Sunspots returned with the New Year, with sunspot numbers of 13, 16
and 16 on January 1-3. The new region was AR2732, and the area of the
spot tripled each day, beginning at 10 millionths of the visible solar
disc, then tripling to 30 on Tuesday, and 90 on Wednesday.
This made the average daily sunspot number for the
reporting week (December 27 to January 2) 4.1, compared to 0 for the
previous seven days.
Average daily solar flux rose slightly from 70 to 70.4.
Average daily planetary A index rose from 4.9 to 9.3, and average mid-latitude A index from 4 to 7.6.
Predicted solar flux for the next 45 days is 72 on
January 4-5, 70 on January 6-11, 71 on January 12-19, 69 on January 20
through February 2, 71 on February 3-15, and 69 on February 16-17.
Predicted planetary A index is 15, 24, 15 and 8 on
January 4-7, 5 on January 8-9, 10 on January 10, 5 on January 11-15, 12
on January 16, 5 on January 17-23, then 20, 12, 12 and 10 on January
24-27, 5 on January 28-30, 12 on January 31, then 15, 15 and 8 on
February 1-3, 5 on February 4-11, 12 on February 12, and 5 on February
13-17.
Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period
January 4-30, 2019 from F.K. Janda, OK1HH of the Czech Propagation
Interested Group compiling this geomagnetic activity weekly forecast
since 1978.
"Geomagnetic field will be:
Quiet on January 10-12, 22-23, 29-30
Quiet to unsettled on January 13, 20, 27-28 Quiet to
active on January 9, 14, 18-19 Unsettled to active on January 4-8, 15,
17, 21, 25-26 Active to disturbed on January 16-17, 24
"Solar wind will intensify on January 3-7, (8, 13-14,) 15-19, (20-24,) 25-29
"Parenthesis means lower probability of activity enhancement.
"This forecast was compiled on January 3. The next one will be compiled on January 31."
Jon, N0JK of Lawrence, Kansas wrote on January 3:
"After a relatively lackluster December for
sporadic-E, conditions improved at the end of December on to the first
few days of the New Year.
"I had 6 meter Es December 28 to Canada, and the
29th to the southeast states. Logged several stations running just 10
watts on SSB.
"But the real DX took place on January 2, 2019. 6
meters opened for sporadic-E around 1700z across North America and
stayed open late into the evening. Around 2330z, Es links to afternoon
trans-equatorial propagation across the geomagnetic equator set up an
opening between North America and Australia.
"VK3OT, VK3DUT, VK4MA and others appeared suddenly
on the JT65 and FT8 modes on 50 MHz VK4MA worked east to Illinois on
FT8. Larry, N0LL (EM09) decoded VK3OT and VK3DUT on JT65. He worked NH6Y
on FT8.
I copied one decode on NH6Y on FT8. The Hawaiian
stations made contacts in Texas, Mississippi and the Rocky Mountain
states.
"The 'Winter Surprise' North America to VK/ZL
openings have taken place in past years, one of the best was late
December 2015. But to occur with a solar flux of only 70 is remarkable.
Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA discussed the mechanism of these openings in a
column he wrote for the World Radio magazine."
Mike Schaffer, KA3JAW of Easton, Pennsylvania regularly monitors the FM broadcast band for interesting openings:
"On Friday, December 28, 2018 at 5:49 pm EST (2249
UTC) I was monitoring the FM broadcast band on 88.3 MHz and started to
hear Spanish music, then when the music ended, a male announcer. The
signal which was fairly weak for roughly thirty seconds vaporized, being
taken over with a mix from WRAU, Ocean City, MD (50 kW), WPPB,
Southampton, NY (25 kW). The unidentified station's announcer sounded
Cuban, which would be near 1274 miles to the south.
"While watching the DXMAPS website, spots were
starting to come in on 6 meter SSB via Es from MA to AL, 1154 mile path
at 2349 UTC.
"On December 29, 0005 UTC 6 meter CW Beacon from Maine to Manitoba, Canada, 1315 mile path.
"By 0018 UTC, the MUF climbed up to 72 MHz above FN04 (Barrie, Ontario, Canada).
"Then the unexpected happened. A report of 6M FT8
from Massachusetts to New Mexico, 2133 mile path, double-hop Es event at
0032 UTC.
"At 0037 UTC MUF shot up to 95 MHz above EN92 (London, Ontario, Canada).
"A report of brief Es in the FM broadcast band from
near Williamsport, PA (FN11) to various south Miami, Florida stations
(EL95) up to 1118 miles away at 0055 UTC.
"Forty-five minutes later, analog television channel 6 with a plus offset was observed, likely from Cuba.
"Now the western panhandle of Florida to the lower
Hudson Bay-James Bay, Canada with the MUF stabilizing at 95 MHz on a
1572 mile path at 0100 UTC with FT8 mode.
"By this time at 0115 UTC I expected the MUF to begin crashing down into the HF bands. Nope, the MUF rose 4 MHz higher to 99.
"Yikes, it is 8:15 pm EST (0115 UTC) and the Es storm continues!
At 0133 UTC MUF remains at 99 MHz.
"By 0158 UTC, finally a report of a weak analog
television channel 2, CHBX in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario (EN76) was
detected in Akron, OH (EN91) via short-hop sporadic-E at 406 miles. The
video rendered an advertisement for 'Boxing Week' with a boxer dog."
Jeff, N8II of West Virginia wrote on December 29:
"The only 'ray of sunshine' Xmas week was some long
path into Australia on 30 and 40M CW and Japan on 40M SSB and CW this
week. It had been nearly 2 years since my last JA QSOs on 40M outside of
contests and I failed to work any in this year's CQWW as well.
"That was until Friday night the 29th GMT date when
there was widespread sporadic-E right in time for the Radio Amateurs of
Canada Winter Contest. I ran all 6 bands within 4 minutes with VE9HF in
New Brunswick and worked several VE3s on 20M and then many on 40M in
the 0100Z hour along with many USA stations some at very short distances
in the 1/2/3/4/5/8/9th call areas on 40 SSB.
"10 meters was open to W4/5, lots of activity.
Saturday morning 20 was open to EU as usual as well as Eastern Canada,
and by 1500Z to western Canada as well with lots of Manitoba and
Saskatchewan activity. On 15 CW, I worked Slovenia, France, and England.
Also worked on 15 were W5/6/7/0 and QC and ON on backscatter as well as
SK, AB, and BC."
Jeff Howington, AD0AK of Fairfax, Iowa sent this on December 29:
"Regarding Al, W1VTP's inquiry in your 28 December
bulletin, the Australian Space Weather Services has a web page at https://bit.ly/2sbceum
that might better address his needs. It provides Hourly Area Prediction
(HAP) charts containing easy to understand graphical MUF (foF5) data
for various locations. Al can select the Boston map from the pull down
list.
"That map typically shows roughly concentric rings
centered on Boston that are color coded to indicate the maximum usable
frequency a Boston base station should use to reach a mobile at various
distances away. It's not a stretch to mentally re-center the rings to
Al's station in Manchester to give an idea of where his signal will go
from that location. Note that these maps are good only for one hour and
are refreshed on the hour.
"I've used the HAP map centered on Kansas City with
good success while running a NVIS net in the Midwest Region. Since
nearly all nets are fixed in the frequencies they use, these maps can
help select the best times to run the net, and they can also provide
information as to which stations can best serve as relays to net control
assuming you know their locations."
Check the AD0AK page on QRZ.com for more on Jeff's interests and work at Collins.
If you would like to make a comment or have a tip for our readers, email the author at k7ra@arrl.net.
For more information concerning radio propagation, see 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/.
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 December 27, through January 2,
2019 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 13, and 16, with a mean of 4.1. 10.7 cm flux
was 68.5, 69.3, 69, 69.4, 69.3, 71.9, and 75.2, with a mean of 70.4.
Estimated planetary A indices were 5, 24, 11, 10, 7, 6, and 2, with a
mean of 9.3. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 5, 19, 9, 7, 7, 5,
and 1, with a mean of 7.6.
• All propagation reports can be found at:
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TNX Southgate