On the Origin of the sudden Heliospheric Open Magnetic Flux Enhancement during the 2014 Pole Reversal
Coronal holes are recognized as the primary sources of heliospheric open magnetic flux (OMF). However, a noticeable gap exists between in-situ measured OMF and that derived from remote sensing observations of the Sun. In this study, we investigate the OMF evolution and its connection to solar struct...
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Zusammenfassung: | Coronal holes are recognized as the primary sources of heliospheric open
magnetic flux (OMF). However, a noticeable gap exists between in-situ measured
OMF and that derived from remote sensing observations of the Sun. In this
study, we investigate the OMF evolution and its connection to solar structures
throughout 2014, with special emphasis on the period from September to October,
where a sudden and significant OMF increase was reported. By deriving the OMF
evolution at 1au, modeling it at the source surface, and analyzing solar
photospheric data, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the observed
phenomenon. First, we establish a strong correlation between the OMF increase
and the solar magnetic field derived from a Potential Field Source Surface
(PFSS) model ($cc_{\mathrm{Pearson}}=0.94$). Moreover, we find a good
correlation between the OMF and the open flux derived from solar coronal holes
($cc_{\mathrm{Pearson}}=0.88$), although the coronal holes only contain
$14-32\%$ of the Sun's total open flux. However, we note that while the OMF
evolution correlates with coronal hole open flux, there is no correlation with
the coronal hole area evolution ($cc_{\mathrm{Pearson}}=0.0$). The temporal
increase in OMF correlates with the vanishing remnant magnetic field at the
southern pole, caused by poleward flux circulations from the decay of numerous
active regions months earlier. Additionally, our analysis suggests a potential
link between the OMF enhancement and the concurrent emergence of the largest
active region in solar cycle 24. In conclusion, our study provides insights
into the strong increase in OMF observed during September to October 2014. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2402.12805 |