SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP010 ARLP010 Propagation de K7VVV ZCZC AP10 QST de W1AW Propagation Forecast Bulletin 10 ARLP010 From Tad Cook, K7VVV Seattle, WA March 8, 2002 To all radio amateurs SB PROP ARL ARLP010 ARLP010 Propagation de K7VVV Sunspot numbers are down, and the sun is relatively quiet, although there has been a solar wind stimulating some geomagnetic activity this week. Average sunspot numbers dropped nearly 16 points this week over last, and average solar flux was down over 14 points. Geomagnetic planetary A indices moved out of the single digits this week, and averaged about double last week's average. The most active day was February 28th, with planetary K indices as high as 5. Contesters were grateful that conditions quieted down for the ARRL Phone DX Contest last weekend. There was also some geomagnetic activity on March 5-6, when the K index over several periods was 4. The sun should be quiet over the next week, with solar flux below 200. The first day of spring is less than two weeks away. The equinox is a great time for HF propagation. 10-meters should be good over the next few weeks, and 15-meters will improve as we move later into spring. K9LA writes in to report that subtraction and multiplication were not his high point last week. Here's the correct version of the data he reported. The monthly median critical frequency foF2 at Dyess AFB (Abilene, Texas) for December 2000 was 11.65 MHz. For December 2001, it was 13.2 MHz. That's a difference of 1.55 MHz, and is representative of the increased worldwide ionization in December 2001. With the F2 region MUF for a 3000 km path being about 3 times the critical frequency, that 1.55 MHz difference in critical frequencies translates to a MUF roughly 5 MHz higher in December 2001 than December 2000. This increase was due to the recent resurgence in Cycle 23, and goes a long way in explaining why December 2001 (and the months around it) were so good for 6-meters compared to a year ago. Sunspot numbers for February 28 through March 6 were 188, 153, 153, 169, 197, 168 and 191 with a mean of 174.1. 10.7 cm flux was 204.2, 187.7, 191, 182.7, 174.9, 172.2 and 177.8, with a mean of 184.4, and estimated planetary A indices were 17, 11, 5, 10, 9, 15 and 15 with a mean of 11.7. NNNN /EX