---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mike Terry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, Nov 8, 2008 at 4:33 AM
Subject: [dxld] Propagation - The Sun Shows Signs of Life
To: DXLD <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


  Radio propagation, in the shortwave bands, is best when the average number

of sunspots is at its highest.
This article by Dr. Tony Phillips from NASA Science News on November 7,
2008:

After two-plus years of few sunspots, even fewer solar flares, and a
generally eerie calm, the sun is finally showing signs of life.

"I think solar minimum is behind us," says sunspot forecaster David Hathaway

of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center.

His statement is prompted by an October flurry of sunspots. "Last month we
counted five sunspot groups," he says. That may not sound like much, but in
a year with record-low numbers of sunspots and long stretches of utter
spotlessness, five is significant. "This represents a real increase in solar

activity."

Even more significant is the fact that four of the five sunspot groups
belonged to Solar Cycle 24, the long-awaited next installment of the sun's
11-year solar cycle. "October was the first time we've seen sunspots from
new Solar Cycle 24 outnumbering spots from old Solar Cycle 23. It's a good
sign that the new cycle is taking off."

Old Solar Cycle 23 peaked in 2000 and has since decayed to low levels.
Meanwhile, new Solar Cycle 24 has struggled to get started. 2008 is a year
of overlap with both cycles weakly active at the same time. From January to
September, the sun produced a total of 22 sunspot groups; 82% of them
belonged to old Cycle 23. October added five more; but this time 80%
belonged to Cycle 24. The tables have turned.

At first glance, old- and new-cycle sunspots look the same, but they are
not. To tell the difference, solar physicists check two things: a sunspot's
heliographic latitude and its magnetic polarity. (1) New-cycle sunspots
always appear at high latitude, while old-cycle spots cluster around the
sun's equator. (2) The magnetic polarity of new-cycle spots is reversed
compared to old-cycle spots. Four of October's five sunspot groups satisfied

these two criteria for membership in Solar Cycle 24.

The biggest of the new-cycle spots emerged at the end of the month on
Halloween. Numbered 1007, or "double-oh seven" for short, the sunspot had
two dark cores each wider than Earth connected by active magnetic filaments
thousands of kilometers long. Amateur astronomer Alan Friedman took this
picture from his backyard observatory in Buffalo, New York:

On Nov. 3rd and again on Nov. 4th, double-oh seven unleashed a series of
B-class solar flares. Although B-flares are considered minor, the explosions

made themselves felt on Earth. X-rays bathed the dayside of our planet and
sent waves of ionization rippling through the atmosphere over Europe. Hams
monitoring VLF radio beacons noticed strange "fades" and "surges" caused by
the sudden ionospheric disturbances.

Hathaway tamps down the excitement: "We're still years away from solar
maximum and, in the meantime, the sun is going to have some more quiet
stretches." Even with its flurry of sunspots, the October sun was mostly
blank, with zero sunspots on 20 of the month's 31 days.

But it's a start. Stay tuned for solar activity.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/07nov_signsoflife.htm?list1066436

 



-- 
Andy K3UK

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