Last update issued on October 12, 2003 at 03:30 UTC.
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The geomagnetic field was quiet on October 11. Solar wind speed ranged between 350 and 433 km/sec.
Solar flux measured at 20h UTC on 2.8 GHz was 105.8. The planetary A index
was 5 (STAR Ap - based on the mean of three hour interval ap indices:
6.0).
Three hour interval K indices: 21212212 (planetary), 00111321
(Boulder).
The background x-ray flux is at the class B2 level.
At midnight there were 4 spotted regions on the visible disk. Solar flare activity was very low.
Region 10471 decayed quickly and quietly and is rotating over the
southwest limb..
Region 10477 was mostly unchanged and
quiet.
Region 10479 rotated into view at the northeast limb on October
9 and was numbered by SEC the next day.
Spotted regions not numbered by NOAA/SEC:
[S276] A new
region emerged in the northwest quadrant on October 10 and developed slowly on
October 11. Location at midnight: N08W77.
October 9-11: No potentially geoeffective CMEs observed.
Coronal hole history
(since late October 2002)
Compare today's report with the situation one
solar rotation ago: 28 days ago 27 days ago 26 days ago
A recurrent trans equatorial coronal hole (CH62) was in a geoeffective position on October 10. Another recurrent trans equatorial hole (CH63) will rotate into a geoeffective position on October 12-14. CH63 has become much smaller over the last rotation.
Processed SOHO/EIT 284 image at 01:06 UTC on October 12. The darkest areas on the solar disk are likely coronal holes.
The geomagnetic field is expected to be quiet on October 12. Quiet to active is likely on October 13-14 due to a high speed stream from coronal hole CH62 with a high speed stream from coronal hole CH63 causing unsettled to minor storm conditions on October 15-17.
Long distance low frequency (below 2 MHz) propagation along east-west paths over high and upper middle latitudes is good to very good. Propagation along north-south paths is fair. [Trans Atlantic propagation conditions are currently monitored every night on 1470 kHz. Dominant station tonight: None. A mess of at least 4 US stations with WWNN Boca Raton one of them. Lots of North American stations noted on other frequencies as well, many with strong signals].
Coronal holes (1) | Coronal mass ejections (2) | M and X class flares (3) |
1) Effects from a coronal hole could reach Earth within the next
5 days.
2) Material from a CME is likely to impact Earth within 96
hours.
3) There is a possibility of either M or X class flares within the
next 48 hours.
Green: 0-20% probability, Yellow: 20-60% probability, Red: 60-100% probability.
Compare to the previous day's image.
Data for all numbered solar regions according to the Solar Region Summary provided by NOAA/SEC. Comments are my own, as is the STAR spot count (spots observed at or inside a few hours before midnight) and data for regions not numbered by SEC or where SEC has observed no spots.
Solar region | Date numbered | SEC spot count |
STAR spot count |
Location at midnight | Area | Classification | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10471 | 2003.09.30 | 18 | 4 | S07W70 | 0110 | DAO | classification was HAX at midnight, area 0030 |
10473 | 2003.10.03 | 1 | S08W89 | 0080 | HAX | rotated out of view | |
10475 | 2003.10.05 | S22W31 | plage | ||||
10476 | 2003.10.06 | S16W54 | plage | ||||
10477 | 2003.10.06 | 6 | 4 | S14E04 | 0050 | CSO | |
10478 | 2003.10.09 | 1 | N12W31 | 0010 | AXX | spotless | |
10479 | 2003.10.10 | 1 | 1 | N23E52 | 0030 | HSX | |
S273 | emerged on 2003.10.08 |
N13E18 | plage | ||||
S274 | emerged on 2003.10.09 |
N10W13 | plage | ||||
S276 | emerged on 2003.10.10 |
2 | N08W77 | 0050 | CSO | ||
Total spot count: | 27 | 11 | |||||
SSN: | 77 | 51 |
Month | Average solar flux at Earth |
International sunspot number | Smoothed sunspot number |
---|---|---|---|
2000.04 | 184.2 | 125.5 | 120.8 cycle 23 sunspot max. |
2000.07 | 202.3 | 170.1 | 119.8 |
2001.12 | 235.1 | 132.2 | 114.6 (-0.9) |
2002.09 | 175.8 | 109.6 | 94.6 (-4.1) |
2002.10 | 167.0 | 97.5 | 90.5 (-4.1) |
2002.11 | 168.7 | 95.5 | 85.2 (-5.3) |
2002.12 | 157.2 | 80.8 | 82.0 (-3.2) |
2003.01 | 144.0 | 79.7 | 80.9 (-1.1) |
2003.02 | 124.5 | 46.0 | 78.5 (-2.4) |
2003.03 | 131.4 | 61.1 | 74.1 (-4.4) |
2003.04 | 126.4 | 60.0 | (69.6 predicted, -4.5) |
2003.05 | 115.7 | 55.2 | (65.3 predicted, -4.3) |
2003.06 | 129.3 | 77.4 | (61.5 predicted, -3.8) |
2003.07 | 127.7 | 85.0 | (58.0 predicted, -3.5) |
2003.08 | 122.1 | 72.7 | (55.0 predicted, -3.0) |
2003.09 | 112.2 | 48.8 | (53.0 predicted, -2.0) |
2003.10 | 116.0 (1) | 30.9 (2) | (50.3 predicted, -2.7) |
1) Running average based on the daily 20:00 UTC observed solar flux value at
2800 MHz.
2) Unofficial, accumulated value based on the Boulder (NOAA/SEC)
sunspot number. The official international sunspot number is typically 30-50%
less.
This report has been prepared by Jan Alvestad. It is based partly on my own observations and analysis, and partly on data from sources noted in solar links. All time references are to the UTC day. Comments and suggestions are always welcome.
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