Propagation
[Top] [All Lists]

[Propagation] KN4LF HF/LF/MF Freq RX Prop Outlook #2004-04

To: "ABDX MF e-List" <abdx@abdx.org>,"a RSGB PSC eGroup" <PSC.Committee@rsgb.org.uk>,"a PropNET eGroup" <PropNET-Online@yahoogroups.com>,"a Propagation Reflector" <propagation@contesting.com>,"a HCDX Prop Channel" <propagation@hard-core-dx.com>,"a Greyline Yahoo eGroup" <greyline@yahoogroups.co.uk>
Subject: [Propagation] KN4LF HF/LF/MF Freq RX Prop Outlook #2004-04
From: "Thomas Giella KN4LF" <kn4lf@tampabay.rr.com>
Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 13:13:09 -0500
List-post: <mailto:propagation@contesting.com>
KN4LF Daily HF/LF/MF Frequency Radio Propagation Outlook #2004-004



http://www.kn4lf.com/kn4lf5.htm                                                 
                               

http://www.hard-core-dx.com/index.php?topic=Propagation   

http://dayton.akorn.net/pipermail/propagation/


Date Format is MM/DD/YYYY



Published Friday 11/26/2004 At 1800 UTC Valid 11/26-12/02 2004

 

Note! Producing this propagation outlook requires several hours of analysis. 
Please excuse any errors or omissions in this first outlook as I'm a little 
rusty and will need a little time to get back in the swing of things mentally, 
so to speak.

 



I expect to see quiet to unsettled geomagnetic conditions (Kp 0-3) during the 
forecast period. Isolated periods of active to minor geomagnetic storming (Kp 
4-5) are possible, in association with recurrent coronal hole #129 which will 
move into geoeffective (Earth facing) position between 11/27-28, 2004.



The chance of polar cap absorption on high latitude propagation paths due to 
excessive energetic protons >10 Mev (10+0) is low.



The chance of daylight radio blackouts from solar flares is medium.



BUT with prolific sunspot group #10696 rising around the east limb of the Sun 
today or tomorrow my forecast could be completely derailed.

 



GLOBAL LF UNDER 300 KC PROPAGATION CONDITIONS EXPECTED-


Daytime- Poor
Nighttime- Poor To Fair

 



GLOBAL HF 3000-30000 KC PROPAGATION CONDITIONS EXPECTED-



Low Latitude- Good
Mid Latitude- Good To Fair
High Latitude- Fair

 



GLOBAL MF 300-3000 KC PROPAGATION CONDITIONS EXPECTED WITH AN EMPHASIS ON THE 
MF AM BROADCAST BAND, 160 METERS AND 120 METERS-



-Expect fair to good "Northern Hemisphere" domestic propagation conditions on 
east-west paths.
 
*Expect poor to fair domestic conditions on north "TO" south paths in the 
"Northern Hemisphere" out to approximately 1100 miles.
 
+Expect good to fair domestic conditions on south "TO" north paths in the 
"Northern Hemisphere" out to approximately 1100 miles.

 



-Expect fair "Southern Hemisphere" domestic propagation conditions on east-west 
paths.
 
+Expect fair domestic conditions on north "TO" south paths in the "Southern 
Hemisphere" out to approximately 1100 miles.
 

*Expect poor conditions on south "TO" north paths in the "Southern Hemisphere" 
out to approximately 1100 miles.



Equatorial region domestic propagation conditions out to approximately 1100 
miles should be fair to good.

 



"High latitude" Northern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, 
(TP) Trans Pacific and cross equatorial propagation conditions in excess of 
approximately 3200 miles should be poor to fair.
 
"High latitude" Southern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, 
(TP) Trans Pacific and cross equatorial propagation conditions in excess of 
approximately 3200 miles should be poor.
 

 

"Mid latitude" Northern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, (TP) 
Trans Pacific and cross equatorial propagation conditions in excess of 
approximately 3200 miles should be good then becoming fair to good.
 
"Mid latitude" Southern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, (TP) 
Trans Pacific and cross equatorial propagation conditions in excess of 
approximately 3200 miles should be fair.
 

 

"Low latitude" Northern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, (TP) 
Trans Pacific propagation conditions in excess of approximately 3200 miles 
should be good.
 
"Low latitude" Southern Hemisphere (TA) Trans Atlantic, (TI) Trans Indian, (TP) 
Trans Pacific propagation conditions in excess of approximately 3200 miles 
should be fair.

 



Equatorial region to Northern Hemisphere "mid latitude" propagation conditions 
in excess of approximately 3200 miles should be fair to good.



Equatorial region to Southern Hemisphere "mid latitude" propagation conditions 
in excess of 3200 miles should be poor to fair.





Equatorial region to Northern Hemisphere "high latitude" propagation conditions 
in excess of approximately 3200 miles should be fair to good.



Equatorial region to Southern Hemisphere "high latitude" propagation conditions 
in excess of 3200 miles should be poor to fair.

 



Propagation Forecast Scales-
 
Excellent- +1 db Over S9 Or better
Good- S7-9
Fair- S4-6
Poor- S1-3
 
 
GLOBAL NOISE (QRN) OUTLOOK-
 
U.S. LIGHTNING STRIKE DATA
(See Where Your QRN Is Coming From)

Sorry but global views of near real time lightning strikes are no longer 
available.
 
http://www.lightningstorm.com/tux/jsp/gpg/lex1/mapdisplay_free.jsp;jsessionid=70301187101071113657379
 
During the 7 day outlook period there will be "moderate lightning induced QRN 
levels in low latitude areas of the Northern Hemisphere due to the proximity of 
the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and tropical cyclones.
 
Northern hemisphere mid latitude regions can expect "low to moderate" lightning 
induced QRN tied to winter season thunderstorms, cold/warm/occluded fronts and 
associated extra-tropical cold core low pressure systems.
 
Northern hemisphere high latitude regions can expect "very low to low" 
lightning induced QRN tied to winter season thunderstorms, cold/warm/occluded 
fronts and associated extra-tropical cold core low pressure systems.
 



During the outlook period there will be "high" lightning induced QRN levels in 
low latitude areas of the Southern Hemisphere due to the proximity of the Inter 
Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and tropical cyclones.
 
Southern hemisphere mid latitude regions can expect "high" lightning induced 
QRN, tied to summer season thunderstorms and tropical cyclones. 



Southern hemisphere high latitude regions can expect "moderate" lightning 
induced QRN tied to summer season thunderstorms, cold/warm/occluded fronts and 
associated extra-tropical cold core low pressure systems.

 



End of Forecast





SOLAR, SPACE WEATHER AND GEOMAGNETIC INDICES FOR 11/19-25/2004-
 
Sunspot Groups- 

No visible sunspot groups were capable of producing large M class and huge X 
class solar flares. Unfortunately though even small C class solar flares can 
impact MF propagation conditions in a negative manner.
 
Solar Flux Readings- 99 to 113
  
SEC Sunspot Number- 27 to 72

Solar Wind Speed- 309-627
 
X-Ray Solar Flares- C-11 M-0 X-0
  
Averaged Background X-Ray Flux- B1.1 to B3.0
 
Elevated Energetic Protons >10 MeV (10+o)- None
 
Geo or partially geoeffective (Earth Facing) Coronal Mass Ejections- 0
 
Recurrent Coronal Hole #128 which became geoeffective beginning on 11/21-23/04, 
finally lost it's negative impact on Earth's magnetic field on UTC 11/26/04. 



The Ap index has been at quiet to minor storm levels, with a range of 0 to 39.
 
The Kp index has been at quiet to minor storm levels, with a range of 0 to 5.
  

 

Here are some "general" guidelines concerning correlation of propagation 
indices to actual expected MF propagation conditions.
 
1.) Dropping indices numbers are better.

2.) For medium frequencies a solar flux under 150, under 100 better, 70 is best 
for E layer multi hop.

Keep in mind though that the 10.7 cm (2800 mhz) solar flux index is not a 
"reliable" gauge of ionization in our atmosphere, as the energy of photons at 
this frequency is to low on the order of one million times. However most are 
used to solar flux and sunspot number and it's a hard habit to break. A better 
indicator is the background x-ray flux. See #7.
 
3.) Solar flux of at least 100 for E valley-F layer ducting mechanism.
4.) Previous 24 hour Ap index under 10, under 7 for several days
consecutively is best.
5.) Previous 3 hour Kp index under 3 for mid latitude paths, under 2 for
high latitude paths, 0-1 for several days consecutively is best.
6.) Energetic protons no greater then 10 MeV (10+0) for 160/120 meters and
no greater then (10-1) on MF broadcast band.
7.) Background x-ray flux levels less than C1 for several days consecutively 
for 160/120 meters and less then B9 for MF broadcast band but A9 or less is 
best.
8.) No current STRATWARM alert.
9.) IMF Bz with a (+) sign, indicates a lesser chance of high latitude path 
auroral absorption/unpredictable refraction or scattering of MF RF signals, 
when the Kp is above 3.                                                         
                              

10.) A -50 or better towards a positive number Dst index during the recovery 
time after a geomagnetic storm, as related to the Equatorial Ring Current.
 

 

TODAY'S PROPAGATION LESSON -
 None this week.

 

 

Space Weather Scales-
 
Kp Indices-
 
G5 = Extreme Storm - Kp = 9
G4 = Severe Storm - Kp = 8
G3 = Strong Storm - Kp = 7
G2 = Moderate Storm - Kp = 6
G1 = Minor Storm - Kp = 5
Active - Kp = 4
Unsettled - Kp = 3

 

Ap Indices-
 
Ap 100-400 Severe Storm
Ap 50-99 Major Storm
Ap 30-49 Minor Storm
Ap 16-29 Active
Ap 8-15 Unsettled
Ap 0-7 Quiet
 
Correlation Of Kp To Ap Indices-
 
K- 0= A- 0
K- 1= A- 3
K- 2= A- 7
K- 3= A- 15
K- 4= A- 27
K- 5= A- 48
K- 6= A- 80
K- 7= A- 140
K- 8= A- 240
K- 9= A- 400

 

 

Standard Disclaimer-
 
Note! I use "RAW" public domain data from the NOAA Space Environment Center, as 
well as other U.S. government organizations, to produce my "not for profit" 
propagation forecast outlooks. This data is gathered and made public
by the U.S. Government using taxpayer $$$. However the forecast outlooks that I 
produce from the "RAW" public domain data, is my personal intellectual 
property. Therefore the propagation outlooks contained herein is copyrighted © 
1988-2004 by Thomas F. Giella and the Florida Space and Atmospheric Weather 
Institute, all rights reserved. Reproduction of information herein is allowed 
as long as proper credit is given.
 
Also space weather forecasting is still an inexact science. The discussions, 
forecasts and outlooks are not official but for educational purposes only and 
are subject to human error and acts of God, therefore no guarantee or warranty 
implied.
 
73 & GUD DX,
Thomas F. Giella, KN4LF
Retired Space & Atmospheric Weather Forecaster
Plant City, FL, USA
Grid Square EL87WX
Lat & Long 27 58 33.6397 N 82 09 52.4052 W
kn4lf@arrl.net

 

Propagation eGroup: http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/propagation
PropNET Beacon Program: http://www.propnet.org
KN4LF Daily Solar Space Weather & Geomagnetic Data Archive: 
http://www.kn4lf.com/kn4lf5.htm
KN4LF HF/MF Frequency Radio Propagation Theory Notes: 
http://www.kn4lf.com/kn4lf8.htm
KN4LF Amateur & SWL Radio History: http://www.kn4lf.com/index.htm



 

 


---
Outgoing mail is certified virus free by Grisoft AVG 6.0.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.801 / Virus Database: 544 - Release Date: 11/24/2004
_______________________________________________
Propagation mailing list
Propagation@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/propagation

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • [Propagation] KN4LF HF/LF/MF Freq RX Prop Outlook #2004-04, Thomas Giella KN4LF <=