The K7RA Solar Update
Solar activity is increasing, suggesting that perhaps now in Fall 2013 we are in  the midst of a second peak in cycle 24. We hope it sustains.
Sunspot  numbers this week ran up all the way to 228, a level not seen in the past decade  since October 27 through November 1, 2003 when the daily sunspot numbers were  238, 230, 330, 293, 266 and 277. Prior to that, on January 11, 2003 the daily  sunspot number was 238.
Average daily sunspot numbers increased over 35  points to 162 (when compared to the previous seven day period, October  10-16).
Average daily solar flux increased over 13 points to  139.6.
Geomagnetic indices indicate a quiet geomagnetic  field.
Predicted solar flux this week is 165 on October 25-27, then 160,  155, 145, 135, 130, and 115 on October 28 through November 2, 120 on November  3-5, 125 on November 6-10, 130 on November 11, 135 on November 12-13, then 130,  120, 115 and 120 on November 14-17, and 115 on November 18-20. Based on  recurrence due to solar rotation, in 45 days flux values are predicted at  130.
Predicted planetary A index is 16, 12, 8 and 20 on October 25-28, 8  on October 29-30, 5 on October 31 through November 9, then 12, 15, 10 and 8 on  November 10-13, 5 on November 14-16, then 10 and 8 on November 17-18. After  November 18 everything looks very quiet (A index of 5) until 44-45 days out,  when the prediction shows A index values of 12 and 15 on December  7-8.
Those predictions come from the United States Air Force Space  Weather Squadron, and are made available to the public via  NOAA.
See:
http://www.afweather.af.mil/units/spaceweatheroperations.asp
This  set of pdf slides gives a hint at some of the tools they use:
http://ccmc.gsfc.nasa.gov/RoR_WWW/workshops/2012/Thursday_pdf/smithro_ccmc2012.pdf
As  usual, OK1HH gives us his own predictions for geomagnetic activity. He sees  quiet to active geomagnetic conditions on October 25, quiet to unsettled October  26, mostly quiet October 27, quiet to active October 28-29, mostly quiet October  30, quiet October 31 through November 3, mostly quiet November 4, quiet to  active November 5, quiet to unsettled November 6, mostly quiet November 7, quiet  to active November 8-12, quiet to unsettled November 13, quiet on November  14-19, and mostly quiet November 20. He does not expect any days with active to  disturbed conditions.
Pete Markavage, WA2CWA, of Sayreville, New Jersey  reports great conditions on 10 meters this week, but using AM and FM instead of  CW or SSB. Pete wrote, “Ten meters has been hot all week. During the late  morning hours of October 22 I worked about 25 stations, all on AM, in a number  of Eastern and Western European countries. AM power was about 90 watts into a 4  element tri-bander. In the late afternoon I worked a Japanese station on 10 FM  direct with a 40 watt rig. On October 24 around 6:45 PM EDT, finally worked my  first Japanese station on 10 AM. Six meters has been dismal for openings here in  the East, but 10 meter activity is making up for it.”
A week ago we got  this from Jeff Hartley, N8II, in West Virginia, but not in time for last week’s  bulletin: “10 meter and 12 meter propagation has been up and down with the  degree of disturbed conditions, but almost every day the Middle East and  Southern EU are booming in on ten here.
"I listened Wednesday October 16  until 1430Z and ten never opened well to Europe, but that evening about 75  minutes past sunset I was able to work a weak JA on 10 meter CW, heard one more  and worked another on 12 meter CW around 2400Z when the band seemed to be  closing rapidly. Jimmy BX5AA (Taiwan) was S7 on 15 phone about 0010Z and easily  logged, so it seemed the K index lowered as the day progressed. A day or two  before 10 was wide open to Scandinavia around 1300-1400Z as well as several  southern UA3 area stations worked on CW. Paths to Africa have been open very  late into the day with TN2NS (Congo) loud at 2130Z on 10 phone and even later on  12 CW.”
Chip Margelli, K7JA, wrote (also last week): “From what I was able  to hear in a brief tune around ten meters this morning (October 18), it is  widely open to Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Nice signals were observed  from OD5ZZ and OD5NJ, several 4X/4Z stations, SU8JOTA (Boy Scout Jamboree On The  Air in Egypt!), and generally signals from all of Europe were excellent. F6KHM  (0.5 W) and MM3FYA (5 W to an attic dipole) were nice copy this morning  (October 18) around 1600 UTC.
"Last night, 18 October at 0158 UTC, I  worked FK8CP on 50.110.6 MHz. Remi peaked about 579 and was in for at least a  half hour. QSB was very heavy, almost like meteor scatter at times, but he also  became steady, solid copy at times, too.
"It's nice to have some  prop!
"I run 200 W to a 7-element LFA Yagi on 6 meters, and the same  200 W to a 7-element OP-DES Yagi on ten meters.”
Ganesh, VU2TS,  sends us this message from Karnataka: “With  the sunspot activity quite low, the band conditions these days are poor - even  though we are supposed to be experiencing the Solar Max!
"However, I  wish to share with you my pet theory about amateurs ionizing the ionosphere.  This weekend is the CQ WW DX SSB contest, and with something like 30 to 40,000  stations on the air at the same time, and some 30 percent of them using a kW or  more, all the bands open up for long haul DX!  (Remember HAARP?)
"Just  listen to the bands this weekend and you will be surprised at the unusual band  openings!”
That’s right Ganesh, in  order to feed the ionosphere we have to call, not just listen. It is part of the  magic of radio.
Further evidence of the magic of radio is the fact that I  am writing Friday’s bulletin while using an airline Wi-Fi connection during a  flight from Seattle to Washington, DC. Like all other basic in-flight amenities,  such as snacks, it is quite expensive. Of course, back when snacks were free, I  couldn’t get an Internet connection in the air.
For more information  concerning radio propagation, see the ARRL Technical Information Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals. For an explanation  of the 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/.
Monthly propagation charts between  four USA regions and twelve overseas locations are at http://arrl.org/propagation.
Instructions for starting  or ending email distribution of ARRL bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins.
Sunspot numbers for October  17 through 23 were 166, 154, 149, 117, 179, 228, and 141, with a mean of 162.  10.7 cm flux was 136.1, 139.9, 132.7, 133.4, 135.8, 146.3, and 152.7, with a  mean of 139.6. Estimated planetary A indices were 9, 3, 3, 3, 2, 5, and 4, with  a mean of 4.1. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 10, 3, 3, 3, 2, 3, and 3,  with a mean of 3.9.
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