Solar cycle 17 explained

Cycle Num:17
Start Date:September 1933
End Date:February 1944
Duration:10.4
Max Count:198.6
Max Count Date:April 1937
Min Count:5.8
Spotless Count:269
Prev Name:Solar cycle 16
Next Name:Solar cycle 18
Prev Dates:1923–1933
Next Dates:1944–1954

Solar cycle 17 was the seventeenth solar cycle since 1755, when extensive recording of solar sunspot activity began.[1] The solar cycle lasted 10.4 years, beginning in September 1933 and ending in February 1944. The maximum smoothed sunspot number observed during the solar cycle was 198.6 (April 1937), and the starting minimum was 5.8.[2] During the minimum transit from solar cycle 17 to 18, there were a total of 269 days with no sunspots.[3] [4] [5]

History

1938

See main article: January 1938 geomagnetic storm. A great aurora display was seen all over Europe on 25 January 1938, as far south as Portugal and Sicily, frightening many people. Some thought that the red glow indicated large fires, while others linked it to the Fátima prophecies. An aurora was visible over New York on 3 April 1940.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Sun: Did You Say the Sun Has Spots? . Space Today Online . 12 August 2010.
  2. SIDC Monthly Smoothed Sunspot Number. "http://sidc.oma.be/sunspot-data/"
  3. Spotless Days. "http://spaceweather.com/glossary/spotlessdays.htm?PHPSESSID=dli444kmrjgre0rjq6l86fv144"
  4. Web site: What's Wrong with the Sun? (Nothing). 11 July 2008. Dr. Tony Phillips. NASA. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080714032353/https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/11jul_solarcycleupdate.htm. 14 July 2008.
  5. Solaemon's Spotless Days Page. "http://users.telenet.be/j.janssens/Spotless/Spotless.html"
  6. Web site: Space Weather Newspaper Archives. Solar. Storms. 28 July 2017. www.solarstorms.org.