(C) ARRL Letter
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The K7RA Solar Update [1]

[]

Date: 2023-03

This was a busy week for geomagnetic storms. A solar wind stream

from an equatorial hole and a CME blew geomagnetic numbers seemingly

off the scale, with the planetary A index on Monday hitting 94.

Aurora was visible as far south as 40 degrees latitude. Imagine a

line running from Reno, Nevada through Provo, Utah then Denver, then

the Kansas-Nebraska state line, Quincy, Illinois, Dayton, Ohio and

Philadelphia.



This week the source of the 10.7 cm solar flux, the DRAO observatory

at Penticton, British Columbia, was again saturated by solar wind on

February 25 and the measurement was 279.3. NOAA corrected this to

152, which I thought was a bit too low. The other recent saturation

was on February 17 at 343.1, but for some reason NOAA let this

stand.



I corrected it in this bulletin to 165, which was that morning's

1800 UTC reading:



https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/text/daily-solar-indices.txt



This week we saw two new sunspot groups appear on February 23,

another on the following day, another on February 27, on February 28

one more, two more on March 1, and another on March 2.



Average daily sunspot number rose from 107 to 126.3, but average

daily solar flux declined from 162.4 to 158.2.



Average daily planetary A index rose from 10.6 to 27.7.



Over the next few weeks it appears that solar flux values should hit

a peak around March 17-18.



Predicted solar flux is 165 March 3-5, 170 and 175 on March 6-7, 180

on March 8-9, 165 on March 10-12, 170 on March 13-15, 175 on March

16, 180 on March 17-18, then 175, 170 and 165 on March 19-21, 160 on

March 22-23, 155 on March 24-26, 150 on March 27-28, then 145 on

March 29-30, then 140, 145, 150, 155 and 160 on March 31 through

April 4, then 165 on April 5-8, and 170 on April 9-11.



Predicted planetary A index is 5, 12, 20, 18, 16 and 8 on March 3-8,

5 on March 9-14, then 15, 8, 8, 5, 8 and 15 on March 15-20, 5 on

March 21-23, then 12, 16, 56, 32, 16 and 10 on March 24-29, 8 on

March 30-31, then 16, 18, 15 and 8 on April 1-4, and 5 on April

5-10.



Note the predicted A index of 56 and 32 on March 26-27, suggest a

return of this week's disturbance in the next solar rotation.



Here is a Newsweek report about radio blackout:



https://bit.ly/3YsJREJ



A story from Sky & Telescope:



https://bit.ly/3ZbC1As



Click past all the offers and pop-ups to view this article:



https://bit.ly/3ymZrqR



That report is from Western Washington, where I live. Unfortunately

the sky was overcast, but observers in Eastern Washington were able

to see the aurora. Remember that many of the aurora images you see

were from cameras with a long exposure time, which makes them much

brighter than what you see with unassisted vision.



Thanks to spaceweather.com for this NASA movie of sunspot group

AR3234 growing as it comes over our Sun's eastern limb:



https://bit.ly/3J1IIiJ



Spaceweather.com also reported that the average sunspot number for

February was among the highest of the last 10 years.



Here is data on Solar Cycle 25 progress:



https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/solar-cycle-progression



Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period March 3-9, 2023:



"Quiet: March 3-5, 9

Unsettled: March 4-6, 8-9

Active: March 6-7

Minor storm: possible March 6-7



"At February 27, we recorded the highest geomagnetic activity since

2008. At Budkov observatory, the three last K indices of this day

were at level 6. Over the next few days we expect geomagnetic

activity decrease. Until Sunday, March 5, we expect mostly quiet

conditions. More unsettled conditions are expected between Sunday,

March 5, and Thursday, March 9.



"Between March 6-7, active conditions with likely storming event is

possible. Wednesday, March 7, we expect unsettled conditions.



"Tomas Bayer, Institute of Geophysics of the ASCR, Prague, Budkov

observatory (BDV)."



Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's

Ionosphere March 3-9, 2023 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH:



"A week ago, we observed an increase in the size and flare activity

of sunspot group AR3234 in the northeast of the solar disk. But more

interesting was the activity in the northwestern quadrant, where a

magnetic filament associated with the relatively little noticeable

sunspot AR3229 erupted on February 24. It set off a chain reaction

in which the filament lifted off and cut through the solar

atmosphere at 1949 UTC.



"In AR3229 a long-duration M3-class solar flare (LDE) at 2030 UTC,

with a CME, partially directed toward Earth. At the same time,

gaseous material flowed from an equatorial coronal hole in the solar

atmosphere. Earth was hit by two CMEs on February 27 and 28. The

arrival of the first one was followed by a G1 to G2 class

geomagnetic storm, while the second was followed by a G3 class

storm.



"In the ever-growing sunspot group AR3234, already in the

northwestern solar disk, an M8.6-class solar flare with a possible

weak CME was observed at 1750 UTC on 28 February.



"Simultaneously, the Dellinger effect knocked out shortwave links at

frequencies up to 30 MHz around the Pacific Ocean with a duration up

to one hour.



"The CME is expected to arrive at Earth perhaps as late as March 4,

delivering only a glancing blow to the Earth's magnetic field.

Starting on March 4, a minor G1-class geomagnetic storm is likely.

Solar activity will not decrease, as another active region in the

southeastern solar disk will emerge in the meantime."



Here is a conversation about 6 meters:



"Gents, some 6M DX to report here at KM0T.



"Last few days, February 25-27, there was some DX worked locally so

I was trying to keep an eye on things. Then we got some aurora from

some flare impacts, and sure enough on the 27th got a few ZL and VK

decodes, lots of the Midwest worked some, but too scattered for me.

Also decoded FK8CP, who I have been chasing a card from a 2014 CW

contact.



"So Tuesday afternoon the 28th, was at the radio doing other shack

items when I saw a FT8 decode from VK4HJ at 2306 UTC working a W9

station. Proceeded to call him and worked at 2309 UTC with his -10

signal. Worked VK4WTJ at 2315 UTC with him coming in at -15.



"I then started to see decodes from FK8CP and FK8HA on and off for

the next 15 minutes. I worked FK8HA in RG37 with his -18 digs at

2344 UTC, I received a -20 report, took about 4 minutes once I got

his attention.



"During this whole time, I was calling FK8CP on and off between

trying others when they popped up. VK4MA came in at 2351 UTC with

his -09 digs. FK8CP was calling CQ WI all the time, but with FT8 you

can still answer, so I kept thinking why is he calling for

Wisconsin? Then figured that it was 'West Indies' (lol). He finally

relented and I worked him on FT8 around 0009 UTC with -13 sig report

from him.



"The whole thing about New Caledonia is that I worked FK8CP on 6M in

2014 on CW, but forgot back then to try for a card. Going through my

logs for 6M DXCC showed the errors of my ways and I started to send

cards back around 2020 since he was not LoTW. First one got returned

around 6 months later, the post master said he did not know why,

perhaps a typhoon. Then I tried again, but no answer for a long

time. Got returned again, about a year later. I thought perhaps he

was a SK, but his web page on QRZ did not leave any other contact

info other than regular mail.



"I forgot about it for a long time until I decoded him a few days

ago. I checked his QRZ page and it said due to Covid-19, mail has

been an issue for a very long time. So I got my card out and

readdressed a new envelope, went to the post office this morning and

mailed the card again. Wow, then I worked him that same day on FT8!

9 years later - too funny!



"73, Mike, KM0T.



"PS - Definitely F2, Not strong, but in and out. No Es to the SW

that I could tell. I worked VK and ZL on SSB 10 meters earlier,

about 2200 UTC with 80W. That band was in good shape and quiet, had

a 20 minute chat with a ZL with no QSB."



I (K7RA) asked, "When there is a geomagnetic storm and we see

openings on 6 meters, is it always due to auroral propagation?"



The response from Mike King, KM0T, to K7RA:



"Tad, in my experience on 6M, aurora gives your standard aurora

propagation early on during the actual aurora. Northern latitude

Midwest and NE - NW stations, with the typical auroral sound to SSB

and CW.



"Then later that same night we can get auroral-E skip, which may or

may not sound like aurora. Very typical to work Alaska later at

night after an aurora or auroral Es (at least from my location).



"Then after a night of aurora, I have always been on the lookout the

next day for F2/TEP/Chordal hop. When the flux is hovering around

160 or so, and there is really no F2 at 50 MHz from the Midwest, an

Aurora the previous day means that we got hit with a CME and the

whole thing could still be charged up. Thus when we get full

sunlight, I have seen many times F2/TEP propagation from the Midwest

that I would not normally get. It lasts just that one day typically

unless we get hit with more from the Sun.



"From here in the Midwest it's East or West F2 to Caribbean, Africa,

Indian Ocean, South America and Oceania. I don't believe I have seen

it to EU the next day. (If you're in Texas, SW - SE, even better

for you - but they get that TEP much more than us...location,

location, location.)



"I have worked Scandinavia over the pole path a few times at

nighttime during an aurora via aurora-Es or F2, could never really

tell. So if E-skip it would be multi hop like a summertime day, but

had an auroral quality to those contacts. In my mind I always called

aurora enhanced F2.



"For me, having a decent aurora with flux being around 160, I feel

it's one of the best clues I get for looking for when 6M might do

wild things the next day. Throw this coming summertime auroras in

during the 6M E-skip season, those days after an aurora might be

crazy!



"73 Mike, KM0T"



Here is a response from Jon Jones, N0JK:



"Tad, Mike:



"Agree with Mike's comments and good summary.



"The aurora geomagnetic activity can increase F-layer MUF,

especially when in the sunlight. Sometimes during an aurora F2 can

appear. The more common scenario is the one Mike describes. Aurora

during the night and F2 propagation the next day. That is what

happened Monday February 27. Tuesday was some left over F2, K still

elevated.



"Yesterday (March 1) the K index around 2. I copied Pipe, CE3SX for

4 FT8 sequences on 50.313 MHz at 2111 UTC. No luck with a contact.

Saw him send K0SIX (EN35) 'RR73.'



"Yes and left over F2 the 2nd day after the aurora like yesterday,

is normally only North South Propagation for me (Midwest) over the

TEP zone, which I worked one CE station for fun, decoded a bunch of

LUs, CX and CE, but had to leave for hockey practice."



Jon Jones added at 2035 UTC on Thursday:



"6 Meters popped open to Ecuador early in the afternoon March 2 on

F2. I was at work, able to take a break around 1910 UTC. Set up from

car - 1/4 wave whip and 10 watt MFJ-9406 radio. Many very loud

decodes on FT8 from Ecuador. Called several stations. At 1925 UTC

HC1DX called me on FT8 and we completed. Received a '-17 dB' report.

N0LL/P was on from rare grid EN01 and worked several in Ecuador.

Around 1900 UTC seems to be a good time frame for 6 Meter F2 to the

south."



The phone portion of the ARRL DX Contest is this weekend.



http://www.arrl.org/arrl-dx



Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to

[email protected]. When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us

which mode you were operating.



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 February 23 through March 1 2023 were 108, 130,

129, 120, 192, 100, and 105, with a mean of 126.3. 10.7 cm flux was

148.2, 164.1, 152, 159, 161.2, 160.9, and 162, with a mean of 158.2.

Estimated planetary A indices were 22, 6, 10, 26, 94, 28, and 8,

with a mean of 27.7. Middle latitude A index was 16, 4, 9, 18, 60,

19, and 6, with a mean of 18.9.





[END]
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