The Radio Informer- It's About Radio: Continued Radio Blackouts Expected
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  • The Radio Informer Radio News Content: Below:
  • -------------------------------------------
  • Tuesday, January 18, 2005
    Continued Radio Blackouts Expected
    credit: http://www.hard-core-dx.com

    Continued radio blackouts expected
    Monday, January 17 2005

    NW7US Propagation Update
    17 January 2005 - 2030 UTC

    The latest long-duration flare from active solar region 720 (the flare
    measured X3.8 and X4.1, officially recorded as X3.8 at 0659 UTC
    17-I-2005), which took 2 hours to reach maximum, and had a long decay as
    well, unleashed such an intense amount of plasma, proton, and energy burst
    that many sensing equipment (satellites like ACE) have become unreliable
    and unusable. The solar wind speed exceeded 800 km/s, and the
    interplanetary magnetic field orientation was observed pointing southward,
    until the sensors 'shut down' under the influence of the proton
    bombardment. So, we don't really know how high the wind speed has been
    since, nor do we really know how the IMF is oriented.

    What we know is that we are under a full onslaught of a proton storm. We
    are under the influence of a very strong solar wind. Massive amounts of
    plasma and a solar particle cloud is passing as the result of the coronal
    mass ejection from the X2-class flare of a few days ago. The planetary K
    index (Kp) has reached the level of 7 - a real geomagnetic storm.

    The CME-triggered storm will continue for at least the next 12 to 24
    hours. But, with the arrival of what looks like a medium-sized coronal
    hole, as well as the arrival of a new coronal mass ejection on 18 January
    2005, we are expecting the geomagnetic storm to increase to severe storm
    levels on the 18th.

    The X3.8 flare unleashed a very fast coronal mass ejection. This one is
    faster than the last two by over 300 km/s. It was measured at 1567 km/s,
    and was directed toward Earth. This means that it will arrive here
    sometime on 18 January 2005. This one is big. The long-duration of this
    event indicates a possibly very large cloud ejected over a longer period
    than the last two ejections. Again, that translates to a severe
    geomagnetic storm. Since the current strong (S3) radiation storm is
    expected to continue for several more days, we cannot be sure if the
    sensors will give us indication of when the shock wave arrives. Reports
    will therefore be spotty.

    Active region 720 has been amazingly eventful. Five large solar flares
    produced moderate (R2) to strong (R3) radio blackouts since 15 January.
    HF radio communications on the sunlit hemisphere of Earth experienced
    significant signal degradation during these solar flares, and the area
    around eastern Africa was totally shut down.

    Active Region 720 is a large and complex sunspot cluster. Further major
    eruptions are possible from this region before it rotates around the
    visible solar disk on 22 January. Continued radio blackouts, geomagnetic
    storms, and solar radiation storms will impact MW, HF, VHF
    communications. Aurora is a sure bet.

    73 de Tomas, NW7US (AAR0JA/AAA0WA)

    : Propagation Editor for CQ, CQ VHF, Popular Communications :
    : Creator; live propagation center http://prop.hfradio.org/ :
    : Associate Member of Propagation Studies Committee of RSGB :
    : US Army Miltary Affiliate Radio Service (MARS) SMD AAA0WA :
    : 122.93W 47.67N / Brinnon, Washington USA CN87 CW/SSB/DIGI :
    : Website/software/database design http://newwebmakers.com/ :
    : 10x56526, FISTS 7055, FISTS NW 57, Lighthouse Society 144 :


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