Geomagnetischer Sturm G3 mit Aurora Borealis und Amateurfunk-Yagi-Antenne

DX Weather Week 24/2026: SFI 141 — G3 Storm Ahead, Aurora Chance and Strong Second Half

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Week 24 / 2026 | June 8 – 14 | SFI 141 | SSN 124 | A 36 | K 2 | X-Ray C1.2


Summary

Warning: G3 storm ahead! NOAA forecasts a strong geomagnetic storm reaching Kp 7 (G3 class) for Sunday/Monday (June 8–9). This will temporarily disrupt HF conditions severely — especially on the upper bands. Just last Thursday (June 5), a G2 storm (Kp 6.3) hit Earth, and we’re still recovering.

Solar Flux holds steady at 141 — just below last week’s 142. The Sunspot Number stands at 124, and an M1.8 flare was recorded today (June 6). Flare probabilities remain elevated: C/M-class 50%, X-class 10%. Solar wind is also elevated at 593 km/s.

The week splits in two: Sunday/Monday storm, Tuesday onwards recovery. Those who exploit the second half will be rewarded with SFI 140+ and quiet geomagnetic conditions. The Sporadic E season on 6 m continues unaffected — geomagnetic storms barely influence Es propagation.

Band Forecast

Band conditions are heavily storm-dependent. During the G3 storm (Sun/Mon), upper bands will be severely attenuated, and even 20 m may be affected at times. From Tuesday, conditions should normalise rapidly — SFI 140+ delivers excellent conditions once the field quiets.

BandDay (from Tue)NightNotes
160mPoorPoorSeason over — nights too short, high QRN
80mFairFairIntra-EU evenings possible, Sun/Mon disturbed
40mGoodGoodReliable from Tue — NA/JA from 20 UTC
30mGoodGoodStable after recovery, FT8/CW consistent
20mVery goodGoodMain band from Tue — worldwide openings
17mVery goodFairSFI 140+ delivers daytime DX to JA, VK, W
15mGood to very goodPoorF2 stable from Tue, Sun/Mon heavily attenuated
12mGoodPoorF2 + Es — but only after storm subsides
10mGood (F2 + Es)PoorSun/Mon dead, from Tue double openings possible
6mGood (Es)PoorEs storm-independent! Daily openings likely

Geomagnetic Forecast

Warning: NOAA forecasts a G3 storm from Sunday midday. The disturbance will last until Monday night. Rapid recovery expected from Tuesday.

DayKp expectedSFI ForecastAssessment
Sun, Jun 82→5→7140G1 from midday → G2 → G3 evening — HF severely disturbed
Mon, Jun 97→5138G3 aftermath — slow recovery
Tue, Jun 103–4138Settling — bands reopening
Wed, Jun 112–3140Usable — upper bands returning
Thu, Jun 122140Quiet — good DX conditions
Fri, Jun 131–2140Quiet — best DX window of the week
Sat, Jun 141–2138Excellent — perfect weekend for HF and VHF

Recommendations for the Coming Week

  • Sunday/Monday: Ride out the storm! At Kp 7 (G3), upper bands (10–17 m) are essentially unusable. Even 20 m and 40 m may drop out intermittently. Use the time for antenna work or CW practice.
  • 6 metres is storm-resistant: Sporadic E openings are ionospheric and barely affected by geomagnetic storms. If you’re active on 50 MHz, you can still make QSOs on Sunday/Monday — even better with a Yagi.
  • Aurora scatter on VHF possible! A G3 storm can produce aurora propagation on 2 m and 70 cm. Monitor CW and SSB on 144.100 MHz and 432.100 MHz — signals sound “raspy” and broad. Point your antenna north!
  • From Tuesday: Seize the recovery! The second half of the week promises excellent conditions. SFI 140+ with quiet Kp = perfect combination for DX on all bands from 40 to 10 m.
  • Thu–Sat = prime DX window: Kp 1–2 at SFI 140+ — best conditions of the week. Prefer 17 m and 15 m during daytime, 20 m evenings for NA DX.
  • HAM RADIO Friedrichshafen: The 49th HAM RADIO takes place June 26–28 — Europe’s largest amateur radio exhibition. Mark your calendars!

Week 23 Review and Outlook

The flux rally since the low at SFI 101 (week 21) stabilises at a high level: 101 → 124 → 142 → 141 over four weeks. The NOAA long-term trend for June averages SFI 138 — we continue to track above the predicted monthly mean.

Week 23 was shaped by the subsiding CH-HSS disturbance from May 30 and excellent conditions from Tuesday. Then on Thursday, June 5, a G2 storm (Kp 6.3) struck — recovery was still underway when NOAA announced the next, stronger storm for Sunday.

Today’s M1.8 flare shows the Sun remains active. The elevated major flare probability (10%) means a larger flare is possible at any time — with corresponding propagation effects. Cycle 25 remains surprisingly strong even in its descending phase.

For VHF enthusiasts, the second week of June is ideal: Sporadic E season is in full swing, and the G3 storm offers the rare chance of aurora scatter on 2 m and 70 cm. Anyone with a transverter or VHF station should monitor 144 MHz on Sunday/Monday evening.

Live Data

☀ Aktuelle Ausbreitungsbedingungen 06.06.2026 21:07 UTC
SFI 141
SSN 139
A-Index 36
K-Index 2
X-Ray C1.0
Band Tag ☀ Nacht ☾
160m Schlecht Mäßig
80–40m Mäßig Gut
30–20m Gut Gut
17–15m Gut Gut
12–10m Mäßig Schlecht
Aktuelle Sonnenereignisse
M1.8 06.06. 14:01

Further Reading


Transparency Notice

This weather report was created with the assistance of AI (Claude, Anthropic) based on current data from NOAA/SWPC, HamQSL and SolarHam. All content has been reviewed by the oeradio.at editorial team. Corrections or additions to [email protected].

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