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SARC Propagation
News (latest items first) |
http:www.southgatearc.org/propagation
August
2008 |
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16 August |
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Propagation de K7RA
Our sun is still not producing any sunspots. As mentioned in previous bulletins, the peak of the last cycle was a double peak, so perhaps we are in the midst of an extended bottom
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09 August |
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Propagation de K7RA
As mentioned in last week's Bulletin, Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA, is filling in for your regular reporter Tad Cook, K7RA
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02 August |
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Propagation de K7RA
July ended with no sunspots at all, save for three days, July 18-20, when one weak sunspot group appeared and faded from view. Sunspot numbers for those days were 11, 12 and 11
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July
2008 |
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27 July |
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Propagation de K7RA
For several days over the past week we saw a couple of sunspots, but just like other recent dying cycle 23 spots, they faded quickly |
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19 July |
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Propagation de K7RA
If today is like yesterday and the day before that, it will be the twenty-sixth consecutive day with no sunspots. Think this is bad? At the last solar minimum there were only four days showing any sunspots between September 5 and October 24, 2006 |
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12 July |
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Propagation de K7RA
Another week, and still no sunspots. The three month moving average for daily sunspot numbers that we began reporting toward the end of cycle 23 seemed to suggest retrospectively that solar minimum occurred last fall. The daily average for the three month period centered on last October was nearly 3, or 2.967 to split some hairs |
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04 July |
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Propagation de K7RA
The weeks seem to drag on with no sunspots in sight. An image from helioseismic holography on Tuesday shows a spot on our Sun's far side. We hope it emerges in a week or ten days on our side, and hasn't died out by then. Spots emerge from time to time, but they are all old Cycle 23 spots, and they seem to fade quickly, without much activity |
June
2008 |
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28 June |
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Propagation de K7RA
Recent days graced by sunspots were short lived. June 10 through June 13 saw a single sunspot group, followed by two days with no spots, then a week of spots from June 16-22. During that week the sunspot number was 11 every day, the lowest non-zero sunspot number |
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21 June |
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Propagation de K7RA
We are lucky to see at least one sunspot this week, although it isonly one. Sunspot 999 is currently in its most geo-effective position, near the center of the sun, as we see it |
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14 June |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sunspot 998 emerged this week, another old Cycle 23 sunspot near the equator |
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07 June |
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Propagation de K7RA
We had seven days of no sunspots this week, but a sunspot was emerging on Thursday, June 5. Helioseismic holography revealed a high latitude sunspot on the opposite side of the Sun |
May
2008 |
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30 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
This week we saw only one sunspot, numbered 997, and only on LaborDay, May 26. Alas, this was another sunspot left over from fading Cycle 23, and the appearance was very brief. One day it weakly emerged, and it quickly faded from view |
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23 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
This week several new sunspots appeared for five days, but they were all leftover spots from cycle 23, not new cycle 24 spots. But this is okay, because at the sunspot minimum we appreciate any spots we can get |
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16 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
We've had another week with no sunspots.
Our reporting week for this bulletin runs from Thursday through Wednesday, and this is the fifth bulletin of the year reporting zero sunspots for the week |
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10 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
Again this week Earth residents saw a new, but brief sunspot from new Cycle 24, judging from the polarity of the spot, sunspot 993 |
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03 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
For several weeks we expected today, May 2 to have active geomagnetic conditions |
April
2008 |
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19 Apr |
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Propagation de K7RA
We saw a string of zero-sunspot days over the past couple of weeks, but this week saw a brief but significant sunspot lasting only a couple of days |
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11 Apr |
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Propagation de K7RA
No sunspots for seven days, as of Thursday, April 10. We may see sunspots return around April 21-28. This is based on recent activity rotating out of view around the Sun and (we hope) reappearing later this month |
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04 Apr |
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Propagation de K7RA
The past few days have had very stable geomagnetic conditions |
March
2008 |
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28 Mar |
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Propagation de K7RA
It is exciting to see heightened solar activity one week into Spring |
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17 Mar |
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Propagation de K7RA
This is an off-schedule propagation bulletin based on last Friday's release, Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP011. There will be another off-schedule bulletin on Thursday, March 20, because ARRL headquarters will close for the Good Friday holiday |
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15 Mar |
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Propagation de K7RA
With just a few scattered sunspots in the past two weeks (February 28 to March 12), it isn't meaningful to ponder the change in weekly averages. There were just four days with sunspots during that time, February 28, March 5-6 and March 10 |
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08 Mar |
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Propagation de K7RA
Following five days of no sunspots, we saw one (number 984) on March 5 and 6, but it is fading off the west limb of the earth-facing portion of the Sun. Solar activity is still very low |
February
2008 |
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29 Feb |
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Propagation de K7RA
A sunspot emerged a few days ago, a welcome sight at cycle minimum
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22 Feb |
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Propagation de K7RA
No sunspots yet, and the Sun has been blank for seventeen days. For a week one sunspot was visible prior to the spotless period, and that followed a twenty-day spotless run |
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15 Feb |
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Propagation de K7RA
No sunspots appeared this week. Solar flux was about the same as last week
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09 Feb |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sixteen consecutive days with no visible sunspots, and still counting. This is the way it is at solar cycle minimum
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02 Feb |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sunspots have returned. After nearly three weeks with nothing visible (January 9-28), sunspot group 982 emerged on January 29
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January
2008 |
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25 Jan |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sixteen consecutive days with no visible sunspots, and still counting. This is the way it is at solar cycle minimum |
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18 Jan |
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Propagation de K7RA
We've seen another seven days with no sunspots. After observing the first sunspot of Cycle 24, we hope to see more and more of these, signaling the beginning of the next sunspot cycle and the end of Cycle 23 |
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11 Jan |
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Propagation de K7RA
We just saw eight days of sunspots, but now the solar disk is spot-free. The big story this week is the sighting of the first spot of sunspot Cycle 24 |
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05 Jan |
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Propagation de K7RA
It's a new year, and now time to review 2007 sunspot cycle progression. In 2006 there was a consensus that solar minimum would occur in early 2007, but we actually may not be there still |
December
2007 |
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29 Dec |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Last week this bulletin reported sunspot 978
rotating from view. Now through a process called helioseismic holography,
an image of the Sun's far side shows the spot fading away |
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22 Dec |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Sunspot 978 faded this week, with Tuesday,
December 18 its last day visible. The average daily sunspot number
dropped nearly 13 points from last week to 24.1, and average daily
solar flux was down over three points to 83.9 |
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15 Dec |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Sunspot 978 made a strong showing this week,
and daily sunspot numbers are up as a result. The average daily
sunspot number for this week rose over 25 points to 36.7, and average
daily solar flux rose over 14 points to 87.2 |
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08 Dec |
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Propagation
de K7RA
More sunspots emerged this week, with every December day so far
showing spots. In addition to the sunspot numbers listed through
Wednesday at the end of this bulletin, Thursday, December 6 had
a sunspot number of 29 |
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01 Dec |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Sunspots appeared over several days in the past week. November 24-27
had daily sunspot numbers of 15, 12 and 11. Otherwise, the Sun has
been blank. In the previous reporting period, November 15-21, there
were only two days with sunspots, and the daily sunspot numbers
on both days were 13 |
November
2007 |
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26 Nov |
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Propagation
de K7RA
This is an off-schedule post-Thanksgiving
bulletin. Because ARRL headquarters was closed on Friday, the day
this bulletin is normally released, and the last Propagation Forecast
Bulletin ARLP048 was written before the end of our reporting week,
the sunspot, solar flux and geophysical numbers normally at the
end of the bulletin are in this bulletin, but were not a part of
ARLP048 |
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21 Nov |
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Propagation
de K7RA
This is an off-schedule bulletin before Thanksgiving.
Because ARRL headquarters is closed on Friday, the day this bulletin
is normally released, and this bulletin was written before the end
of our reporting week (which is Thursday through Wednesday), the
sunspot, solar flux and geophysical numbers normally at the end
of this bulletin will appear in a new propagation bulletin on Monday |
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17 Nov |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Another quiet week, but strangely, like the
previous week there was just a single sunspot appearing for one
day, and it was also on a Tuesday. Just like the previous week,
the daily sunspot number was 11, and then it went back to 0 when
the spot disappeared. No spots expected in the near future |
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10 Nov |
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Propagation
de K7RA
A single sunspot (number 973) appeared briefly
toward the end of Wednesday, November 6, then quickly faded. This
broke a 29-day stretch of no sunspots |
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03 Nov |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Average daily solar flux and sunspot numbers
were unchanged from last week. The average sunspot number was easy
to figure, since there were none.
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October
2007 |
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27 Oct |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Zero, zero, zero sunspots for 18 straight
days now. A single
sunspot appeared briefly October 6-7, no sunspots for four days
prior, one sunspot for the final few days of September, and none
for the three whole weeks prior to that |
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20 Oct |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Our Sun is still blank. The past week has shown no sunspots, and
we will probably see more of nothing |
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13 Oct |
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Propagation
de K7RA
The average sunspot number for the past week is about half what
it was the week before, but this doesn't mean much, since only two
days of the last seven had any sunspots. In fact, on only 7 out
of the last 29 days did the sun show any spots |
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06 Oct |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Sunspots reappeared, but only briefly. In fact, it was one sunspot,
number 971, emerging September 28 for just a few days. This after
21 days of no sunspots. Now we are back into a zero-sunspot period
of indeterminate length, just four days so far
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September
2007 |
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29 Sept |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Last week's report stated the possibility
that zero-sunspot days were about to end, but no such luck. Instead
we've seen no sunspots for three weeks straight, since September
7 |
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22 Sept |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Fifteen days in a row with no sunspots, but this may change soon |
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15 Sept |
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Propagation
de K7RA
The Sun has been blank, with no visible sunspots, for the past seven
days, September 7-13. We may not see another sunspot until September
22, just before the Autumnal Equinox |
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07 Sept |
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Propagation
de K7RA
In little more than two weeks the northern hemisphere will see the
Autumnal Equinox, marking the start of Fall north of the equator
and the beginning of Spring south of the equator. |
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01 Sept |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Sunspot numbers pulled up from 0 this week, but barely. Average
daily sunspot numbers rose over nine points to 12.9. Geomagnetic
conditions were quiet. Conditions have been quiet for so long that
we may not appreciate this, as many of us wish for more solar activity
and sunspots
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August
2007 |
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25 August |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Conditions were quiet this week, with no geomagnetic disturbances
and most days had zero sunspots. For the past two days, August 22-23,
the sunspot number was 11 and 12, indicative of a single sunspot group
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18 August |
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Propagation de
K7RA
We're on the road this week, and post this bulletin from
Hillsborough County, New Hampshire |
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11 August |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers were up a little, rising over five points
to 12.4. After a short period of no sunspots, we are back to seeing
a spot or two every day. Expect these conditions to continue, possibly
falling back to zero spots again around August 16-20 |
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04 August |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers rose very little this week, less than
6 points to 7.3. There were no major geomagnetic upsets, only slightly
unsettled conditions on the first day of August |
June
2007 |
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30 June |
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Propagation de
K7RA
We are seeing new sunspots over the past few
days after eleven days with none at all. Lack of solar activity
made Field Day this year (June 23-24) a real cycle minimum experience |
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23 June |
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Propagation de
K7RA
June 23-24 is ARRL Field Day, and it follows
a week with no sunspots |
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16 June |
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Propagation de
K7RA
In last week's Propagation Forecast Bulletin
ARLP024, we had erroneous solar flux values for June 5-6. Instead
of 88.8 on June 5, the solar flux was actually 81.2 |
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09 June |
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Propagation de
K7RA
After five days of no sunspots from May 24-28, spots returned on
May 29, and have increased since in number and size. There are currently
several sunspots visible, and the sunspot number for the past five
days (Sunday through Thursday) was 58, 58, 63, 47 and 59.Coupled
with quiet and stable geomagnetic indicators, this is good for HF
propagation |
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02 June |
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Propagation de
K7RA
The average daily sunspot number this week dropped nearly 23 points
to 3.3, while average daily solar flux declined exactly five points
to 68.8 |
May
2007 |
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26 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
This week saw a return to active geomagnetic
conditions after a period of relative quiet.
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18 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
This week saw a rise in sunspot numbers, with
the average daily value up over 11 points to 29.3 |
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11 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
Over the past week, sunspot activity has again
declined, with average daily sunspot number down by more than 7
points to 18 |
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05 May |
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Propagation de K7RA
The string of 0 sunspot days ended April 25, and relative to the bottom
of the solar cycle, sunspot numbers over the past few days have been
quite an improvement |
April
2007 |
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27 April |
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Propagation de
K7RA
In the past few days sunspots have reappeared
after six days of nothing. In April so far we've seen 18 days with
0 spots. But currently a large sunspot, number 953 is rolling into
view. A solar wind stream is also expected to hit earth, causing
geomagnetic upset on Saturday, April 28 |
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21 April |
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Propagation de
K7RA
This week we are on the road in Boise, Idaho.
This was another week with little or no sunspots. Most days had
0 spots, but from time to time a new sunspot will appear, but only
briefly
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13 April |
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Propagation de
K7RA
So far this month we've observed 9 days in
a row with 0 sunspots, and all of our reporting week for this bulletin
(April 5 through 11) falls within this string of inactive solar
days. |
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| 06 April |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Here we are at the bottom of the sunspot cycle,
although we won't know when it occurs for sure until a year after
it passes. This is because daily and monthly variations are so great
that we need to look at averages derived from many months of daily
readings to determine a cycle peak or minimum
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March
2007 |
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30 March |
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Propagation de
K7RA
The daily sunspot number ended the stretch
of zeroes on March 23, after 10 days of totally blank sun |
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23 March |
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Propagation de
K7RA
For the past ten days we've observed no sunspots
at all. Periods like this, or longer, are expected at the bottom
of the sunspot cycle |
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16 March |
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Propagation de
K7RA
We just saw more 0-sunspot days, followed
by the brief emergence of small spots, then more days with no sunspots.
The average daily sunspot number for the past week was down nearly
70% from the previous week, to 5.9 |
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09 March |
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Propagation de K7RA
On March 1 sunspot 944 was pointed straight at us. It was a small
sunspot, followed a few days later by another small spot, 945 |
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| 02 March |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sunspot numbers and solar flux both increased this week, but just
barely. Average daily sunspot numbers rose five points to 19.6, while
average daily solar flux rose one point to 75.8 |
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February
2007 |
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23 Feb |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Sunspot numbers picked up a bit this week from 0 daily sunspot numbers
for February 11-15. Currently the sunspot number is 25 for February
22, with only a lone visible spot, small sunspot 942, looking straight
at us from the center of the visible solar disk |
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16 Feb |
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Propagation de
K7RA
The sunspot number is still zero, and the sun appears spotless, at
least from this side |
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15 Feb |
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Propagation
de K7RA
This bulletin is out a day early. Look for
the next bulletin on
Friday, February 23 |
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09 Feb |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers and solar flux
were up this week, while average daily geomagnetic indices were
down, which is a nice combination |
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| 02 Feb |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Might we see a high-bottom minimum at the end of this solar cycle? |
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January
2007 |
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| 26 Jan |
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Propagation
de K7RA
This week (January 18-24) saw lower sunspot
numbers (seven points lower, on average) than the previous week.
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19 Jan |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers for the week
were down 16 points to 27.4 from the previous week. Geomagnetic
conditions were unsettled on Monday through Wednesday, January 15-17 |
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12 Jan |
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Propagation
de K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers for the week
more than doubled from the previous seven days, rising 24 points
to 43.4. This is a nice number for what should be the bottom of
the sunspot cycle |
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| 05 Jan |
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Propagation
de K7RA
This is the first bulletin of 2007, the year
we'll likely see the end of sunspot cycle 23, the beginning of cycle
24, and the minima between cycles |
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December 2006 |
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29 Dec |
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Propagation de K7RA
More zero sunspot days are finishing out the
month, which seems appropriate as we descend near the bottom of
Solar Cycle 23
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22 Dec |
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Propagation de K7RA
More of the stormy space weather appeared this week, while at the
same time sunspot activity was lower |
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15 Dec |
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Propagation de K7RA
Big solar and geomagnetic activity this week from sunspot 930, as
it moved across the center of the visible sun as we see it from earth
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08 Dec |
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Propagation de K7RA
The past couple of days have seen robust solar
activity, with flares and strong solar wind. On Wednesday and Thursday,
December 6 and 7, the planetary A index rose to 28, then 25. On
December 5 a large X9 class solar flare emerged from the sun's eastern
side, but it wasn't earth directed |
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01 Dec |
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Propagation de K7RA
The IMF, or Interplanetary Magnetic Field,
dipped south early Thursday UTC (Wednesday night, November 29 in
North America) letting in a blast of solar wind |
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November 2006 |
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27 Nov |
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Propagation de K7RA
This issue of the propagation bulletin is
released on an irregular schedule because of the Thanksgiving holiday.
This bulletin has the updated numbers from November 16-22. This
Friday, December 1, Propagation Forecast Bulletin ARLP050 will come
out on the regular schedule with solar data from November 23-29
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22 Nov |
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Propagation de K7RA
This is an early bulletin because of the Thanksgiving
holiday, but the timing is wrong for publishing another week of
solar and geomagnetic data, so the numbers at the bottom of this
bulletin are the same as in last week's Propagation Forecast Bulletin |
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17 Nov |
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Propagation de K7RA
This week saw the odd combination of the average
daily sunspot number declining while the solar flux rose. It isn't
so odd for this to happen when there are very few sunspots, and
one rises slightly while the other declines slightly. But this time,
the solar flux rose quite a bit |
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10 Nov |
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Propagation de K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers more than doubled
this week over last, up nearly 27 points to 46.3. While there were
more sunspots, the geomagnetic K index was 0, and on some days the
A index was 0 as well |
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| 04 Nov |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sunspot numbers rose over the past few days. Though the average sunspot
number for the past reporting week (Thursday through Wednesday) was
about the same as the previous week, the emergence of sunspots 921
and 922 brought the daily sunspot number over October 29 through November
2 to 0, 15, 34, 46 and 59 |
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October 2006 |
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27 Oct |
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Propagation de K7RA
Early on Friday morning before the CQ World
Wide SSB DX Contest, conditions are stable and quiet, and after
the sunspot number rose to 50 this week following eight days of
no sunspots, the average daily sunspot number increased from nothing
to 23.3 |
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20 Oct |
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Propagation de K7RA
Sunspot numbers this week were 0 on every
day.
In fact, 0 was the sunspot number for eight days in a row, from
October 11 through 18. |
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13 Oct |
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Propagation de K7RA
Last week's bulletin reported the week's solar flux and sunspot numbers
rose slightly, and this week they declined |
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| 06 Oct |
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Propagation de K7RA
September 30 ended the third quarter of 2006,
so now is a good time to review quarterly averages of daily sunspot
numbers and solar flux, to examine the current solar cycle's downward
trend |
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| September 2006 |
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29 Sept |
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Propagation de K7RA
Bill Huntimer, KI0CW in Dell Rapids, South
Dakota wrote to ask, "Would you explain what sunspots do to
radio interference?" |
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23 Sept |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers this week were
down nearly 31 points to 13.4, and average daily solar flux declined
over 8 points to 77 |
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15 Sept |
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Propagation de
K7RA
The Autumnal Equinox for the Northern Hemisphere
will occur on September 23 this year (at 0402z). We've been moving
from summertime propagation conditions to fall, which is generally
a better time for HF propagation, except for the lack of sporadic-E
skip |
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08 Sept |
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Propagation de K7RA
Average daily sunspot numbers were down only slightly this week, from
27 to 25.3. There were two days this week when
the sunspot number was 0, and we should see more zero sunspot days
than we're currently experiencing as we move closer to the bottom
of the sunspot cycle |
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| 01 Sept |
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Propagation de K7RA
The second magnetically reversed sunspot appeared this week, and this
time it remained longer. This is the second sunspot from the new solar
cycle 24 |
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| August 2006 |
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26 August |
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Propagation de
K7RA
Average daily sunspot number was 12 points lower this week than
last, but the geomagnetic indices were higher. Active geomagnetic
conditions on August 19-22 were the result of an August 19 change
in the IMF (Interplanetary Magnetic Field) opening toward the south,
which allowed a solar wind to affect the earth |
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| 18 August |
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Propagation de K7RA
The extra propagation bulletin earlier this week concerning a proposed
DARPA project which could disrupt HF radio communications, generated
a huge boatload of e-mail |
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16 August |
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Special Report
on the DARPA project |
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