Solar Rotation Rate during Solar Activity Cycle 23

Solar Physics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 278 (2) ◽  
pp. 257-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miyoshi Suzuki
1983 ◽  
Vol 102 ◽  
pp. 99-111
Author(s):  
Robert Howard ◽  
Barry J. LaBonte

Several parameters of the solar rotation show variations which appear to relate to the phase of the solar activity cycle. The latitude gradient of the differential rotation, as seen in the coefficients of the sin2 and sin4 terms in the latitude expansion, shows marked variations with the cycle. One of these variations may be described as a one-cycle-per-hemisphere torsional oscillation with a period of 11 years, where the high latitudes rotate faster at solar activity maximum and slower at minimum, and the low latitudes rotate faster at solar activity minimum and slower at maximum. Another variation is a periodic oscillation of the fractional difference in the low-latitude rotation between north and south hemispheres. The possibility of a variation in the absolute rotational velocity of the sun in phase with the solar cycle remains an open question. The two-cycle-per-hemisphere torsional waves in the solar rotation also represent an aspect of the rotation which varies with the cycle. We show that the amplitude of the fast flowing zone rises a year before the rise to activity maximum. The fast zone seems to be physically the more significant of the two zones.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S273) ◽  
pp. 298-302
Author(s):  
Hari Om Vats ◽  
Satish Chandra

AbstractThe coronal sidereal rotation rate as a function of latitude for each year, extending from 1992 to 2001 for soft X-ray images and from 1998 - 2005 for radio images are obtained. The present analysis reveals that the equatorial rotation rate of the corona is comparable to the photosphere and the chromosphere, However, at the higher latitudes, the corona rotation quite differently than the photosphere and chromosphere. The latitude differential obtained by both radio and X-ray images is quite variable throughout the period of the study. The equatorial rotation period seems to vary almost systematically with sunspot numbers which indicates its dependence on the phases of the solar activity cycle.


2019 ◽  
Vol 491 (4) ◽  
pp. 5572-5578 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Frick ◽  
D Sokoloff ◽  
R Stepanov ◽  
V Pipin ◽  
I Usoskin

ABSTRACT Numerous analyses suggest the existence of various quasi-periodicities in solar activity. The power spectrum of solar activity recorded in sunspot data is dominated by the ∼11-yr quasi-periodicity, known as the Schwabe cycle. In the mid-term range (1 month–11 yr) a pronounced variability known as a quasi-biennial oscillation is widely discussed. In the shorter time-scale a pronounced peak, corresponding to the synodic solar rotation period (∼27 d), is observed. Here we revisit the mid-term solar variability in terms of statistical dynamics of fully turbulent systems, where solid arguments are required to accept an isolated dominant frequency in a continuous (smooth) spectrum. For this, we first undertook an unbiased analysis of the standard solar data, sunspot numbers and the F10.7 solar radio flux index, by applying a wavelet tool, which allows one to perform a frequency–time analysis of the signal. Considering the spectral dynamics of solar activity cycle by cycle, we showed that no single periodicity can be separated, in a statistically significant manner, in the specified range of periods. We examine whether a model of the solar dynamo can reproduce the mid-term oscillation pattern observed in solar data. We found that a realistically observed spectrum can be explained if small spatial (but not temporal) scales are effectively smoothed. This result is important because solar activity is a global feature, although monitored via small-scale tracers like sunspots.


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 586-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Danilov ◽  
A. V. Konstantinova

Solar Physics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 296 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Courtillot ◽  
F. Lopes ◽  
J. L. Le Mouël

AbstractThis article deals with the prediction of the upcoming solar activity cycle, Solar Cycle 25. We propose that astronomical ephemeris, specifically taken from the catalogs of aphelia of the four Jovian planets, could be drivers of variations in solar activity, represented by the series of sunspot numbers (SSN) from 1749 to 2020. We use singular spectrum analysis (SSA) to associate components with similar periods in the ephemeris and SSN. We determine the transfer function between the two data sets. We improve the match in successive steps: first with Jupiter only, then with the four Jovian planets and finally including commensurable periods of pairs and pairs of pairs of the Jovian planets (following Mörth and Schlamminger in Planetary Motion, Sunspots and Climate, Solar-Terrestrial Influences on Weather and Climate, 193, 1979). The transfer function can be applied to the ephemeris to predict future cycles. We test this with success using the “hindcast prediction” of Solar Cycles 21 to 24, using only data preceding these cycles, and by analyzing separately two 130 and 140 year-long halves of the original series. We conclude with a prediction of Solar Cycle 25 that can be compared to a dozen predictions by other authors: the maximum would occur in 2026.2 (± 1 yr) and reach an amplitude of 97.6 (± 7.8), similar to that of Solar Cycle 24, therefore sketching a new “Modern minimum”, following the Dalton and Gleissberg minima.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Ulrich ◽  
John Boyden ◽  
Tham Tran ◽  
Luca Bertello

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