The K7RA Solar Update
A dramatic increase in solar activity emerged over the past week, and geomagnetic activity reacted as well.
Two new sunspot groups appeared on March 21, then one new group emerged each day over March 22-25.
Average daily solar flux rose from 153.3 to 191.9, and average daily sunspot numbers increased from 94.3 to 147.
The highest sunspot number over last week was 171 on March 22, which was the highest sunspot number since November 22-25, 2023 when the numbers were 174, 176, 184, and 179.
Average daily planetary A index jumped from 5.9 to 25.4, and middle latitude numbers from 5 to 19.
On March 24 the college A index in Fairbanks, Alaska reached 100! The planetary A index was 64. Looking ahead, solar flux is predicted to reach a peak of 210 on April 23-24.
The projected solar flux is 175, 170 and 155 on March 29-31, 150 on April 1-2, 155 on April 3-4, 185 on April 5, then 180 and 185 on April 4-5, 190 on April 6-7, then 185, 180, 175 and 180 on April 8-11, 185 on April 12-13, then 190, 185, 190, 185 and 180 on April 14-18, then 175 on April 19-20, then 200 and 205 on April 21-22, 210 on April 23-24, then 205, 190 and 180 on April 25-27, 175 on April 28-29, then 170, 180 and 185 on April 30 through May 2, and 190 on May 3-4.
The planetary A index forecast shows 8 and 6 on March 29-30, 10 on March 31 through April 1, then 8, 5, 5 and 12 on April 2-5, 5 on April 6-8, 8 on April 9-11, 5 on April 12-18, then 8, 10, 10 and 8 on April 19-22, 5 on April 23-29, then 15, 12, and 12 on April 30 through May 2, and 5 on May 3-5.
Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's Ionosphere for March 28, 2024 from F. K. Janda, OK1HH:
The period without stronger disturbances in the Earth's magnetic field was incredibly long: 19 December 2023 to 20 April 2024, or three whole months. But it had to end at some point. Especially since we're near the peak of the 11-year solar cycle.
Around March 20, we were expecting the rise of a larger sunspot group in the northeastern solar disk, AR3614. The bigger surprise, however, was the simultaneous emergence of another group, designated AR3615, which surprised us both by its size and dispersion and by the number of moderate flares produced, which totaled eleven on March 23.
Although AR3614 was the source of a much smaller number of flares, it made up for everything with a large proton flare, accompanied by a CME, on 23 March with a maximum at 0133 UT. The Earth was bombarded by energetic protons on the following days, while simultaneously being hit by particle clouds from flares in both active regions. Which couldn't have resulted in anything other than the development of a magnetic storm. Its intensity was greatest on April 24.
The disturbance began on April 23, however, with an increase in MUF, or so-called positive phase. A significant decrease in MUF and an increase in the attenuation of radio waves in the ionosphere occurred since 24 March. The significant deterioration of shortwave propagation conditions lasted until 26 March.
A return to slightly above-average propagation is expected after March 28.
In a March 28 email titled "Big CME impact ignites 6 meters", Jon Jones, N0JK in Kansas wrote:
"The CME that struck March 24 ignited 6 meters for the Midwest USA through Wednesday March 26.
"On March 24 I logged 9Y4D on 6 Meter FT8 and had good copy on VP8WA up to +4 dB. Had a psk flag from CE8EIO at -5 dB. The planetary K index went to 8.
"March 25 copied HD8MD from my fixed mobile (1/4 wave whip) around 1930 UTC up to -7 dB on FT8.
"March 26 worked HC5VF, copied HD8MD, LU1WFU, HC2AP/P, HC1BI, LU8DRH, CX4DSAE and many others on FT8. Big pileups on the DX stations.
Jon N0JK EM28 KS"
Shortwave blackout: https://bit.ly/3IYnul6
Check out the KN8DMK page on QRZ.COM. Using a VLF receiver on 40.75 KHz, he monitored US Navy transmitter NAU in Puerto Rico during a solar flare.
Tamitha Skov video: https://youtu.be/SSPbzvxbX2M
This weekend is the CQ World Wide WPX SSB Contest. See https://cqwpx.com/ for info. The CW weekend is May 25-26.
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 web page 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
Also, check this: https://bit.ly/3Rc8Njt
Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins .
Sunspot numbers for March 21 through 27 2024 were 141, 171, 146, 145, 163, 149, and 114, with a mean of 147. 10.7 cm flux was 196.9, 197.6, 210.7, 195.1, 190.1, 178.2, and 174.6, with a mean of 191.9. Estimated planetary A indices were 27, 11, 36, 64, 22, 11, and 7, with a mean of 25.4. Middle latitude A index was 20, 10, 25, 43, 17, 11, and 7, with a mean of 19.
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