Aurora

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Aurora is a phenomena which is most prevalent in the regions close to the so called "Aurora Belt". Depending on where you live in the world this belt may be southern Canada or the northern part of the Nordic countries. In these areas Aurora will occur a dozen times a year, even in the quiet periods of the Solar Cycle. If you live more to the south, like in Central Europe, years may pass with little or no Aurora openings.
 Finally, after a very long solar minimum, our neighbouring star has been showing activity since early 2010. Sunspots have been appearing again, but thus far there have been no major Aurora openings. However, we are interested to have infos about ANY Aurora opening occurring in the European area (other parts of the Northen and Southern hemisphere may be added later, depending on Ham and Solar activity). So if you make any Aurora QSOs on 2 metre or 70 cm, please post them into the aurora page using LOGIN, or send as a text file to pa3biy@mmmonvhf.de and pa2dw@mmmonvhf.de. The results of QSOs will be plotted on a map of Europe, and/or posted as lists of worked stations.

In order to produce an intersection map of the position of the Aurora cloud(s), we need reports from both stations who have been involved in a QSO, including an accurate beam heading. Please use LOGIN (please register), and file your list of QSOs by clicking: "Send your report" and follow the guidelines. 
 
Example log entry by PA3BIY:
12:14 PA4EME JO20WX 45
12:17 HA5CRX JN97NM 85

If you are new to VHF DX, you might want to read this small introduction article about Aurora and its relation to the Sun. Other articles related to VHF propagation can be found on the FORUM page.


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Last update: 30. Jan 2026 at 21:22 UTC

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12. Nov 2025

Over the past 3 days Solar region 14274 was the source of 3 major flares. All three eruptions had associated CMEs. The first 2 of them arrived shortly after each other around midnight of November 11/12. A few hours later the K-index peaked 9 (!!), but as nearly everyone in Europe was asleep, very few QSOs were reported. Though the K-index remained high over the morning time (6 to 7), only minor aurora was reported (I myself heard a few a few SM7 and Gs around noon, but signals faded soon).
Tonight at 18:20z the third CME arrived at the ACE satellite. The wind velocity jumped up to approximately 1000 km/s, but the magnetic field strength is not yet impressive at time of writing. Also the Bz is positive (we need a negative Bz).