[Ips-hf-warning] ASWFC HF SHORTWAVE FADEOUT WARNING issued 2220 UT on 25 Feb 2026 [SEC=OFFICIAL]
Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre
aswfc at bom.gov.au
Thu Feb 26 09:20:46 AEDT 2026
SUBJ: ASWFC HF RADIO COMMUNICATIONS WARNING 26/26
ISSUED AT 2220UT/25 FEBRUARY 2026
BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.
A new sunspot region is currently rotating on to the visible
solar disk and may produce R1 level solar flares over the next
few days.
DEGRADED HF PROPAGATION CONDITIONS EXPECTED
FROM 26-27 FEBRUARY 2026
IF COMMS DIFFICULTIES EXPERIENCED TRY A HIGHER FREQUENCY BAND
_____________________________________________________________
SOLAR ACTIVITY FORECAST HF COMMS FADEOUTS
26 Feb: R0-R1 Possible
27 Feb: R0-R1 Possible
Note:
An ASWFC MUF depression HF Warning and ASWFC shortwave fadeout
HF Warning are both current. Shortwave fadeouts degrade
lower shortwave radio frequencies first (through increased
ionospheric absorption) and the usual strategy during shortwave
fadeouts is to try a higher frequency. In contrast, during
periods of ionospheric MUF depression, the upper frequencies
are degraded first and the usual strategy is to use a
lower frequency.
In general use a lower frequency if you are having trouble
with your normal workable frequency.
If a shortwave fadeout occurs during a period when ionospheric
MUFs are depressed the available HF bandwidth will be "squeezed",
with increased absorption raising the lowest usable frequency
and the ionospheric depression lowering the highest usable
frequency. Under such conditions it is suggested that the
HF communicator operates on the highest usable frequency,
even though this may well be in fact lower than what is normally
supported for that particular circuit.
Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre
Bureau of Meteorology
ASWFC at bom.gov.au
www.bom.gov.au | www.sws.bom.gov.au
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