1 GONG Magnetogram pipeline. 2 The GONG Data Processing Pipeline
Latest Results from GONG: Helioseismic Studies of the Solar Cycle and Space Weather
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Transcript of Latest Results from GONG: Helioseismic Studies of the Solar Cycle and Space Weather
Latest Results from GONG: Helioseismic Studies of the Solar Cycle and Space Weather
Frank HillDec. 3, 2009
NAOC, Beijing
Outline
• Brief overview of helioseismology• The GONG system• Latest results• Future Hα observations
Helioseismology• In 1960, it was discovered that the solar surface
oscillates at a dominant period of five minutes.• In 1975, it was demonstrated that the oscillations are
acoustic waves trapped inside the Sun.• Since the sun is filled with sound, the characteristics
of the waves are determined by the internal solar structure and dynamics.
• Thus we can infer the properties of the solar interior by measuring the wave frequencies, amplitudes, and life times.
Properties of the acoustic waves
• Amplitudes: up to 20 cm/s• Periods: 3 to 10 min (5 min has most power)• Life times: hours to months• Sound is generated by surface granulation• Waves are trapped in the internal temperature
gradient• Discrete allowed frequencies associated with vertical
wavelengths that “fit” into the thermal cavities• 5,000,000 distinct modes• The Sun is a huge musical instrument
Two types of helioseismology• Global:
– Waves are standing normal modes– Data decomposed into spherical harmonics– Inferred solar properties are averaged over entire sun– Need long (months to years) nearly continuous data sets without gaps
(so GONG network, SOHO and SDO space missions)• Local:
– Waves are travelling– Data decomposed into functions (e.g. sine waves) on localized areas– Inferred solar properties are typically averaged over small patches– Short (hours to days) data sets OK, but need to continually observe to
identify artifacts and study temporal variations
Global helioseismology data reduction
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Observed Doppler shift movie
Three spherical harmonics Time signal for 3 modes
Some Pictures Of The Solar Acoustic Spectrum
Local Helioseismology
• Probe a portion of the sun, not entire sun• 3 methods:– Ring diagrams– Time-Distance– Holography
Ring diagrams
3-d Fourier power spectrum of 16° patches
Spectrum sliced at constant frequency
Time-distanceClose analogy to terrestrial seismology
Ray paths from a source Cross-correlation amplitude as a function of time and distance from a source
Acoustic holographyThe interference pattern from an object
Waves emitted by subsurface sources are observed on the surface
Waves are “time-reversed” to image the sources at a chosen depth
What is GONG?
• Global Oscillation Network Group• GONG is a observing system for helioseismology
and solar magnetic field studies• The instruments are geographically distributed
to observe the Sun continually• Operating since 1995, camera change in 2001,
polarization modulator change in 2006, Hα coming in 2010.
What does GONG observe?
• Full-disk Doppler velocity, line-of-sight magnetic field, and intensity
• Uses Ni I 676.8-nm spectral line• Solar image is 800x800 pixels (2.5” pixels)• One data set every 60 sec at each site• Semi-automated operation• Coming in mid 2010: H-α intensity images
GONG instrument locations
The GONG Instrument
Why a network?
• Diurnal setting of sun produces a periodic gap once a day at a single site.• The solar acoustic spectrum is convolved with the temporal window spectrum, contaminating solar spectrum with many spurious peaks.• A well-designed network greatly decreases the amplitude of these artifacts.• Other observational strategies are space and Antarctica.
GONG temporal coverageGONG monthly duty cycle
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GONG Month
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Overall average duty cycle: 0.849
Last year: 0.893
No day without data since July 2001
1995 2007
Latest results
• Solar cycle and the extended minimum• Magnetic field changes• Space weather
The current minimum is unusual• Longer than average• Most spotless days (so far) since cycle 15• Lowest global solar wind pressure of the space age• Solar magnetic field 36% weaker than last minimum• Lowest irradiance yet measured• Lowest sustained 10.7-cm radio flux since 1947• Unusually high tilt of dipole field• No classical quiescent equatorial streamer belt • Very high cosmic ray flux
Spotless days of the last 150 years W. Livingston & M. Penn
Helioseismic view of the minimum
• Frequency shifts• Travel time differences• Meridional flow• Tachocline oscillation• Convection zone dynamics• Zonal flows/torsional oscillations
Activity-related frequency shifts
Jain & Tripathy
The temporal evolution of mean frequency shifts (bottom panel) and activity indices represented by sunspot number (top panel) and 10.7 cm radio flux (middle panel). The quantities are calculated on a time scale of nine days and cover the period of May 7, 1995 to Dec 11, 2008. Both the magnitude and the fluctuations of the frequency shifts of this minimum are smaller than those of the last cycle.
Temporal variation of frequencies and activity indicies
Odd behavior of p-mode frequency shifts
Temporal evolution of GONG intermediate-degree frequency shifts (red) calculated from 72 day time series during the (a) previous (cycle 22/23) and (b) current (cycle 23/24) minima of the solar cycle. The blue line represents the linearly scaled 10.7 cm radio flux (F10.7). The dash-dot and dash-dot-dot-dot lines in both panels of the figure display the minimum value in activity and frequency shifts between the cycle 22/23, respectively. Note that the frequency shifts are anti-correlated during the current minimum, unlike the previous one. This is also seen in MDI data.
Travel-time changesRelative to 2000 maximum
Sound speed is roughly 20 m/s slower compared to 1996 minimum
Independent of separation near surface effect
Implies either much cooler layers (T/T 0.5%) or lower B
Consistent with reduced irradiance and very low activity
S. Kholikov
Near-surface meridional flow
Deep meridional flow
Three meridional cells in latitude near the surface?
R. Komm
Variations at the Tachocline
See Howe et al. (2000; Science 287, 2456)
1.3y period (Howe et al. 2000)
GONG (black) and MDI (red) agree.
Disappears after solar max
Not affected by reanalysis, but still unconfirmed.
Convection zone dynamics
Courtesy R. Howe
A solar cycle of internal flows – the movie
R. Howe
Torsional Oscillation at depth of 1 Mm
Courtesy R. HoweSymmetric global inversion
1. Cycle 24 migration started in 2003
2. Activity turns on when flow reaches latitude of about 22°
3. Cycle 24 migration has taken 1.5 yrs longer to reach critical latitude
4. Poleward branch yet to appear
Zonal Flow Patterns (Time-Radius)
MDI OLA
MDI RLS
GONG RLS
0 15 30 45 60
Howe et al 2005 Cycle 24 flow is weaker during its rise phase below the surface
Surface TO
Courtesy R. Ulrich
Clear north/south asymmetry
GONG Magnetic Field Observations
• GONG produces full-disk 800X800 magnetograms every minute 24-7.
• 10-min averages are available on the Internet a few minutes after acquisition.
• Synoptic maps and magnetic field extrapolations are generated every hour, also available on the Internet.
• Movies of all synoptic maps & field extrapolations are available on the Internet.
Sample images from GONG’s web page
• Each image is a 10-min average created at the instrument.• Bad images are rejected.• An approximate calibration is performed.• Images are registered and circularized to a common radius. • Data is delivered to the web a few minutes after acquisition.• All previous images are available in an FTP directory.
GONG
Synoptic Maps
Synoptic coronal hole plot Line of sight coronal hole plot
Synoptic field plot
Field extrapolation products
Line of sight synoptic field plot
Ecliptic-plane projections
Synoptic view
Synoptic view
Line of sight view
North polar view
Movies of hourly magnetic field products
• All projections are also provided as movies
• Example: Line-Of-Sight plane of sky projection
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AFRL ADAPT product
10-min magnetic field average
10-min magnetic field standard deviation
10-min intensity average
Weights for synoptic map
High-cadence magnetic field changes
From December 12 2006: Mosaic plot of line-of-sight field changes over a four-hour period centered at 1829UT, the start time of a X6.5 flare in AR10930. Each plot corresponds to one pixel, and the mosaic covers most of AR10930. There is a systematic pattern to the changes, which should yield information about flare mechanisms. Courtesy G. Petrie, J. Harvey, J. Sudol.
Partial rings – apparent suppression in some directions
Rings from magnetic field data – Quiet Sun
Rings from magnetic field data – Active Sun
Rings suppressed in direction towards active region
Information on active region dynamics contained in 3-d power spectrum
Spherical harmonic decomposition of magnetic field
Also shows apparent suppression (retrograde here)
Helioseismology and space weather
• Far-side imaging• Emerging active regions• Subsurface vorticity
Farside imaging and frontside activity
Far-side magnetic fields
Irene Gonzalez-Hernandez & Charlie Lindsey have developed a calibration between the far-side phase shift and the magnetic field strength (above).
It is now possible to create “magnetograms” of the far side (above images), but without polarity information.
New, improved far-side mapsA comparison of the current far-side maps (on the right) and the new improved version on the left. The improved ones have been created from four maps over two days, which strengthens the persistent features and reduces the noise. Thus, some faint features that could not be reliably identified as active regions in the original maps have become candidate regions. These are identified with a red circle and a number that quantifies the probability that the feature is an active region.
Solar acoustic radius variability
Temporal variation in disk-averaged far-side phase shift (Courtesy I. González Hernández).
Temporal variation in lag of low-degree autocorrelation function peak – could be applied to asteroseismic observations (courtesy S. Kholikov).
Vertical flows and emerging active regions
Solid line: vertical velocity averaged over all 801 regions and all ring days
Filled squares: regions with emerging flux – the 25% with highest increase in flux
Filled circles: regions with decaying flux – the 25% with greatest decrease in flux
Open squares: the rest (50% of regions)
Emerging flux: strong upflows in deeper layers, weaker downflows near the surface.
Decaying flux: stronger downflows
801 active regions, vertical flow and flux values for complete disk passage. Courtesy R. Komm
Emerging active regions
Underneath a Sunspot
Above: Sound speed: red is relatively high, blue is low. The variations are caused by either temperature or magnetic field.
Below: vorticity (twisting motions). Pattern shows two horizontal “tornadoes” with opposite sense of rotation. This pattern is under every active region that produces large numbers of X-class flares.
Subsurface vorticity and flare activity
Komm & Hill
Temporal behavior of kinetic helicity before a flare
Helicity increases before flares
Henthorn & Reinard
A superposed epoch analysis for active regions associated with X-class flares (red), M-class flares (blue), and C-class flares (cyan). Shown in green is an average value for active regions that donot flare.
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Statistics for flare forecasting based on NHGV and surface magnetic field strength
Time period Accuracy Hit rate False alarm rate Heidke Score
1 day before flare 96.7% 32.7% 62.4% 0.33
2 days before flare 97.2% 27.3% 71.0% 0.27
3 days before flare 97.7% 25.0% 71.7% 0.25
1-3 days before flare 94.4% 44.3% 65.8% 0.36
0-3 days before flare 91.2% 49.3% 65.1% 0.36
All days 86.9% 58.1% 65.0% 0.38
For M- and X-class flares
Heidke scores for surface magnetic field alone are 0.07-0.15
Hα in GONG
• Add filter, beam-splitter, 2048x2048 camera, DAS• Entrance window bandpass is adequate• Plenty of room on optical table• Acquire 1 image per minute at each site,
staggered by 20 sec between sites• Funded by US Air Force Weather Agency• Prototype running in Tucson• Deployment in spring 2010
GONG/AFWA Hα Concept
Existing GONG Calibration assembly
Hα camera
Hα filter
Focusing lens
Reimaging optics
Beam splitter
Existing instrument cover mounting rail
Prototype at Tucson
Sample GONG Hα image
Power spectral analysis of filament dynamics
Spectra of a synthetic rotating Gaussian
Spectra of area A on the image (an erupting filament)
The details of the spectral structures are related to the rates of rotation, translation, expansion, etc. of the features on the disk.
Can derive the relationships and then use the spectra for statistical studies of filament dynamics.
Spectra of a growing and translating Gaussian
Conclusion• GONG probes the solar interior using helioseismology• GONG also provides nearly continual surface
magnetic/Doppler fields at 1-min cadence• Will soon provide Hα intensity images• Results show deep connections between internal
dynamics and surface activity• Ultimate goal is to understand the solar cycle• Helioseismology can be used for space weather forecasts• GONG welcomes collaboration with Chinese scientists
interested in these areas