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Hello shortwavelovers
There have been a few sunstorms recently. What effect has it on shortwave. I think it blows away the bands first but what happens then after that? Is it good for mediumwave dx? //Lars |
#2
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"Lars brandt" wrote in message
s.com... Hello shortwavelovers There have been a few sunstorms recently. What effect has it on shortwave. I think it blows away the bands first but what happens then after that? Is it good for mediumwave dx? Hi Lars, All depend of your latitude and frequencies, as well as the energy flowing in the sun plasma/gaz. The most dramatic effects occur with G5 class geomagnetic storms or sunflare of class X with Kp=7 or higher. In these conditions there are blackouts. Usually all shortwaves (MF-UHF) observe a blackout but some extra openings might occur in HF between for example LA and PY. In these cases at mid and low latitude your can work HF but only on low bands like 3.5, 7 Mhz, mostly local QSO, a bit on 14 (near countries or 5000 km away) if you live below 40°. Over 50° upper bands are closed, noisy. Aurora allows propagation in VHF. VLF propagation is enhanced due to the increase of ionisation in lower layers Search for more information on the Internet with keyword propagation, blackout. Read this too : http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/qsl-perturbation.htm with links on 2d page http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/qsl-propa.htm Also in French (there is a Translation module in the left menu), these are deep coverage of the subject: http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/indices.htm (solar , geo indices) http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/aurore.htm (aurora) http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/menu-soleil.htm (all about the sun) Most subjects are explained on SEC/NOAA or NASA/MSFC websites too. Links can be found on my website too. 73's Thierry ON4SKY //Lars |
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