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EDITORIAL article

Front. Astron. Space Sci., 02 June 2023
Sec. Stellar and Solar Physics
This article is part of the Research Topic Study of Long-Term Solar Datasets: Exploring Spatio-Temporal Patterns of Solar Variability on Different Time Scales and Implications in Space Weather View all 7 articles

Editorial: Study of long-term solar datasets: exploring spatio-temporal patterns of solar variability on different time scales and implications in space weather

  • 1Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO, United States
  • 2Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences, Nainital, Uttarakhand, India
  • 3HAO/NCAR, Boulder, CO, United States

The Sun is an active star revealing spatiotemporal variability in its magnetic activity, which further impacts our terrestrial system. Various MHD models can simulate certain aspects of the evolution of the solar magnetic field on different time scales. Recently data-driven models and coupling data with models by means of data assimilation and information-theoretic approaches are being explored. The use of high-resolution and high-cadence datasets in conjunction with historical solar data, which are being accumulated to date will allow the derivation of a wealth of spatiotemporal patterns in solar activity on various time scales, covering a few days through months to decades, hence providing reliable inputs for model-simulations, and also the magnetic activity features to be predicted by the models.

Regular measurements of the spatially-resolved solar magnetic field started only in 1967. Observations, before that, captured different magnetic features such as sunspots (Mandal et al., 2020), faculae (Muñoz-Jaramillo et al., 2012; Priyal et al., 2014), and filaments/prominences (Chatterjee et al., 2016; Chatterjee et al., 2017a; Chatterjee et al., 2017b; Chatterjee et al., 2020). These features found in modern datasets and historical archives, form at different heights above the solar surface and help immensely in understanding the magnetic field strength and topology. Several studies have found great corroboration between the long-term spatiotemporal evolution of such magnetic proxies and the evolution derived from current magnetic measurements (McIntosh et al. and references therein). Careful treatment of historical datasets may thus provide invaluable information about the evolutionary pattern in solar magnetic fields (Mordinov et al., 2020) in the past and help establish its causal connection with space weather events (Dikpati and McIntosh, 2020).

It must be noted that modern solar image datasets (e.g., SoHO, SDO, STEREO, HINODE) are captured directly through CCDs whereas historical image archives are primarily available as digitized or non-digitized photographic plates and hand-drawn Sun charts or Carrington maps. The most prominent historical archives are namely, Kodaikanal Solar Observatory Multi-wavelength digitized archive (available from the early 1900’s, Chatterjee et al., 2016; Chatterjee et al., 2017a; Chatterjee et al. 2017b; Mandal et al., 2017; Chatzistergos et al., 2019c; Jha et al., 2021; Priyadarshi et al., 2023), Mt. Wilson white light directs, Ca II K, H-alpha spectroheliograms and hand-drawn sunspot polarity maps (Lefebvre et al., 2005; Bertello et al., 2010; Pevtsov et al., 2019a; Chatterjee et al., 2019), Meudon hand-drawn Carrington Maps (Malherbe et al., 2023), McIntosh hand-drawn archive (Webb et al., 2018; Mazumder et al., 2021; Harris et al., 2022), Kanzelhöhe prominence archive (Pötzi et al., 2013; Chatterjee et al., 2020), Greenwich sunspot archive (Willis et al., 2013), Coimbra archive (Carrasco and Vaquero, 2022) and Kislovodsk archive (Tlatov et al., 2016). Several studies are focusing on one of these datasets. Several factors such as data gaps, inter-observer variability, data degradation, and calibration problems (Chatzistergos et al., 2018b; Muñoz-Jaramillo and Vaquero, 2019) restrict the unified treatment of such datasets. However, applying indirect and sophisticated approaches (Mordinov et al., 2020) can help to unify these datasets, thereby stretching the study time further in the past.

The articles published on this Research Topic focus on a range of problems such as multi-wavelength long-term data generation and calibration, detection of magnetic proxies, data-driven simulation to generate spatiotemporal patterns of magnetic evolution, prediction of the solar cycle amplitude and drawing correlations between solar open flux estimated from solar images and heliospheric in-situ measurements. They employ a diverse set of methodologies encompassing—1) edge detection and Hough transform techniques to detect solar discs for data calibration, 2) iterative polynomial fits to extract limb-darkening profiles for photometric calibration, 3) morphological operators to detect sunspots and OTSU thresholding to detect sunspot umbra, 4) Hilbert transform to predict the solar cycle, 5) flux transport simulations to record spatiotemporal patterns of solar magnetic fields using sunspot polarity and plage data, 6) PFSS extrapolation to estimate open solar flux using magnetograms as input, 7) Monte-Carlo method for ensemble reconstruction.

We hope that the articles on this Research Topic will expose the readers to a subset of the wealth of long-term multi-wavelength solar data that are vital in constraining the existing models to extrapolate the magnetic behavior of the sun as well as understand new physics that was previously unknown. We expect that this Research Topic will inspire applications of state-of-the-art data processing (including Machine Learning) approaches to generate high-quality homogeneous data series combining multiple surveys and enable the scientific community to establish causal connections between phenomena happening at different time scales from the solar surface to the heliosphere.

We list below the detailed description of each article published on this Research Topic.

Lockwood et al. Paper-I presents updated mean reconstructions of the interplanetary magnetic field, solar wind speed, and open solar flux (OSF) for the past 186 years using geomagnetic indices and modern in-situ measurements. They use the Monte Carlo technique that generates an ensemble of 1 million members for each pairing of indices and enables the reconstruction of the mentioned parameters with uncertainty estimates. The study reports an increase in the solar cycle average of open solar flux from 2.46 × 10 14 Wb in 1906 to 4.10 × 10 14 Wb in 1949.

Lockwood et al. Paper-II shows how the geomagnetic observations presented in paper-I can be combined with long data series of solar observations to gain a deeper understanding of the long-term change in the solar corona and heliosphere during the rise and fall of the Modern Grand Solar Maximum. The study finds close agreement between the polar coronal hole fluxes and the values derived from open flux continuity modeling based on sunspot numbers. It also suggests that one possible solution to the “open flux problem” (i.e., mismatch of OSF derived from PFSS reconstruction from solar magnetograms and in-situ observations) is open flux within the streamer belt that potential-based modeling of coronal fields from photospheric fields is not capturing.

Jha et al. extend the sunspot area series from Kodaikanal Solar Observatory to 1904–2017 by adding data for the period 1904–1911 and 2011–2017. The article discusses important aspects such as calibration of the newly added digitized images, semi-automated detection of sunspots, automated detection of sunspot umbra, and validation of extracted features with currently available composite series.

Chatzistergos et al. provide a comprehensive overview of the currently known full-disk Ca II K data archives The article discusses sources of the inhomogeneities in the data, existing processing techniques, and the important results derived with such data so far.

Ermolli et al. provide a detailed overview of The Rome Precision Solar Photometric Telescope (Rome/PSPT) which started solar observation in 1996 and is still continuing to record multi-wavelength solar data. The article encompasses aspects like data acquisition, photometric calibration, image characterization, and different scientific studies that have been enabled by PSPT.

McIntosh et al. use Hale cycle termination points as anchors and forecast amplitude for SC25 to be 184 ± 63 at 2σ (13-month smoothed sunspot number). Using the superposed epoch analysis they also estimate the maximum timing to be between the last quarter of 2023 and the last quarter of 2024. The paper highlights the importance of studying solar longitudinal evolution and the need for a multi-point observing capability to achieve the same.

Author contributions

SC wrote the first draft. DB and MD edited the manuscript causing further improvements. All authors listed have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution to the work and approved it for publication.

Funding

MD acknowledges support by NASA-LWS grant 80NSSC20K0355 and NASA-HSR grant 80NSSC21K1676 to NCAR, and two sub-awards respectively from NASA Cooperative Agreement 80NSSC22M0162 to Stanford University for the COFFIES Drive Science Center and NASA-HSR grant 80NSSC21K1678 to JHU/APL. This editorial work is supported by the National Center for Atmospheric Research, which is a major facility sponsored by the National Science Foundation under cooperative agreement 1852977. SC acknowledges the funding support by NASA HGIO grant 80NSSC23K0416.

Acknowledgments

We thank all the reviewers for their insightful comments. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the staff in the Editorial Office of Frontiers.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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Keywords: solar magnetism, solar cycle, sunspots, chromosphere, solar irradiance, historical datasets, open solar flux, in situ heliospheric measurements

Citation: Chatterjee S, Banerjee D and Dikpati M (2023) Editorial: Study of long-term solar datasets: exploring spatio-temporal patterns of solar variability on different time scales and implications in space weather. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 10:1207120. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2023.1207120

Received: 17 April 2023; Accepted: 23 May 2023;
Published: 02 June 2023.

Edited by:

Luke Barnard, University of Reading, United Kingdom

Reviewed by:

Luca Bertello, National Solar Observatory, United States

Copyright © 2023 Chatterjee, Banerjee and Dikpati. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Subhamoy Chatterjee, c3ViaGFtb3kuY2hhdHRlcmplZUBzd3JpLm9yZw==

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.