We study the influence of faculae on sunspot heat blockage using a thermal model based on eddy heat diffusion through the convection zone. The facula is represented as a localized area of excess emission surrounding the sunspot, which is represented as a thermal plug. Our computations using a range
The use of solar faculae in studies of the sunspot cycle
โ Scribed by G. M. Brown; D. R. Evans
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 557 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0038-0938
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โฆ Synopsis
Comparison of the long-term variation of photospheric faculae areas with that of sunspots shows that studies of faculae provide both complementary and supplementary information on the behaviour of the solar cycle. Detailed studies of the development of sunspots with respect to faculae show that there is a high degree of order over much of a given cycle, but marked differences from cycle to cycle. Within a cycle the relationship between spot and faculae areas appears to be similar for the N and S solar hemispheres, and over the early stages of a cycle it is directly related to the magnitude of the maximum sunspot number subsequently attained in that cycle.
This result may well have predictive applications, and formulae are given relating the peak sunspot number to simple parameters derived from this early developmental stage. Full application to the current cycle 21 is denied due to the cessation of the Greenwich daily photoheliographic measurements, but use of the cruder weekly data suggests a maximum smoothed sunspot number of 150 + 22.
The effects of the incompatibility of the spot and faculae data, in that faculae are unobservable over a large fraction of the solar disc and also do not always develop associated spots, have been examined in a detailed study of two cycles and shown not to vitiate the results.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two independent methods of predicting the magnitude of the peak of a forthcoming sunspot cycle are summarized. One is based on considerations of the development of spots relative to the area of the faculae within which they form during the early stages of the cycle in question, and gives a lead-time
Tile oscillatory behaviour of some faculae has been observed. In some cases power values in the faculae are larger than in the photosphere, but in other faculae power minima are found.
The method proposed by Hathaway et al. [SoPh 151 (1994) 177] was employed to predict the magnitude of sunspot activities in the declining phase of solar Cycle 23, based on the monthly averages of sunspot number and the smoothed monthly averages of sunspot number, respectively. Our results show that:
The statistics of extreme values is used to investigate the statistical properties of the largest areas of sunspots and photospheric faculae per solar cycle. The largest values of the synodic-solar-rotation mean areas of umbrae, whole spots and faculae, which have been recorded for nine solar cycles