Weekly forecast
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Legacy format
Legacy format
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Activity level: low to moderate X-ray background flux (1.0-8.0 A): in the range B9.0 - C2.2 Radio flux (10.7 cm): a fluctuation in the range 136-156 Events: class C (2-9/day), class M (0-2/day), class X (0-1/period), proton (0/period) Relative sunspot number (Ri): in the range 60 - 160 Martina Pavelkova RWC Prague, Astronomical Institute, Solar Dept., Ondrejov, Czech Republic
Quiet: Jan 5 - 7, 9 Unsettled: Jan 7 - 9 Active: Jan 10 - 11 Minor storm: unilkely Jan 11 Major storm: 0 Severe storm: 0 Till Sunday, January 7, we expect at most quiet conditions with an isolated unsettled event only. More unsettled conditions can occur since Monday, January 8. An active episode is expectable at the end of currently forecasted period. i.e. about January 10 - 11. Tomas Bayer RWC Prague Institute of Geophysics of the ASCR, Prague Department of Geomagnetism Budkov observatory (BDV)
The first celebrations of the end of the calendar year in Western civilization are associated with the person of the canonized Pope Silvester I, who died on the last day of the year 335. However, no one expected that December 31, 2023 would be celebrated with fireworks all the way on the sun! Helioseismological observations did focus on a large active region approaching the northeastern limb of the solar disk from the far side, and large spots on the far side of the Sun were seen by the camera of the Perseverance rover on Mars. But no one actually expected a proton solar flare, the largest in the current eleven-year cycle. The X5.0 eruption in X-ray band 1 to 8 Angström occurred at 2155 UTC in NOAA/SWPC 3536 and was the largest observed eruption since the X8.2 eruption on September 10, 2017. In the same sunspot group (in the previous solar rotation numbered 3514), an X2.8 eruption was observed on December 14, 2023, whereby this was the strongest since the beginning of solar cycle 25 up to that point. In particular, however, it also contributed to expectations of a further increase in activity in the next year or two. Four days later, AR 3536 is no longer as large as it was on the Sun's far side and about half the size it was in December as AR 3514, but it is still capable of producing moderate solar flares. Now AR 3536 is approaching the central meridian from where a possible CME (within the next week) could already be hitting Earth. At the same time, we expect a further increase in solar radiation , which could improve propagation conditions in the DX bands. But of course also worsen if a possible magstorm lasts longer or even starts at night. F. K. Janda, A.R.S. OK1HH http://ok1hh.nagano.cz/ Emails: ok1hh(at)crk.cz, ok1hh(at)rsys.cz Pmail: OK1HH(at)OK0NAG.#BOH.CZE.EU
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