. Many Midwest stations were calling him.   
      
   "After the QSO with Mitch, Bill, K2TQC called him and although very   
   strong here in Corona CA it was hard to copy. I quickly realized   
   that he had a very strong echo. His signal from Syracuse NY was 599   
   and his 1.5 second delay echo was 589. I moved him off freq. and he   
   confirmed same on me.   
      
   "I know in previous reports you mention that on 80 but never heard   
   that before on 18 MHz. His QRZ info says he runs power and loops so   
   he was not using a beam."   
      
   Vic thinks he and Bill may have heard both long path and short path   
   signals.   
      
   Victor Paul, WB0TEV of Greenville, Texas sent a link to the same   
   geomagnetic observatory from where until recently we received weekly   
   geomagnetic forecasts. The link is   
   http://www.ig.cas.cz/en/structure/observatories/geomagnetic-obse   
   vatory-budkov/f   
   orecast-of-geomagnetic-activity/.   
      
   Unfortunately, the retiring staff member (F. Zloch) was the one who   
   actually wrote the predictions we used. Upon his recent retirement   
   after 34 years, nobody there is doing the same predictions.  At the   
   link referenced above, you can see local K index readings but the   
   only predictive function is the remark for the following day, such   
   as "Quiet" or "Unsettled to Active."   
      
   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. Find more good   
   information and tutorials on propagation at   
   http://myplace.frontier.com/~k9la/.   
      
   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 12 through 18 were 57, 81, 145, 141,   
   120, 152, and 122, with a mean of 116.9. 10.7 cm flux was 116.8,   
   124.1, 132.3, 133.5, 139.7, 139, and 148.1, with a mean of 133.4.   
   Estimated planetary A indices were 5, 6, 3, 3, 8, 5, and 4, with a   
   mean of 4.9. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 5, 8, 3, 4, 8, 4,   
   and 4, with a mean of 5.1.   
   NNNN   
   /EX   
      
   ---   
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