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[Propagation+Space Weather] The W1AW Weekly Propagation Report - 2022 Oc

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Subject: [Propagation+Space Weather] The W1AW Weekly Propagation Report - 2022 Oct 28 18:00 UTC
From: nw7us@sunspotwatch.com
Reply-to: Practical radio-wave propagation and space weather <propagation@contesting.com>
Date: Fri, 28 Oct 2022 18:00:49 +0000
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The following is the weekly propagation bulletin from W1AW / ARRL (posting on 20221028 18:00 UTC):

QST de W1AW Propagation Forecast Bulletin 43 ARLP043 >From Tad Cook, K7RA Seattle, WA October 28, 2022 To all radio amateurs

SB PROP ARL ARLP043 ARLP043 Propagation de K7RA

Sunspot activity seems listless. Average daily sunspot numbers went from 57.3 to 58.4 (see note at the end of the bulletin concerning last week's averages) while solar flux went from 119.6 to 113.2.

On Thursday, the day after the reporting week ended, the sunspot number was 72, over 13 points above the previous 7 day average. Perhaps this is a promising sign.

The middle latitude geomagnetic numbers this week are wrong. See what I mean:

https://bit.ly/3W7nCnB

I emailed a contact at NOAA about this, and here is the reply:

'Mid lat numbers are absolutely NOT correct.

'Fredericksburg magnetometer is undergoing maintenance this week and has been flaky. I've alerted the individual acting in my absence as well as our developers to see if we can get that cleaned up.'

So, the middle latitude numbers presented here at the end of the bulletin are my own very rough estimates, trying to correlate with the high latitude and planetary numbers. My NOAA contact emailed me the data from the Boulder magnetometer, which can be used in lieu of the Fredericksburg data, and he noted that my estimates were not far off.

Here is what he sent me:

A index (Boulder) 7, 4, 22, 13, 6, 5, 4 with a mean of 8.7 A index (K7RA estimate) 5, 4, 24, 15, 7, 5, 4 with a mean of 9.1

Average daily planetary A index went from 18.6 to 10.4, and middle latitude numbers from 8.1 to 9.1.

Predicted solar flux is 125 on October 28 to November 3, 112 on November 4-5, 118 on November 6-9, 115 on November 10-12, 112 on November 13-14, 110 on November 15, 108 on November 16-18, 104 on November 19, 100 on November 20-23, 98 on November 24-25, 100 on November 26, then 105 on November 27-28, 110 on November 29, 112 on November 30 through December 2, and 118 on December 3-6.

The rise in solar flux in the first week in November to 160 presented in the previous two bulletins is gone from the current prediction. But this Thursday solar flux forecast is more optimistic for the near term than the Wednesday forecast in yesterday's ARRL Letter.

Predicted planetary A index is 8, 18, 22, 15, 12, 10 and 8 on October 28 through November 3, 5 on November 4-9, then 18, 18 and 15 on November 10-12, 5 on November 13-17, then 25, 18, 17 and 12 on November 18-21, 5 on November 22-23, then 8, 15 and 20 on November 24-26, then 15, 15 and 12 on November 27-29, and 5 on November 30 through December 6.

>From F. K. Janda, OK1HH:

'Not much happened on the Sun over the past few days from the point of view of a terrestrial observer. Overall activity was low. Of note, the co-rotating interaction region (CIR) hit Earth's magnetic field on October 22, sparking a G1-class geomagnetic storm and bright auroras around the Arctic Circle.

'Earth's magnetic field calmed down and active sunspot regions began to sink beyond the southwestern edge of the solar disk, while others emerged in the northeast.

'Although helioseismic maps revealed interesting activity on the Sun's far side, this will likely end before it emerges on the eastern edge of the solar disk.'

Scott, N7KQ in Fort Meyers, Florida wrote:

'I wish I had sent this earlier. I worked Japan twice lately on 10 meters from Southwest Florida. Once on October 12th (JM7OLW) and on October 18th (JA1KIH) using an indoor dipole above the garage at 14 feet. Both were weak but 100% copy. They both reported the same for my signal. These contacts were CW, and I run 500 watts.'

10 meters has been much better lately, and for Scott, working stations in Japan is more difficult than for me in Seattle, where we have always had a pipeline to Japan. His path length is about 7,000 miles, while mine is only about 5000 miles, and I recall during past sunspot cycle peaks calling CQ running barefoot into a low dipole produced huge pileups of JA signals.

My own 10 meter CW beacon (K7RA/B, 28.2833 MHz) has been getting more reports lately. A couple of listeners even mailed QSL cards.

Thanks to Darrel, AA7FV for a tip that led me to a news item about a gamma ray burst.

Be sure to visit Spaceweather.com and using the archives feature in the upper right corner, go to October 18 to read about the October 9 gamma ray burst, and the amateur astronomer who detected it using an unusual VLF antenna.

This burst of energy happened 2.4 billion years ago and took that long to reach us.

Here is what stage Earth was in at that time:

https://bit.ly/3znjztv

More info on the event:

https://bit.ly/3FwRZOi

Here is a link to Darrel's own data, labeled Agua Caliente:

https://stanford.io/3U5i0IU

Did you know there is crowd sourced geomagnetic data, using smart phones? You can participate:

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/products/crowdmag-magnetic-data

Here is a Forbes article on doomsday flares:

https://bit.ly/3W8IJpy

Some tabloid news on flares:

https://bit.ly/3gLn1YL

Something even worse than a Carrington Event?

https://bit.ly/3zo5SdR

In last week's Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP042 the averages were wrong.

The correct averages for the numbers at the end of the bulletin in ARLP042 were 57.3, 119.6, 10.6 and 8.1 for sunspot number, solar flux, planetary A index and middle latitude A index respectively. The wrong numbers were actually from the previous week.

Send your tips, reports, observations, questions, and comments to k7ra@arrl.net.

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 October 20 through 26, 2022 were 33, 60, 55, 65, 46, 72, and 78, with a mean of 58.4. 10.7 cm flux was 115.8, 109.4, 105, 108.4, 114.8, 116.3, and 122.4, with a mean of 113.2. Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 5, 27, 16, 8, 5, and 5, with a mean of 10.4. Middle latitude A index was 5, 4, 24, 15, 7, 5, and 4, with a mean of 9.1.


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The W1AW Weekly Propagation Report - 2022 Oct 28 18:00 UTC

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