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#2
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Folks:
What an exciting time for radio enthusiasts! This past weekend's media hype about a major geomagnetic and solar storm was unfortunate and unwarranted. But, today, solar events have occurred that has the whole propagation science community buzzing. I just finished talking with Mike Weaver from the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration Space and Environment Center (NOAA SEC). He is the Solar Forecaster that has been on duty for the last four days. Last week, I also spoke with Bill Murtagh, who is beginning a shift to cover the next few days. Our discussion focused on today's events, and what will transpire over the next few days. The following is my perspective of current solar and geophysical conditions and the forecast for the next 48 hours or so. On 28 October 2003 UTC, an X17.2-class flare from NOAA Region 486 occurred at 0951Z, peaking at 1110Z. This caused severe radio blackouts (R4 is the reported level, see http://www.sec.noaa.gov/NOAAscales/ for details on the scales used) on the sunlit side of the Earth (which would have been morning, on the eastern coast of North America). It also created an S3 (strong) solar radiation storm. Associated with this flare are a proton event and a full-halo coronal mass ejection (CME). This flare is the second most intense of the current solar cycle. It is not historical. We expect several of these large flares during any given solar cycle. The proton event started at about 1330Z, and has exceeded all threshold levels, causing a Polar Cap Absorption event (PCA). It is expected that this proton event will be prolonged and last for the next 36 hours, to some degree. This will cause transpolar path degradation (don't expect any DX over the poles nor over any high-latitude paths) for the next few days. The CME was a full-halo, and is directed squarely at the Earth. Based on the speed and recordings, so far, Mike expects it to impact the Magnetosphere at about 1500Z 29 October 2003. When it hits, the shock alone will produce at least G3-level geomagnetic activity. This would translate to a Kp index of about 8, even if the IMF (Interplanetary Magnetic Field) is not pointed south when the CME arrives. After the initial shock wave, if the Bz is negative, indicating that the IMF has turned south, the Kp index will remain high, with a possible Kp of 9 during the passage of the CME. This will cause between a level G4 and a G5 (severe to extreme) geomagnetic storm. This will severely degrade HF and MW radio communications (while possibly enhancing VHF/UHF propagation). The timing of the arrival of the CME shock will occur after sunrise for those in North America. Therefore, I do not expect to see any Aurora tonight, local time on 28 October 2003. However, I do expect radio auroral mode propagation during the day of 29 October 2003, and continuing into the night of the same day. If the IMF remains negative, there is a strong chance of a prolonged severe geomagnetic storm, with associated Aurora viewable as far south as southern California and Florida. Continued radio blackouts are likely from new flare activity. As I write this, we are in the decline of a new M-class flare. There are eight main regions on the visible solar disk, three of which are actively producing flares. One of these is about to rotate out of view. One of the new regions just rotating into view is active, and has already produced some M-class flares. Overall conditions: In the next 12 to 20 hours, expect great conditions on frequencies above 15 MHz, while in general, all HF will have periods of radio blackouts during the flare events, if they occur. (And, they will occur). Sometime around 1500Z, tomorrow (29 Oct 2003), expect all HF communications to become severely degraded with the arrival of the CME shock, and for a severe to extreme geomagnetic storm to commence and last for a prolonged period. S3-level (severe) solar radiation storm conditions will last for the next 24 to 48 hours. I expect a lot more activity during this week, but I don't view this as a "third" peak in this current solar cycle, number 23. Several past cycles have had such bursts during the decline of those cycles. I'll post more about this soon. 73 de Tomas, NW7US (AAR0JA/AAM0EWA) -- : Propagation Editor, CQ/CQ VHF/Popular Communications Magazines : : http://hfradio.org/ -- http://prop.hfradio.org/ -- Brinnon, WA : : 122.93W 47.67N - CW / SSB / DIGITAL / DX-Hunting / Propagation : : A creator of solutions -- http://accessnow.com/ -- Perl Rules! : : Washington State MARS Emergency Operations Officer - (AAM0EWA) : : WA State Army MARS Webmaster for http://wa.mars.hfradio.org/ : : 10x56526, FISTS 7055, FISTS NW 57, A.R. Lighthouse Society 144 : |
#3
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Tomas wrote:
Folks: What an exciting time for radio enthusiasts! This past weekend's media hype about a major geomagnetic and solar storm was unfortunate and unwarranted. But, today, solar events have occurred that has the whole propagation science community buzzing. I just finished talking with Mike Weaver from the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration Space and Environment Center (NOAA SEC). He is the Solar Forecaster that has been on duty for the last four days. Last week, I also spoke with Bill Murtagh, who is beginning a shift to cover the next few days. Our discussion focused on today's events, and what will transpire over the next few days. The following is my perspective of current solar and geophysical conditions and the forecast for the next 48 hours or so. On 28 October 2003 UTC, an X17.2-class flare from NOAA Region 486 occurred at 0951Z, peaking at 1110Z. This caused severe radio blackouts (R4 is the reported level, see http://www.sec.noaa.gov/NOAAscales/ for details on the scales used) on the sunlit side of the Earth (which would have been morning, on the eastern coast of North America). It also created an S3 (strong) solar radiation storm. Associated with this flare are a proton event and a full-halo coronal mass ejection (CME). This flare is the second most intense of the current solar cycle. It is not historical. We expect several of these large flares during any given solar cycle. The proton event started at about 1330Z, and has exceeded all threshold levels, causing a Polar Cap Absorption event (PCA). It is expected that this proton event will be prolonged and last for the next 36 hours, to some degree. This will cause transpolar path degradation (don't expect any DX over the poles nor over any high-latitude paths) for the next few days. The CME was a full-halo, and is directed squarely at the Earth. Based on the speed and recordings, so far, Mike expects it to impact the Magnetosphere at about 1500Z 29 October 2003. When it hits, the shock alone will produce at least G3-level geomagnetic activity. This would translate to a Kp index of about 8, even if the IMF (Interplanetary Magnetic Field) is not pointed south when the CME arrives. After the initial shock wave, if the Bz is negative, indicating that the IMF has turned south, the Kp index will remain high, with a possible Kp of 9 during the passage of the CME. This will cause between a level G4 and a G5 (severe to extreme) geomagnetic storm. This will severely degrade HF and MW radio communications (while possibly enhancing VHF/UHF propagation). The timing of the arrival of the CME shock will occur after sunrise for those in North America. Therefore, I do not expect to see any Aurora tonight, local time on 28 October 2003. However, I do expect radio auroral mode propagation during the day of 29 October 2003, and continuing into the night of the same day. If the IMF remains negative, there is a strong chance of a prolonged severe geomagnetic storm, with associated Aurora viewable as far south as southern California and Florida. Continued radio blackouts are likely from new flare activity. As I write this, we are in the decline of a new M-class flare. There are eight main regions on the visible solar disk, three of which are actively producing flares. One of these is about to rotate out of view. One of the new regions just rotating into view is active, and has already produced some M-class flares. Overall conditions: In the next 12 to 20 hours, expect great conditions on frequencies above 15 MHz, while in general, all HF will have periods of radio blackouts during the flare events, if they occur. (And, they will occur). Sometime around 1500Z, tomorrow (29 Oct 2003), expect all HF communications to become severely degraded with the arrival of the CME shock, and for a severe to extreme geomagnetic storm to commence and last for a prolonged period. S3-level (severe) solar radiation storm conditions will last for the next 24 to 48 hours. I expect a lot more activity during this week, but I don't view this as a "third" peak in this current solar cycle, number 23. Several past cycles have had such bursts during the decline of those cycles. I'll post more about this soon. 73 de Tomas, NW7US (AAR0JA/AAM0EWA) Great report. Are these events more likely to happen during the decline of a solar cycle? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#4
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John Doty wrote:
In article , "starman" wrote: Great report. Are these events more likely to happen during the decline of a solar cycle? Yes. In the declining part of the cycle flares are generally less frequent but more energetic. Is that because the magnetic field lines become more 'twisted' (for lack of a better word) during the declining phase of the cycle? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#5
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In article , "starman"
wrote: John Doty wrote: In article , "starman" wrote: Great report. Are these events more likely to happen during the decline of a solar cycle? Yes. In the declining part of the cycle flares are generally less frequent but more energetic. Is that because the magnetic field lines become more 'twisted' (for lack of a better word) during the declining phase of the cycle? --- Other way around. The field is less tangled, so there are fewer opportunities for reconnection. However, this also means that if reconnection occurs, it can rearrange the field on a large scale, releasing a lot of energy. -- John Doty "You can't confuse me, that's my job." Home: Work: |
#6
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John Doty wrote:
In article , "starman" wrote: John Doty wrote: In article , "starman" wrote: Great report. Are these events more likely to happen during the decline of a solar cycle? Yes. In the declining part of the cycle flares are generally less frequent but more energetic. Is that because the magnetic field lines become more 'twisted' (for lack of a better word) during the declining phase of the cycle? --- Other way around. The field is less tangled, so there are fewer opportunities for reconnection. However, this also means that if reconnection occurs, it can rearrange the field on a large scale, releasing a lot of energy. -- John Doty I thought the solar cycle is primarily driven by the effect of the sun's differential rotation on it's magnetic field. If this is correct, how does it relate to what you say (above) about the field lines becoming less 'twisted' during the declining phase of the cycle? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#7
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In article , "starman"
wrote: I thought the solar cycle is primarily driven by the effect of the sun's differential rotation on it's magnetic field. If this is correct, how does it relate to what you say (above) about the field lines becoming less 'twisted' during the declining phase of the cycle? Differential rotation winds the field up. When the fields get really wound up and tangled, reconnection becomes more frequent, breaking long tangled field lines into shorter loops. Solar flares are the result of reconnection events. If you see them, the field is untangling. -- | John Doty "You can't confuse me, that's my job." | Home: | Work: |
#8
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John Doty wrote:
Differential rotation winds the field up. When the fields get really wound up and tangled, reconnection becomes more frequent, breaking long tangled field lines into shorter loops. Solar flares are the result of reconnection events. If you see them, the field is untangling. Reconnection comes from resistance, which produces heating. Without dissipation charged particles cannot cross field lines (actually reversing cause and effect here; the field lines take into account charged particles not crossing them; their motion is a current. The prohibition of crossing field lines disappears if the particle velocities can be interrupted by something other than electrical effects, like collisions. This produces heating. The sharp turns in the field lines then can ``drag'' through the particles and become less sharp.) -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#9
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In article , "Ron Hardin"
wrote: John Doty wrote: Differential rotation winds the field up. When the fields get really wound up and tangled, reconnection becomes more frequent, breaking long tangled field lines into shorter loops. Solar flares are the result of reconnection events. If you see them, the field is untangling. Reconnection comes from resistance, which produces heating. That's the magnetohydrodynamic story. The trouble is that MHD is a poor model for real plasmas. Also, the resistivity of astrophysical plasmas is much too low to produce the reconnection phenomena we see. Without dissipation charged particles cannot cross field lines (actually reversing cause and effect here; the field lines take into account charged particles not crossing them; their motion is a current. On the scale of the cyclotron radius they cross field lines all the time. In a uniform magnetic field, with no electric field, the motion is helical with the axis parallel to the field, so a particle must stay *near* a particular field line. This is the sense in which "particles don't cross field lines". However, if the field isn't uniform on the scale of the cyclotron radius a particle can readily move away from a particular field line. The prohibition of crossing field lines disappears if the particle velocities can be interrupted by something other than electrical effects, like collisions. This produces heating. In astrophysical plasmas particle collisions are generally too infrequent to have an effect. Wave-particle interactions are much more important. These tend not to be very effective at entropy generation, but they can exchange free energy between the particles and waves in the plasma. Laser-like phenomena can occur: the presence of waves stimulates the emission of more wave energy. Wave amplitudes can grow until the helical motion of the particles is severely disturbed. The macroscopic effect is similar to collisions (look up "Bohm diffusion" in your favorite plasma physics text). There's not as much heat as collisions would produce, however: the energy tends to wind up in waves and accelerated particles. -- | John Doty "You can't confuse me, that's my job." | Home: | Work: |
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