WEAK CME IMPACT
A CME hit Earth’s magnetic field on Nov. 29th (0245 UT), but the impact was so weak it did not spark a geomagnetic storm. The G2-storm watch previously issued for Nov. 29th is cancelled
Saturday
December 21, 2024 9:55 PM
I am a Licensed Amature Radio operator (N0MRB) Effective Date: 08/032024 - Expires: 08/03/34 I am also a GMRS Licensed operator (WSEQ246)Effective Date: 09/12/2024 - Expires: 09/12/34 SkyWarn Advanced spotter, NWS Snow spotter, I run a fully functional weather station that reports to NWS, through ARPS, MADIS, and others, every 5 minutes. Also belong to CoCoRaHS - Community Collaborative Rain, Hail & Snow Network. I have several HT radios, 2 QB25 Quad band radios. 146MHZ /222MHZ /365MHZ /430MHZ. 1 is a base station, the second is a mobile unit. Hopefully soon, I will have another Quad band radio, that will cover 2M/6M/10M/70CM. it will be a dual radio, for the base, and mobile. I am a resident of Shelby, Ohio, the NE side. lived in Shelby for almost 13 years.
A CME hit Earth’s magnetic field on Nov. 29th (0245 UT), but the impact was so weak it did not spark a geomagnetic storm. The G2-storm watch previously issued for Nov. 29th is cancelled
A G2-class geomagnetic stom is possible on Nov. 28th when a CME is expected to hit Earth’s magnetic field. The CME was hurled into space by a magnetic filament attached to sunspot 3901, which erupted on Nov. 25th. There is a chance this CME will sail south of Earth with little to no contact, so this is a low probability forecast.
This is only a few times I will post this to the main page from me.
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Thank you,
Respectfully, Ray N0MRB
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