SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP019 ARLP019 Propagation de KT7H ZCZC AP19 QST de W1AW Propagation Forecast Bulletin 19 ARLP019 From Tad Cook, KT7H Seattle, WA May 9, 1997 To all radio amateurs SB PROP ARL ARLP019 ARLP019 Propagation de KT7H Geomagnetic conditions became progressively quiet over the week, after disturbed conditions began the month. ARLP018 mentioned an erroneous average A index though, with the actual average as 7, not 49. The A index this week averaged 9.6. Solar flux and sunspot numbers were still the same, stuck in the doldrums with no sign of increased activity from a new solar cycle. A new projection from the NOAA Space Environment Service Center forecasts a smoothed solar flux of 100 for this July, but so far the predicted values have been increasingly ahead of actual measured values. It shows the expected smoothed solar flux for January through April of this year as 77, 80, 84 and 87, while the actual monthly averages have been 74, 73.8, 73.5 and 74.5. The projected smoothed flux for May is 91, but combining the actual flux for the first eight days of May with subsequent projected values for the month shows an average of only 71.4, so the gap between the actual average values versus the projected smoothed values has grown over January through May from 3, 6.2, 9.5, 12.5 to 19.6. This same forecast projects a smoothed solar flux of 149 and sunspot number of 99 one year from now. One can only hope that reality will catch up with the projection. Values for May are expected to stay the same, in the low seventies for solar flux with minimal sunspot numbers. Possible disturbances could appear around May 13 to 21, with the worst periods around the 14th and 15th and the 18th and 19th, and disturbances again around May 28 and 29. As the days get longer, expect noise on the lower frequencies to rise, and less of the good low band propagation that we experienced on winter nights. Particularly if we see a rise in solar flux, look for longer openings to the west on 20 meters in the evening. Sunspot Numbers for May 1 through 7 were 0, 0, 13, 11, 11, 11 and 11 with a mean of 8.1. 10.7 cm flux was 72.2, 72.1, 71.1, 70.9, 72.3, 72.1 and 72, with a mean of 71.8, and estimated planetary A indices were 20, 16, 9, 7, 6, 4, and 5, with a mean of 9.6. NNNN /EX