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Strategies & Market Trends : Taking Advantage of a Sharply Changing Environment
NRG 152.05-4.1%Jan 16 9:30 AM EST

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3bar
To: 3bar who wrote (4634)3/9/2021 9:59:56 AM
From: Doug R1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) of 6365
 
The sunspots themselves are a basic indication of overall solar magnetic field strength.
Individually, as they travel across the solar disk facing Earth, their immediate effects are temporary.
Flares, CMEs do most of the work seen in regularly changing weather patterns and events.
Sunspots don't "cause" warming. More sunspots...greater magnetic strength...fewer cosmic rays into Earth's systems...less clouds....less cold.
Sunspots come in different sizes and configurations. So just counting them isn't a very accurate measurement of solar magnetic field strengtrh.
But 1 or 2 per day would be a stronger field than 1 or 2 per week.

One measurement to watch is the 10.7 cm. radio flux.
USAF 45-DAY AP AND F10.7CM FLUX FORECAST

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