*SOLAR WIND SURROUNDS EARTH:*For the fifth day in a row, Earth is surrounded by a fast-moving stream of solar wind flowing froma large hole <http://spaceweather.com/images2017/03jan17/ch_strip.png?PHPSESSID=qldvtt9u8qamt2b19ncupb86p2>in the sun's atmosphere. NOAA forecasters say there is a 40% chance of G1-class geomagnetic storms on Jan. 8th asbright auroras <http://spaceweathergallery.com/aurora_gallery.htm>flicker around the Arctic Circle.

http://spaceweather.com/  for further details

cheers, Graham ve3gtc

On 2017-01-08 20:48, Bob Stewart wrote:
This morning at about 0400 CST and again at more or less 0800CST, I noticed a 
number of large phase excursions on one of the GPSDOs I'm testing.  It also 
happened the day before but I didn't notice the time.  I am comparing the 1PPS 
from two separate units on a 5370.  On the one unit I was logging, there were 2 
or three phase excursions of up to +/- 28ns or so at these times.  And yet, the 
5370 showed nothing out of the ordinary on the plot of the phase difference 
between the two units.  So that tells me that it happened to both GPSDOs.

Did anyone else see anything odd in whatever units you're logging at around 
this timeframe?  Was this likely caused by an ionospheric shift?

Unfortunately, I didn't save the data for any of that, as I was only logging 
one of the units.  Now I'm logging both units in question, as well as the 
Timelab data, and of course it probably won't happen again.
Bob
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