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Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study

Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study. Yang Liu, Peter W. Schuck. Topics to be discussed. Buildup of magnetic relative helicity in two emerging active regions; Hemispheric helicity rule: test with HMI data;

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Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study

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  1. Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study Yang Liu, Peter W. Schuck

  2. Topics to be discussed. • Buildup of magnetic relative helicity in two emerging active regions; • Hemispheric helicity rule: test with HMI data; • Test with Demoulin and Berger’s hypothesis (Demoulin & Berger, 2003) for helicity flux computation; • Computation of helicity flux density: which is better: G_A or G_theta?

  3. 1. Energy and helicity buildup: Calculation of energy and helicity fluxes emerging term shear term shear term emerging term Bh, Bn [obs], and Vh, Vn [obs + DAVE4VM (Schuck 2008)]

  4. Evolution of AR11072: emerging and developing to be a simple active region.

  5. Bz + Vt Bz + Vz (green: upflow, red: downflow) • AR11072: • Separation motion is detected; • Upflow is associated with emerging flux, and surrounds the leading sunspot; • Simple bipolar active region. Vector B

  6. Summary: • Helicities from the shear-term and emergence-term have the same sign; • Shear-term dominant; • Upflow and downflow inject oppsite sign helicities. Both are small.

  7. Evolution of AR11158: 1. emerging; 2. separation of leading and following fields; 3. rotation of sunspots; 4. shear motion along the polarity inversion line.

  8. Bz + Vt Bz + Vz (green: upflow, red: downflow) • AR11158: • Spinning sunspots; • Shear motion along the PIL; • Upflows surround sunspots; • Highly sheared magnetic field near the PIL. Vector B

  9. Summary of AR11158: • Same sign of helicity from shear-term and emergence-term; • Shear-term dominants; • Upflow and downflow contribute helicity with opposite signs.

  10. Energy in the two active regions (left: AR11072, right: AR11158): • shear-term and emergence-term are consistent in phase; • Both terms well correspond to the flux emergence; • Emergence-term is dominant.

  11. 1. Energy and helicity buildup: conclusions • Shear-term contributes most helicity in the corona; • The helicities from shear-term and emergence-term have the same sign; • Upflow and downflow contribute helicity with the opposite signs; • Energy flux well corresponds with the flux emergence; • Emergence-term and shear-term energy fluxes are consistent in phase; • Emergence-term contributes more energy.

  12. 2: Hemispheric helicity rule • Methodology and data • Select emerging active regions; • Compute the helicity flux; • Integral over time of the emergence process to obtain the helicity accumulated in the corona in the active region.

  13. A weak hemisphere-preference is found in this 56-active-region sample. 56% of the active regions follow the rule, while 44% against.

  14. Fitting the data with |H| ~ a * Flux ^ alpha yields alpha = 1.91; Roughly estimate the turn of the twist of the flux by |H| ~ N * Flux^2. The average turn N = 0.055.

  15. 2. Hemispheric helicity rule: conclusions • It is found in a sample of 56 active regions that 56% of them obey the hemispheric rule while 44% violate it; • Fitting the data with a formula |H| = a * Flux^alpha yields alpha = 1.91; • Turn of the flux twist is roughly 0.055 in average.

  16. 3: Test Demoulin & Berger’s hypothesis (2003)—DB03 hypothesis Using DAVE (Schuck 2006)u

  17. AR11072: Both energy flux and helicity from the tracking velocity [u] (DAVE; blue curves) don’t agree with the total fluxes (black curves). This indicates that the DB03 hypothesis is incorrect.

  18. AR11158: Blue curves don’t agree with the black curves, indicating that the DB03 hypothesis is incorrect.

  19. 3. DB03 hypothesis: conclusion • Both cases indicate that the energy and helicity fluxes computed from the tracking-footpoint velocity does not equal to the total fluxes. This indicates that the DB03 hypothesis is incorrect.

  20. 4. Computation of helicity density: Two helicity density proxies

  21. Calculate the vector potential

  22. Boundary condition for the Green’s function. • The periodic Green’s function (G_A-FFT; G_theta-FFT). • The free-space Green’s function (G_A-FS; G_theta-FS).

  23. Vector B Test with MHD data: As Pariat et al (2005) pointed out that G_A proxy contains fake signals.

  24. Test with HMI data: G_A has fake signals.

  25. When the boundary is chosen consistently, both G_A and G_theta yield identical helicity fluxes, as well as two components of the helicity flux (shear-term and emergence-term).

  26. Helicity flux versus zero-padded boundary. N refers to the factor by which the original data is expanded and zero-padded. The zero-paddede data us N x Lx by N x Ly, where Lx and Ly are the width and height of the field of view of the original data. The solid line with asterisks represents the helicity flux computed from G_A-FFT, while the horizontal dashed line refers to the helicity flux from G_A-FS from the original data. The helicity flux from G_A-FFT converges to that from G_A-FS while increasing the padding areas.

  27. 4. Computation of helicity flux: conclusions • Helicity flux density proxy G_A contains fake signal, as Pariat et al. pointed out (2005); • This fake signal is cancelled out completely when computing the total helicity flux, as well as the two components of the flux (shear-term and emergence-term), by integral over the entire area of the region; • The difference of the helicity fluxes computed from helicity density proxies G_A and G_theta is not due to the fake signal that G_A introduces as Pariat et al (2005) suggested, but rather due to inconsistency of the boundaries chosen in the Green’s function; • The helicity flux computed from G_A-FFT converges to that from G_A-FS with increase of the padding area.

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