Viewing archive of Thursday, 19 June 2003

Geophysical report

Any mentioned solar flare in this report has a scaling factor applied by the Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). Because of the SWPC scaling factor, solar flares are reported as 42% smaller than for the science quality data. The scaling factor has been removed from our archived solar flare data to reflect the true physical units.
Solar and Geophysical Activity Summary 2003 Jun 19 0245 UTC
Prepared by the NOAA © SWPC and processed by SpaceWeatherLive.com

Joint USAF/NOAA Solar and Geophysical Activity Summary

SGAS Number 170 Issued at 0245Z on 19 Jun 2003 This report is compiled from data received at SWO on 18 Jun
A. Energetic Events
Begin  Max  End  Rgn   Loc   Xray  Op 245MHz 10cm   Sweep
2227 2255 2312  0386        M6.8     1200   2100   II/IV
B. Proton Events
The greater than 10 Mev proton fluxes at geosynchronous orbit reached event threshold at 18/2050Z and due to the recent activity the exact source for this particle event is not certain at this time but is most likely from the M6.8 x-ray flare from 17 June..
C. Geomagnetic Activity Summary
The geomagnetic field was at predominantly minor to major storm levels with an isolated period of severe storm conditions seen at high latitudes between 18/0600 and 0900Z. A co-rotating integrated region preceding a recurrent high speed coronal hole stream and is believed to responsible for the storm conditions.
D. Stratwarm
None
E. Daily Indices: (real-time preliminary/estimated values)
10 cm 120  SSN 099  Afr/Ap 045/054   X-ray Background B3.2
Daily Proton Fluence (flux accumulation over 24 hrs)
GT 1 MeV 2.5e+07   GT 10 MeV 1.4e+06 p/(cm2-ster-day)
(GOES-8 satellite synchronous orbit W128 degrees)
Daily Electron Fluence
GT 2 MeV 2.30e+06 e/(cm2-ster-day)
(GOES-12 satellite synchronous orbit W75 degrees)
3 Hour K-indices
Boulder 5 5 6 6 3 5 4 3 Planetary 5 6 7 6 4 4 4 4
F. Comments
  None
PLAIN
K-Indices:
On 16 June, it was determined that a scaling problem exists with the Boulder magnetometer instrument.  While this problem, and its fix are being investigated the primary instrument for Boulder K-indices has been switched to the Boulder USGS (via Domsat) magnetometer, effective 1500 UTC on 16 June.

GOES Protons:
To ensure continued operational monitoring of important energetic particle data, it is necessary to reassign primary/secondary designations for the GOES Space Environment Monitor (SEM) detectors. GOES 11 (113W) will become the primary satellite for protons. The transition from GOES 8 to GOES 11 was scheduled for 18 June, but has been delayed until 19 June. GOES 12 will continue as the primary satellite for magnetometer, X-ray, and electron measurements. GOES 10 (135W) will be the secondary satellite for all SEM sensors - magnetometer, X-ray, and energetic particles.  Because of the degraded state of the proton data on GOES-10, its designation as the secondary source for proton data is a short-term solution.  More permanent solutions have been identified and are being evaluated.  Users will be notified when we define and schedule a permanent fix.  Further details can be found at http://www.sec.noaa.gov/GOES.html.
99999

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