On the Tilt and Twist of Solar Active Regions
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2004 papers
Abstract
Tilt and twist are two measurable characteristics of solar active regions that can give us information about subsurface physical processes associated with the creation and subsequent evolution of magnetic flux tubes inside the Sun. Using Mees Solar Observatory active region vector magnetograms and Mount Wilson Observatory full-disk longitudinal magnetograms, we measure the magnetic twist and tilt angles of 368 bipolar active regions. In addition to two well-known phenomena, Joy's law and the hemispheric helicity rule, this data set also shows a lesser known twist-tilt relationship, which is the focus of this study. We find that those regions that closely follow Joy's law do not show any twist-tilt dependence. The dispersion in tilt angles and the dispersion in twist are also found to be uncorrelated with each other. Both of these results are predicted consequences of convective buffeting of initially untwisted and unwrithed flux tubes through the Σ-effect. However, we find that regions that strongly depart from Joy's law show significantly larger than average twist and very strong twist-tilt dependence—suggesting that the twist-tilt relationship in these regions is due to the kinking of flux tubes that are initially highly twisted, but not strongly writhed. This implies that some mechanism other than the Σ-effect (e.g., the solar dynamo itself or the process of buoyancy instability and flux tube formation) is responsible for imparting the initial twist (at the base of the solar convection zone) to the flux tubes that subsequently become kink-unstable.
Related Papers
- → Flux‐Tube Twist Resulting from Helical Turbulence: The Σ‐Effect(1998)201 cited
- → Generation of twist on magnetic flux tubes at the base of the solar convection zone(2012)9 cited
- → On the Twist of Emerging Flux Loops in the Solar Convection Zone(2000)12 cited
- → Magnetic Twist and Writhe of Active Regions: On the Origin of Deformed Flux Tubes(2014)59 cited