Chromospheric Synoptic Maps of Polar Crown Filaments [SSA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1910.07943


Polar crown filaments form above the polarity inversion line between the old magnetic flux of the previous cycle and the new magnetic flux of the current cycle. Studying their appearance and their properties can lead to a better understanding of the solar cycle. We use full-disk data of the Chromospheric Telescope (ChroTel) at the Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain, which were taken in three different chromospheric absorption lines (H-alpha 6563A, CaII-K 3933A, and HeI 10830A), and we create synoptic maps. In addition, the spectroscopic HeI data allow us to compute Doppler velocities and to create synoptic Doppler maps. ChroTel data cover the rising and decaying phase of Solar Cycle 24 on about 1000 days between 2012 and 2018. Based on these data, we automatically extract polar crown filaments with image-processing tools and study their properties. We compare contrast maps of polar crown filaments with those of quiet-Sun filaments. Furthermore, we present a super-synoptic map summarizing the entire ChroTel database. In summary, we provide statistical properties, i.e. number and location of filaments, area, and tilt angle for both the maximum and declining phase of Solar Cycle 24. This demonstrates that ChroTel provides a promising data set to study the solar cycle.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Diercke and C. Denker
Fri, 18 Oct 19
66/77

Comments: 18 pages, 10 figures