Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/7905
Title: Solar Cycle Evolution of Filaments over a Century: Investigations with the Meudon and McIntosh Hand-drawn Archives
Authors: Mazumder, Rakesh
Chatterjee, Subhamoy
Nandy, Dibyendu
Banerjee, D
Keywords: Solar cycle
Solar filaments
Solar activity
Issue Date: 1-Oct-2021
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 919, No. 2, 125
Abstract: Hand-drawn synoptic maps from the Meudon Observatory (1919 onwards) and the McIntosh archive (1967 onwards) are two important sources of long-term, manually recorded filament observations. In this study, we calibrate the Meudon maps and subsequently identify filaments through an automated method. We extract physical parameters from this filament database and perform a comparative study of their long-term evolution focusing on the cotemporal period of the McIntosh and Meudon observations. The spatiotemporal evolution of filaments manifests in the form of a filament butterfly diagram, further indicating that they are intimately related to the largescale solar cycle. Physical descriptors such as the number and length of filaments, which are tracers of the solar surface magnetic field, have cycles which are phase locked with the ∼11 yr sunspot cycle. The tilt-angle distribution of filaments—both near to or distant from active region locations—indicates that their origin is due to either large-scale surface magnetic field or inter-active-region field evolution. This study paves the way for constructing a composite series of hand-drawn filament data with minimal gaps stretching over the time span of solar filament observations up to a century. On the one hand, this would serve as a useful constraint for models of magnetic field emergence and evolution on the Sun’s surface over multiple solar cycles, and on the other hand, this filament database may be used to guide the reconstruction of filament/prominence associated eruptive events before the space age.
Description: Restricted access
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/7905
ISSN: 1538-4357
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications



Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.