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- Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 04:31:02 PST
- From: Ham-Space Mailing List and Newsgroup <ham-space@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Ham-Space-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Ham-Space@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Ham-Space Digest V94 #33
- To: Ham-Space
-
-
- Ham-Space Digest Fri, 18 Feb 94 Volume 94 : Issue 33
-
- Today's Topics:
- Daily IPS Report - 11 Feb 94 (2 msgs)
- Daily IPS Report - 18 Feb 94
- Guide to the Personal Radio Newsgroups
- It's Official: GPS Anti-spoofing Is Now on Continuously
- MIR frequencies, AM or FM ?
- Oscar 13 Questions
- Weekly IPS Report - 18 Feb 94
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Ham-Space@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Ham-Space-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Ham-Space Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/ham-space".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Feb 1994 14:58:56 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uknet!strath-cs!cen.ex.ac.uk!jmvasnie@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Daily IPS Report - 11 Feb 94
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- dave@eram.esi.com.au writes:
- > IPS RADIO AND SPACE SERVICES AUSTRALIA
- > Daily Solar And Geophysical Report
- > Issued at 2330 UT 10 February 1994
- > Summary for 10 February and Forecast up to 13 February
- > IPS Warning 03 was issued on 03 Feb and expires today.
- > -----------------------------------------------------------
- >
- > 1A. SOLAR SUMMARY
- > Activity: low
- >
- > Flares: none.
- >
- > Observed 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 094/040
- >
- > 1B. SOLAR FORECAST
- > 11 February 12 February 13 February
- > Activity Low Low to moderate Low to moderate
- > Fadeouts None expected None expected None expected
- >
- > Forecast 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 090/034
- >
- > 1C. SOLAR COMMENT
- > Previously flaring region (M class) has yet to appear.
- > -----------------------------------------------------------
- >
- > 2A. MAGNETIC SUMMARY
- > Geomagnetic field at Learmonth : ???
- >
- > Estimated Indices : A K Observed A Index 9 February
- > Learmonth 21 3333 5442
- > Fredericksburg 27 32
- > Planetary 30 34
- >
- >
- > 2B. MAGNETIC FORECAST
- > DATE Ap CONDITIONS
- > 11 Feb 20 Active.
- > 12 Feb 20 Active.
- > 13 Feb 20 Active.
- >
- > 2C. MAGNETIC COMMENT
- > Magnetic activity did not decline as expected, futher active periods
- > are now expected. Another recurrent disturbance is expected Feb
- > 14-15.
- >
- > 3A. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION SUMMARY
- > LATITUDE BAND
- > DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
- > 10 Feb fair-normal fair-normal poor-fair
- > PCA Event : None.
- > 3B. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION FORECAST
- > LATITUDE BAND
- > DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
- > 11 Feb normal fair poor
- > 12 Feb normal fair poor
- > 13 Feb normal fair poor
- > 3C. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION COMMENT
- > Propagation conditions are now expected to remain fair for
- > mid lats and fair-poor at high lats until Feb 16.
- >
- > -----------------------------------------------------------
- >
- > 4A. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC SUMMARY
- > MUFs at Sydney were about 15% below predicted monthly values
- >
- > T index: -4
- >
- > 4B. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC FORECAST
- > DATE T-index MUFs
- > 11 Feb 10 10 to 15% below predicted monthly values.
- > 12 Feb 20 About 10% below predicted monthly values.
- > 13 Feb 20 About 10% below predicted monthly values.
- >
- > Predicted Monthly T Index for February is 30.
- >
- > 4C. AUSTRALIAN REGION COMMENT
- > Ionosphere did not recover as expected yesterday, probably due
- > to continuing magnetic activity. Another disturbed period is
- > expected Feb 14-16.
- > --
- > Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2OP.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- > dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 18 Feb 94 02:09:56 GMT
- From: munnari.oz.au!newshost.anu.edu.au!sserve!usage!metro!news.ci.com.au!eram!dave@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Daily IPS Report - 11 Feb 94
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <CLDIy8.7HG@cen.ex.ac.uk>,
- jmvasnie@cen.ex.ac.uk writes:
-
- | dave@eram.esi.com.au writes:
- | > IPS RADIO AND SPACE SERVICES AUSTRALIA
- | > Daily Solar And Geophysical Report
- | > Issued at 2330 UT 10 February 1994
- | > Summary for 10 February and Forecast up to 13 February
-
- [ Entire report deleted ]
-
- Yes, I did write that...
-
- --
- Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2OP.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 18 Feb 94 01:01:18 GMT
- From: munnari.oz.au!newshost.anu.edu.au!sserve!usage!metro!news.ci.com.au!eram!dave@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Daily IPS Report - 18 Feb 94
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- IPS RADIO AND SPACE SERVICES AUSTRALIA
- Daily Solar And Geophysical Report
- Issued at 2330 UT 17 February 1994
- Summary for 17 February and Forecast up to 20 February
- IPS Warning 06 was issued on 17 Feb and is current for
- 20-23 Feb.
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- 1A. SOLAR SUMMARY
- Activity: low
-
- Flares: none.
-
- Observed 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 106/055
-
- 1B. SOLAR FORECAST
- 18 February 19 February 20 February
- Activity Low Low Low
- Fadeouts None expected None expected None expected
-
- Forecast 10.7 cm flux/Equivalent Sunspot Number : 110/060
-
- 1C. SOLAR COMMENT
- None.
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- 2A. MAGNETIC SUMMARY
- Geomagnetic field at Learmonth : quiet to unsettled
-
- Estimated Indices : A K Observed A Index 16 February
- Learmonth 10 2222 3332
- Fredericksburg 12 16
- Planetary 10 15
-
-
- 2B. MAGNETIC FORECAST
- DATE Ap CONDITIONS
- 18 Feb 10 Quiet to unsettled.
- 19 Feb 12 Quiet to unsettled.
- 20 Feb 18 Unsettled to active.
-
- 2C. MAGNETIC COMMENT
- None.
-
- 3A. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION SUMMARY
- LATITUDE BAND
- DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
- 17 Feb normal normal fair-normal
- PCA Event : None.
- 3B. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION FORECAST
- LATITUDE BAND
- DATE LOW MIDDLE HIGH
- 18 Feb normal normal fair
- 19 Feb normal normal fair
- 20 Feb normal fair poor
- 3C. GLOBAL HF PROPAGATION COMMENT
- NONE.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- 4A. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC SUMMARY
- MUFs at Sydney were 10 to 15% above predicted monthly values
-
- T index: 54
-
- 4B. AUSTRALIAN REGION IONOSPHERIC FORECAST
- DATE T-index MUFs
- 18 Feb 55 About 15% above predicted monthly values.
- 19 Feb 50 About 10% above predicted monthly values.
- 20 Feb 20 About 15% below predicted monthly values.
-
- Predicted Monthly T Index for February is 30.
-
- 4C. AUSTRALIAN REGION COMMENT
- None.
- --
- Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2OP.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 15 Feb 1994 12:00:25 GMT
- From: news.mtholyoke.edu!news.unomaha.edu!news@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Guide to the Personal Radio Newsgroups
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- Posted-By: auto-faq 3.2.1.2
- Archive-name: radio/personal-intro
- Revision: 1.5 12/18/93 14:15:53
- Changes: new mailing lists, .packet rmgroup, and .policy updates
-
- (Note: The following is reprinted with the permission of the author.)
-
- This message describes the rec.radio.amateur.*, rec.radio.cb, rec.radio.info,
- and rec.radio.swap newsgroups. It is intended to serve as a guide for the new
- reader on what to find where. Questions and comments may be directed to the
- author, Jay Maynard, K5ZC, by Internet electronic mail at
- jmaynard@oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu. This message was last changed on 18 September
- 1993 to add the mailing lists for the new rec.radio.amateur newsgroups, to
- note the rmgroup of rec.radio.amateur.packet, and to officially retire some
- (in)famous threads of discussion on rec.radio.amateur.policy.
-
- History
- =======
-
- Way back when, before there was a Usenet, the Internet hosted a mailing list
- for hams, called (appropriately enough) INFO-HAMS. Ham radio discussions
- were held on the mailing list, and sent to the mailboxes of those who had
- signed up for it. When the Usenet software was created, and net news as we
- now know it was developed, a newsgroup was created for hams: net.ham-radio.
- The mailing list and the newsgroup were gatewayed together, eventually.
-
- As the net grew, and as packet radio came into vogue, packet discussion began
- to dominate other topics in the group and on the list. This resulted in the
- logical solution: a group was created to hold the packet discussion, and
- another corresponding mailing list was created as well: net.ham-radio.packet
- and PACKET-RADIO, respectively.
-
- These two groups served for several years, and went through Usenet's Great
- Renaming essentially unchanged, moving from net.ham-radio[.packet] to
- rec.ham-radio[.packet]. Readership and volume grew with the rest of the
- network.
-
- The INFO-HAMS mailing list was originally run from a US Army computer at
- White Sands Missile Range, SIMTEL20. There were few problems with this
- arrangement, but one was that the system was not supposed to be used for
- commercial purposes. Since one of hams' favorite pastimes is swapping
- gear, it was natural for hams to post messages about equipment for sale
- to INFO-HAMS/rec.ham-radio. This ran afoul of SIMTEL20's no-commercial-use
- restriction, and after some argument, a group was created specifically
- for messages like that: rec.ham-radio.swap. This group wasn't gatewayed to
- a mailing list, thus avoiding problems.
-
- While all this was happening, other folks wanted to discuss other aspects
- of the world of radio than the personal communications services. Those
- folks created the rec.radio.shortwave and rec.radio.noncomm newsgroups,
- and established the precedent of the rec.radio.* hierarchy, which in turn
- reflected Usenet's overall trend toward a hierarchical name structure.
-
- The debate between proponents of a no-code ham radio license and its opponents
- grew fierce and voluminous in late 1989 and 1990. Eventually, both sides grew
- weary of the debate, and those who had not been involved even more so. A
- proposal for a newsgroup dedicated to licensing issues failed. A later
- proposal was made for a group that would cover the many recurring legal issues
- discussions. During discussion of the latter proposal, it became clear that it
- would be desirable to fit the ham radio groups under the rec.radio.*
- hierarchy. A full-blown reorganization was passed by Usenet voters in January
- 1991, leading to the overall structure we now use.
-
- After the reorganization, more and more regular information postings began to
- appear, and were spread out across the various groups in rec.radio.*. Taking
- the successful example of the news.answers group, where informational postings
- from across the net are sent, the group rec.radio.info was created in
- December, 1992, with Mark Salyzyn, VE6MGS, initially serving as moderator.
-
- In January, 1993, many users started complaining about the volume in
- rec.radio.amateur.misc. This led to a discussion about a second
- reorganization, which sparked the creation of a mailing list by Ian Kluft,
- KD6EUI. This list, which was eventually joined by many of the most prolific
- posters to the ham radio groups, came up with a proposal to add 11 groups to
- the rec.radio.amateur hierarchy in April 1993. The subsequent vote, held in
- May and early June, approved the creation of five groups:
- rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc (to replace .packet), .equipment, .homebrew,
- .antenna, and .space.
-
- The Current Groups
- ==================
-
- I can hear you asking, "OK, so this is all neat history, but what does it
- have to do with me now?" The answer is that the history of each group has
- a direct bearing on what the group is used for, and what's considered
- appropriate where.
-
- The easy one is rec.radio.amateur.misc. It is what rec.ham-radio was renamed
- to during the reorganization. Any message that's not more appropriate in one
- of the other groups belongs here, from contesting to DX to ragchewing on VHF
- to information on becoming a ham.
-
- The group rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc is for discussions related to
- (surprise!) digital amateur radio. This doesn't have to be the common
- two-meter AX.25 variety of packet radio, either; some of the most
- knowledgeable folks in radio digital communications can be found here, and
- anything in the general area is welcome. The name was changed to emphasize
- this, and to encourage discussion not only of other text-based digital modes,
- such as AMTOR, RTTY, and Clover, but things like digital voice and video as
- well. The former group, rec.radio.amateur.packet, should be removed by
- September 21st, 1993. It is obsolete, and you should use .digital.misc
- instead (or the appropriate new mailing list, mentioned below). The group
- has .misc as part of the name to allow further specialization if the users
- wish it, such as .digital.tcp-ip.
-
- The swap group is now rec.radio.swap. This recognizes a fact that became
- evident shortly after the original group was formed: Hams don't just swap ham
- radio gear, and other folks besides hams swap ham equipment. If you have radio
- equipment, or test gear, or computer stuff that hams would be interested in,
- here's the place. Equipment wanted postings belong here too. Discussions about
- the equipment generally don't; if you wish to discuss a particular posting
- with the buyer, email is a much better way to do it, and the other groups,
- especially .equipment and .homebrew, are the place for public discussions.
- There is now a regular posting with information on how to go about buying and
- selling items in rec.radio.swap; please refer to it before you post there.
-
- The first reorganization added two groups to the list, one of which is
- rec.radio.amateur.policy. This group was created as a place for all the
- discussions that seem to drag on interminably about the many rules,
- regulations, legalities, and policies that surround amateur radio, both
- existing and proposed. Recent changes to the Amateur Radio Rules (FCC
- Part 97) have finally laid to rest the Great Usenet Pizza Autopatch Debate
- as well as complaints about now-preempted local scanner laws hostile to
- amateurs, but plenty of discussion about what a bunch of rotten no-goodniks
- the local frequency coordinating body is, as well as the neverending no-code
- debate, may still be found here.
-
- The other added group is rec.radio.cb. This is the place for all discussion
- about the Citizens' Band radio service. Such discussions have been very
- inflammatory in rec.ham-radio in the past; please do not cross-post to both
- rec.radio.cb and rec.radio.amateur.* unless the topic is genuinely of interest
- to both hams and CBers - and very few topics are.
-
- The rec.radio.info group is just what its name implies: it's the place where
- informational messages from across rec.radio.* may be found, regardless of
- where else they're posted. As of this writing, information posted to the group
- includes Cary Oler's daily solar progagation bulletins, ARRL bulletins, the
- Frequently Asked Questions files for the various groups, and radio
- modification instructions. This group is moderated, so you cannot post to it
- directly; if you try, even if your message is crossposted to one of the other
- groups, your message will be mailed to the moderator, who is currently Mark
- Salyzyn, VE6MGS. The email address for submissions to the group is
- rec-radio-info@ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca. Inquires and other administrivia should be
- directed to rec-radio-request@ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca. For more information about
- rec.radio.info, consult the introduction and posting guidelines that are
- regularly posted to that newsgroup.
-
- The groups rec.radio.amateur.antenna, .equipment, .homebrew, and .space are
- for more specialized areas of ham radio: discussions about antennas,
- commercially-made equipment, homebrewing, and amateur radio space operations.
- The .equipment group is not the place for buying or selling equipment; that's
- what rec.radio.swap is for. Similarly, the .space group is specifically about
- amateur radio in space, such as the OSCAR program and SAREX, the Shuttle
- Amateur Radio EXperiment; other groups cover other aspects of satellites and
- space. Homebrewing isn't about making your own alcoholic beverages at home
- (that's rec.crafts.brewing), but rather construction of radio and electronic
- equipment by the amateur experimenter.
-
- Except for rec.radio.swap and rec.radio.cb, all of these newsgroups are
- available by Internet electronic mail in digest format; send a mail message
- containing "help" on a line by itself to listserv@ucsd.edu for instructions
- on how to use the mail server.
-
- All of the groups can be posted to by electronic mail, though, by using a
- gateway at the University of Texas at Austin. To post a message this way,
- change the name of the group you wish to post to by replacing all of the '.'s
- with '-'s - for example, rec.radio.swap becomes rec-radio-swap - and send to
- that name@cs.utexas.edu (rec-radio-swap@cs.utexas.edu, for example). You may
- crosspost by including multiple addresses as Cc: entries (but see below). This
- gateway's continued availability is at the pleasure of the admins at
- UT-Austin, and is subject to going away at any time - and especially if
- forgeries and other net.abuses become a problem. You have been warned.
-
- A Few Words on Crossposting
- ===========================
-
- Please do not crosspost messages to two or more groups unless there is genuine
- interest in both groups in the topic being discussed, and when you do, please
- include a header line of the form "Followup-To: group.name" in your article's
- headers (before the first blank line). This will cause followups to your
- article to go to the group listed in the Followup-To: line. If you wish
- to have replies to go to you by email, rather than be posted, use the word
- "poster" instead of the name of a group. Such a line appears in the headers
- of this article.
-
- One of the few examples of productive cross-posting is with the rec.radio.info
- newsgroup. To provide a filtered presentation of information articles, while
- still maintaining visibility in their home newsgroups, the moderator strongly
- encourages cross-posting. All information articles should be submitted to the
- rec.radio.info moderator so that he may simultaneously cross-post your
- information to the appropriate newsgroups. Most newsreaders will only present
- the article once, and network bandwidth is conserved since only one article is
- propagated. If you make regular informational postings, and have made
- arrangements with the moderator to post directly to the group, please
- cross-post as appropriate.
-
- --
- Jay Maynard, EMT-P, K5ZC, PP-ASEL | Never ascribe to malice that which can
- jmaynard@oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu | adequately be explained by stupidity.
- "If my car ran OS/2, it'd be there by now" -- bumper sticker
- GCS d++ p+ c++ l+ m+/- s/++ g++ w++ t+ r
-
- --
- 73, Paul W. Schleck, KD3FU
-
- pschleck@unomaha.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Feb 1994 02:11:28 GMT
- From: agate!overload.lbl.gov!ux5.lbl.gov!dprsm@ames.arpa
- Subject: It's Official: GPS Anti-spoofing Is Now on Continuously
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- What is anti-spoofing? Does this mean that we are now getting a
- scrambled signal? (which I think we've been getting all along?);
- or does it mean that the powers-that-be have come to their senses
- and turned off the signal jitter?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Feb 1994 14:05:57 GMT
- From: library.ucla.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!jussieu.fr!univ-lyon1.fr!elendir@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: MIR frequencies, AM or FM ?
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- Hello,
- I've heard that the MIR station used the 143.625 MHz for Earth control.
- Do you know which mode they use ? AM, FM or SSB ?
-
- Thanks for any info,
- Vince (11 weeks and waiting ...)
-
- --
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Feb 94 16:25:35 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: Oscar 13 Questions
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- The cheapest way to go is a 8-12 turn helix for 432 uplink and the Quagi
- for downlink.
-
- The following chart is a design by W3PM for the 2m downlink for AO-13.
-
- Frequency 145.900 # of Elements 8 Units are Cm
- Length Spacing Boom Pos
- Reflector 218.122 0.000 0.000
- Driven Ele 205.740 52.705 52.705
- Director # 1 90.487 39.529 92.234
- Director # 2 90.011 83.185 175.419
- Director # 3 89.535 43.974 219.393
- Director # 4 89.059 65.722 285.115
- Director # 5 88.582 65.722 350.837
- Director # 6 88.106 65.722 416.560
- Total Length 4.166 M
-
- I recently acquired a 6 element quad for 2m (~ 6 feet long) and a quick check
- the other nite seemed to show some good promise. I need to do a better
- comparison between it and my KLM-14C for high squint angles,weak signals etc.
-
- The S band downlink on AO-13 is approximately 2400 Mhz. Again you can build
- a small dish (2-4 ft) or a 16-22 turn helix. The helix is probabily a better
- choice rather than the 2 ft dish. The main cost for S band is the preamp and
- downconverter. Down East microwaves sells kits/finished products in the range
- of $90/$200. SSB electronics has finished products in the $200-$400 range.
- The high priced SSB stuff has very low noise temperatures and would suit the
- small dish or short helix. W3PM has the Down East kits on a 20 turn helix and
- the signals are pretty good. (By the way W3PM is available at w3pm@amsat.org
- and is the ham I bother with all my questions :) )
-
-
- end
- the views expressed here are the author's
-
- C. Harper harper@huntsville.sparta.com or kd4qio@amsat.org
- KD4QIO
- SPARTA Inc (205) 837-5282 x1216 voicemail
- 4901 Corporate Drive (205) 830-0287 FAX
- Huntsville AL 35805
- "we have met the enemy and he is us." w. kelly
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 18 Feb 94 01:02:03 GMT
- From: munnari.oz.au!newshost.anu.edu.au!sserve!usage!metro!news.ci.com.au!eram!dave@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Weekly IPS Report - 18 Feb 94
- To: ham-space@ucsd.edu
-
- 11 FEBRUARY - 17 FEBRUARY 1994
-
-
- Issue No 07
- Date of issue: 18 February, 1994
-
- INDICES:
- Date 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
- 10cm 093 098 098 101 104 105 106
- A 38 27 30 28 26 16 ( 12)
- T 20 26 36 48 72 41 54
-
-
- SUMMARY OF ACTIVITY
-
- February 11
- Solar activity was very low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled 00-09 and
- 21-24UT, and at storm levels at other times.
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were near predicted
- monthly values, with Sporadic E blanketing at 08UT.
-
- February 12
- Solar activity was very low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled to active,
- apart from minor storm levels 12-15UT.
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were near predicted
- monthly values
-
- February 13
- Solar activity was low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled to active,
- apart from minor storm levels 18-21UT.
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were near predicted
- monthly values until 16UT, apart from enhancements of 15-40% from
- 11-15UT, and 15-30% depressed from 17UT onwards.
-
- February 14
- Solar activity was very low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled to active,
- apart from minor storm levels 15-18UT.
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were near predicted
- monthly values until 09UT, and enhanced by 15-30% thereafter.
-
- .SK
- February 15
- Solar activity was very low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled to active,
- apart from minor storm levels 12-15UT.
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were 30-60% enhanced
- until 06UT, 15-30% enhanced 07-18UT, and near predicted monthly
- values thereafter.
-
- February 16
- Solar activity was very low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was unsettled to active
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were near predicted
- monthly values with spread F during local night.
-
- February 17
- Solar activity was low.
- The geomagnetic field at Learmonth (WA) was quiet to unsettled
- Ionospheric F2 critical frequencies at Sydney were 10 to 15% above
- predicted monthly values
-
-
- FORECAST FOR THE NEXT WEEK (18 - 24 FEBRUARY)
-
- SOLAR: low
-
- GEOMAGNETIC: active 20-23 Feb due to a coronal hole
-
- IONOSPHERIC: near predicted monthly values, MUFs are then expected
- to be depressed 15-20% during the coronal hole activity
- --
- Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2OP.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Ham-Space Digest V94 #33
- ******************************
-