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Something new on this solar cycle!

DXman

Yes, that's 3100 degrees F. Nine yrs of hard work.
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The Termination Event has Arrived


February 25, 2022 / 1 Comment


Feb. 26, 2022: Something big just happened on the sun. Solar physicists Scott McIntosh (NCAR) and Bob Leamon (U. Maryland-Baltimore County) call it “The Termination Event.”
“Old Solar Cycle 24 has finally died–it was terminated!” says McIntosh. “Now the new solar cycle, Solar Cycle 25, can really take off.”
The “Termination Event” is a new idea in solar physics, outlined by McIntosh and Leamon in a December 2020 paper in the journal Solar Physics. Not everyone accepts it–yet. If Solar Cycle 25 unfolds as McIntosh and Leamon predict, the Termination Event will have to be taken seriously.
newprediction.jpg
Above: Predictions for Solar Cycle 25. Blue is the “official” prediction of a weak cycle. Red is a new prediction based on the Termination Event.
The basic idea is this: Solar Cycle 25 (SC25) started in Dec. 2019. However, old Solar Cycle 24 (SC24) refused to go away. It hung on for two more years, producing occasional old-cycle sunspots and clogging the sun’s upper layers with its decaying magnetic field. During this time, the two cycles coexisted, SC25 struggling to break free while old SC24 held it back.
“Solar Cycle 24 was cramping Solar Cycle 25’s style,” says Leamon.
Researchers have long known that solar cycles can overlap. The twist added by McIntosh and Leamon is the realization that overlapping cycles interact. This makes sense. In the early 20th century, George Ellery Hale discovered that the magnetic polarity of sunspot pairs reverses itself from one cycle to the next; indeed, the sun’s entire global magnetic field flips every ~11 years. When adjacent, opposite-polarity solar cycles overlap, they naturally interfere.
Termination Events mark the end of interference, when a new cycle can break free of the old.
coronalbp.jpg
Above: Bands of coronal bright points (hot spots in the sun’s atmosphere) linked to old Solar Cycle 24 vanished in Dec. 2021, signalling a Termination Event. A Twitter thread from Scott McIntosh explains this in greater detail.
The timing of the Termination Event can predict the intensity of the new cycle. In their Solar Physics paper, McIntosh and Leamon looked back over 270 years of sunspot data and found that Termination Events happen every 10 to 15 years.
“We found that the longer the time between terminators, the weaker the next cycle would be,” explains Leamon. “Conversely, the shorter the time between terminators, the stronger the next solar cycle would be.”
So when did the latest Termination Event happen? Dec. 2021. This yields a specific, testable prediction for Solar Cycle 25.
“We have finalized our forecast of SC25’s amplitude,” says McIntosh. “It will be just above the historical average with a monthly smoothed sunspot number of 190 ± 20.”
“Above average” may not sound exciting, but this is in fact a sharp departure from NOAA’s official forecast of a weak solar cycle. It could be just enough to catapult Terminators into the forefront of solar cycle prediction techniques.
Stay tuned. We’ll be back.
 

Just wanted to point this out - a type of oscillation during the cycle progression and also helps to show the "magnetic reversal" the sun exhibits every 22 years.
1646258903365.png

The above is only one cycle, but I wanted to show that there is also a given latitude of where the spots form, but also the "plaques" or simpler prominence eruptions that also tend to follow the latitude shift in the cycle as the plaques then seem to be replaced again by spots during the progression of the cycle from its spot minimum to its maximum - almost as if it has precession - a wobble - in its core.

You can trace it out using the data presented.
 
Because the sun flips the magnetic polarity of its poles at end of each cycle, they describe magnetism on the sun with the words "positive" and "negative" in place of the "north" and "south" we use for magnets down here on earth.

Then again, since two of these 11-year cycles must pass before the sun's "north" pole has a positive magnetic polarity, it's really a 22-year cycle. The 11-year rise/fall of sunspots is only half the full-circle cycle.

73
 
"Magnetic Shift", that sounds like what happened when that guy who hired me to work for him changed his mind when he found out I wasn't that hot blond gal on my LinkedIn profile picture. He was no longer attracted to me...
aww damm homer that was a gooden
 
sunspotcounts.png


Panel predicted that Solar Cycle 25 would peak in July 2025 as a relatively weak cycle, similar in magnitude to its predecessor Solar Cycle 24. Instead, Solar Cycle 25 is shaping up to be stronger.
The “official forecast” comes from the Solar Cycle Prediction Panel representing NOAA, NASA and International Space Environmental Services (ISES).

 
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Maybe on the HF bands. Six meters tends to wake up. And aurora will creep farther south than normal.

73
Yep!!! Guess 6 meters was WIDE OPEN to S. America yesterday afternoon (4-6:00 pm EDST) .... Missed again ...damn the luck!!! Guess I should have been listening on the mobile, instead of chatting with XYL on our road trip.:ROFLMAO:o_O
 
Yep!!! Guess 6 meters was WIDE OPEN to S. America yesterday afternoon (4-6:00 pm EDST) .... Missed again ...damn the luck!!! Guess I should have been listening on the mobile, instead of chatting with XYL on our road trip.:ROFLMAO:o_O

I have a 6 meter radio, but have yet to make any contacts, or actually hear any action on the band.. Is the action on the USB or FM modes? I focus mostly on 11m and 2m, and some shortwave listening, but would like to hear what's going on with 6m. I know it doesn't seem to be as popular as other bands.
Thanks
 

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