CQ Amateur Radio

PROPAGATION

A Quick Look at Current Cycle 24/25 Conditions

(Data rounded to nearest whole number)

Sunspots:

Observed Monthly, May 2020: 0

12-month smoothed, November 2019: 2

10.7-cm Flux:

Observed Monthly, May 2020: 69

12-month smoothed, November 2019: 69

Ap Index:

Observed Monthly, May 2020: 6

12-month smoothed, November 2019: 6

One Year Ago: A Quick Look at Solar Cycle Conditions

(Data rounded to nearest whole number)

Sunspots:

Observed Monthly, May 2019: 6

12-month smoothed, November 2018: 4

10.7-cm Flux:

Observed Monthly, May 2019: 71

12-month smoothed, November 2018: 70

Ap Index:

Observed Monthly, May 2019: 7

12-month smoothed, November 2018: 7

Space is not a vacuum, at least in our solar system. The sun’s atmosphere, which actually extends extremely far out from the sun, fills space in our system with plasma, a low-density gas in which the individual atoms are charged.

The temperature of the sun’s atmosphere is so high that the sun’s gravity cannot hold on to it. The plasma streams off of the sun in all directions at speeds of about 400 kilometers per second (about 1 million miles per hour). This is known as the solar wind.

The speed of the solar wind fluctuates, and carries with it magnetic clouds. These magnetic clouds are interacting regions where high-speed wind catches up with slow-speed wind. The solar wind speed is high (on average 800 kilometers per second) over coronal holes and low (300 kilometers per second) over streamers. These high- and low-speed streams interact with each other and alternately pass by the Earth as the sun rotates. These wind speed variations buffet

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from CQ Amateur Radio

CQ Amateur Radio6 min read
Vhf Plus
During August, an impressive high-pressure system was in place over the middle of the country, bringing sweltering heat and weeks without rain. A silver lining to the weather, however, was the tropospheric ducting that resulted across the region. Pho
CQ Amateur Radio3 min read
Antennas
I have been doing a lot of work on direction-finding antennas lately, so it sure seemed like it would be a good topic for this issue. In Photo A, we have the classic ferrite rod antenna used in most AM radios, often called a wave magnet in the early
CQ Amateur Radio10 min read
Transceiver to Computer Interface
Many modern-day amateur radio programs use a single USB cable between the transceiver and computer to transfer three basic types of information; audio signals which can include SSB, RTTY, digital or CW signals, critical transceiver control and pollin

Related Books & Audiobooks