Observations from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) have the potential for
allowing the helioseismic study of the formation of hundreds of active regions,
which would enable us to perform statistical analyses. Our goal is to collate a
uniform data set of emerging active regions observed by the SDO/HMI instrument
suitable for helioseismic analysis up to seven days before emergence. We
restricted the sample to active regions that were visible in the continuum and
emerged into quiet Sun largely avoiding pre-existing magnetic regions. As a
reference data set we paired a control region (CR), with the same latitude and
distance from central meridian, with each emerging active region (EAR). We call
this data set, which is currently comprised of 105 emerging active regions
observed between May 2010 and November 2012, the SDO Helioseismic Emerging
Active Region (SDO/HEAR) survey. To demonstrate the utility of a data set of a
large number of emerging active regions, we measure the relative east-west
velocity of the leading and trailing polarities from the line-of-sight
magnetogram maps during the first day after emergence. The latitudinally
averaged line-of-sight magnetic field of all the EARs shows that, on average,
the leading (trailing) polarity moves in a prograde (retrograde) direction with
a speed of 121 +/- 22 m/s (-70 +/- 13 m/s) relative to the Carrington rotation
rate in the first day. However, relative to the differential rotation of the
surface plasma, the east-west velocity is symmetric, with a mean of 95 +/- 13
m/s. The SDO/HEAR data set will not only be useful for helioseismic studies,
but will also be useful to study other features such as the surface magnetic
field evolution of a large sample of EARs.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics, 11 figures, one longtable;
update corrects units in Figure