553 research outputs found
Note sur les plus anciennes représentations de Saint Démétrius
Μη διαθέσιμη περίληψηno abstrac
A coupled 2 x 2D Babcock-Leighton solar dynamo model. II Reference dynamo solutions
In this paper we complete the presentation of a new hybrid 2 × 2D flux transport dynamo (FTD) model of the solar
cycle based on the Babcock–Leighton mechanism of poloidal magnetic field regeneration via the surface decay of
bipolar magnetic regions (BMRs). This hybrid model is constructed by allowing the surface flux transport (SFT)
simulation described in Lemerle et al. to provide the poloidal source term to an axisymmetric FTD simulation
defined in a meridional plane, which in turn generates the BMRs required by the SFT. A key aspect of this
coupling is the definition of an emergence function describing the probability of BMR emergence as a function of
the spatial distribution of the internal axisymmetric magnetic field. We use a genetic algorithm to calibrate this
function, together with other model parameters, against observed cycle 21 emergence data. We present a reference
dynamo solution reproducing many solar cycle characteristics, including good hemispheric coupling, phase
relationship between the surface dipole and the BMR-generating internal field, and correlation between dipole
strength at cycle maximum and peak amplitude of the next cycle. The saturation of the cycle amplitude takes place
through the quenching of the BMR tilt as a function of the internal field. The observed statistical scatter about the
mean BMR tilt, built into the model, acts as a source of stochasticity which dominates amplitude fluctuations. The
model thus can produce Dalton-like epochs of strongly suppressed cycle amplitude lasting a few cycles and can
even shut off entirely following an unfavorable sequence of emergence events
A Coupled 2 × 2D Babcock–Leighton Solar Dynamo Model. I. Surface Magnetic Flux Evolution
The need for reliable predictions of the solar activity cycle motivates the development of dynamo models incorporating a representation of surface processes sufficiently detailed to allow assimilation of magnetographic data. In this series of papers we present one such dynamo model, and document its behavior and properties. This first paper focuses on one of the model's key components, namely surface magnetic flux evolution. Using a genetic algorithm, we obtain best-fit parameters of the transport model by least-squares minimization of the differences between the associated synthetic synoptic magnetogram and real magnetographic data for activity cycle 21. Our fitting procedure also returns Monte Carlo-like error estimates. We show that the range of acceptable surface meridional flow profiles is in good agreement with Doppler measurements, even though the latter are not used in the fitting process. Using a synthetic database of bipolar magnetic region (BMR) emergences reproducing the statistical properties of observed emergences, we also ascertain the sensitivity of global cycle properties, such as the strength of the dipole moment and timing of polarity reversal, to distinct realizations of BMR emergence, and on this basis argue that this stochasticity represents a primary source of uncertainty for predicting solar cycle characteristics
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