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Author name code: leamon
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:Leamon, Robert J.

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Title: Uniting The Sun's Hale Magnetic Cycle and `Extended Solar
    Cycle' Paradigms
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Scherrer, Phillip H.; Svalgaard, Leif;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2022arXiv220809026M    Altcode:
  Through meticulous daily observation of the Sun's large-scale magnetic
  field the Wilcox Solar Observatory (WSO) has catalogued two magnetic
  (Hale) cycles of solar activity. Those two (~22-year long) Hale cycles
  have yielded four ($\sim$11-year long) sunspot cycles (numbers 21
  through 24). Recent research has highlighted the persistence of the
  "Extended Solar Cycle" (ESC) and its connection to the fundamental Hale
  Cycle - albeit through a host of proxies resulting from image analysis
  of the solar photosphere, chromosphere and corona. This short manuscript
  presents the correspondence of the ESC, the surface toroidal magnetic
  field evolution, and the evolution of the Hale Cycle. As Sunspot Cycle
  25 begins, interest in observationally mapping the Hale and Extended
  cycles could not be higher given potential predictive capability that
  synoptic scale observations can provide.

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Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity: The Solar Cycle Clock
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Title, Alan M.
2022FrASS...9.6670L    Altcode:
  The Sun's variability is controlled by the progression and interaction
  of the magnetized systems that form the 22-year magnetic activity cycle
  (the "Hale Cycle") as they march from their origin at ∼55° latitude
  to the equator, over ∼19 years. We will discuss the end point of that
  progression, dubbed "terminator" events, and our means of diagnosing
  them. In this paper we expand on the Extended Solar Cycle framework to
  construct a new solar activity "clock" which maps all solar magnetic
  activity onto a single normalized epoch based on the terminations
  of Hale Magnetic Cycles. Defining phase 0*2π on this clock as the
  Terminators, then solar polar field reversals occur at ∼ 0.2*2π,
  and the geomagnetically quiet intervals centered around solar minimum
  start at ∼ 0.6*2π and end at the terminator, thus lasting 40% of the
  cycle length. At this onset of quiescence, dubbed a "pre-terminator,"
  the Sun shows a radical reduction in active region complexity and,
  like the terminator events, is associated with the time when the solar
  radio flux crosses F10.7 = 90 sfu. We use the terminator-based clock
  to illustrate a range of phenomena that further emphasize the strong
  interaction of the global-scale magnetic systems of the Hale Cycle: the
  vast majority, 96%, of all X-flares happen between the Terminator and
  pre-Terminator. In addition to the X-rays from violent flares, rapid
  changes in the number of energetic photons—EUV spectral emission
  from a hot corona and the F10.7 solar radio flux—impinging on the
  atmosphere are predictable from the Terminator-normalized unit cycle,
  which has implications for improving the fidelity of atmospheric
  modelling.

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Title: Interactions Among Magnetic Bands in Extended Solar Cycles
Authors: Belucz, Bernadett; Dikpati, Mausumi; McIntosh, Scott; Erdelyi,
   Robertus; Leamon, Robert
2021AGUFMSH55D1875B    Altcode:
  The extended solar cycle, observationally revealed from the evolutions
  of ephemeral regions, X-ray and EUV brightpoints, plages, filaments and
  faculae, indicates the existence of oppositely-directed double magnetic
  bands at the bottom dynamo-layer in each hemisphere. The band-pairs
  in the North and South hemispheres migrate towards the equator and
  plausibly evolve in amplitude as the cycle progresses. By studying
  the MHD interactions of these band-pairs among themselves in each
  hemisphere, as well as with their opposite-hemisphere's counterparts,
  we show that the cross-equatorial interactions between the low-latitude
  bands (which are essentially the active cycle's bands) in the North and
  South effectively start when the band-separation across the equator is
  less than 30 degrees (the bands are at 15-degree latitude or lower in
  the North and South). Analyzing the properties of this interaction we
  show how certain changes in the energy extractions by various stresses
  from the magnetic fields can lead to the start of the declining phase
  of the solar cycle.

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Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity: 140 Years of the `Extended
    Solar Cycle' - Mapping the Hale Cycle
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Egeland, Ricky;
   Dikpati, Mausumi; Altrock, Richard C.; Banerjee, Dipankar; Chatterjee,
   Subhamoy; Srivastava, Abhishek K.; Velli, Marco
2021SoPh..296..189M    Altcode: 2020arXiv201006048M
  We investigate the occurrence of the "extended solar cycle" (ESC) as it
  occurs in a host of observational data spanning 140 years. Investigating
  coronal, chromospheric, photospheric, and interior diagnostics, we
  develop a consistent picture of solar activity migration linked to the
  22-year Hale (magnetic) cycle using superposed epoch analysis (SEA)
  and previously identified Hale cycle termination events as the key
  time for the SEA. Our analysis shows that the ESC and Hale cycle,
  as highlighted by the terminator-keyed SEA, is strongly recurrent
  throughout the entire observational record studied, some 140
  years. Applying the same SEA method to the sunspot record confirms
  that Maunder's butterfly pattern is a subset of the underlying Hale
  cycle, strongly suggesting that the production of sunspots is not
  the fundamental feature of the Hale cycle, but the ESC is. The ESC
  (and Hale cycle) pattern highlights the importance of 55<SUP>∘</SUP>
  latitude in the evolution, and possible production, of solar magnetism.

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Title: Prediction of the first and last X-Flares of Cycle 25 Active
    Regions
Authors: Leamon, Robert; McIntosh, Scott
2021AGUFMSH55D1881L    Altcode:
  The Suns variability is controlled by the progression and interaction
  of the magnetized systems that form the 22-year magnetic activity cycle
  (the "Hale Cycle") as they march from their origin at ~55 latitude to
  the equator, over ~19 years. Recently, we introduced the concept of
  "Terminators," the endpoints of those activity bands' progress, and a
  new, and more insightful, way of looking at timing solar cycles than
  counting spots [McIntosh et al. 2019; Leamon et al. 2020]. Rather
  than the canonical minimum number of sunspots (which is arbitrary,
  and depends on sum of four decreasing and increasing quantities --
  the number of new and old cycle polarity spots in each hemisphere),
  consider a precise date -- when there is no more old cycle polarity flux
  left on the disk. Expressed in this way, a Terminator is the end of
  a Hale Magnetic Cycle. Based on these Terminators, we construct a new
  solar cycle phase clock which maps all solar magnetic activity onto a
  single normalized epoch. If the Terminators appear at phase 0 * 2, then
  solar polar field reversals occur at ~0.2 * 2, and the geomagnetically
  quiet intervals centered around solar minimum, which start at 0.6 * 2
  and end at the Terminator are thus 40% of the normalized cycle. These
  "pre-Terminators" show a radical reduction of complexity of active
  regions and (like the Terminators) are well approximated by the time
  when the solar radio flux, F10.7 = 90 sfu. We demonstrate that the
  vast majority, 96%, of all X-flares happen between the Terminator and
  pre-Terminator; the July 2021 event appears to fall just outside this
  window, but it is highly possible, if not probable that the Cycle 24
  Terminator occurs between the date of abstract submission and the Fall
  Meeting itself. Further, sunspot max amplitude, the aa geomagnetic
  index, and F10.7 and spectral irradiance are all predictable from a
  normalized unit cycle from Terminator to Terminator.

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Title: Response to "Limitations in the Hilbert Transform Approach
    to Locating Solar Cycle Terminators" by R. Booth
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Chapman, Sandra C.;
   Watkins, Nicholas W.
2021SoPh..296..151L    Altcode:
  Booth (Solar Phys.296, 108, 2021; hereafter B21) is essentially
  a critique of the Hilbert transform techniques used in our paper
  (Leamon et al., Solar Phys.295, 36, 2020; hereafter L20) to predict
  the termination of solar cycles. Here we respond to his arguments;
  our methodology and parameter choices do extract a mathematically
  robust signature of terminators from the historical sunspot record. We
  agree that the attempt in L20 to extrapolate beyond the sunspot record
  gives a failed prediction for the next terminator of May 2020, and we
  identify both a possible cause and remedy here. However, we disagree
  with the B21 assessment that the likely termination of Solar Cycle 24
  is two years after the date predicted in L20, and we show why.

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Title: The Sun's Magnetic (Hale) Cycle and 27 Day Recurrences in
    the aa Geomagnetic Index
Authors: Chapman, S. C.; McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.; Watkins, N. W.
2021ApJ...917...54C    Altcode: 2021arXiv210102569C
  We construct a new solar cycle phase clock which maps each of the last
  18 solar cycles onto a single normalized epoch for the approximately 22
  yr Hale (magnetic polarity) cycle, using the Hilbert transform of daily
  sunspot numbers (SSNs) since 1818. The occurrences of solar maxima show
  almost no discernible Hale cycle dependence, consistent with the clock
  being synchronized to polarity reversals. We reengineer the Sargent
  R27 index and combine it with our epoch analysis to obtain a high time
  resolution parameter for 27 day recurrence in aa, ⟨acv(27)⟩. This
  reveals that the transition to recurrence, that is, to an ordered
  solar wind dominated by high-speed streams, is fast, with an upper
  bound of a few solar rotations. It resolves an extended late declining
  phase which is approximately twice as long on even Schwabe cycles as
  odd. Galactic cosmic ray flux rises in step with ⟨acv(27)⟩ but then
  stays high. Our analysis also identifies a slow-timescale trend in
  SSN that simply tracks the Gleissberg cycle. We find that this trend
  is in phase with the slow-timescale trend in the modulus of sunspot
  latitudes, and in antiphase with that of the R27 index.

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Title: Termination of Solar Cycles and Correlated Tropospheric
    Variability
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Marsh, Daniel R.
2021E&SS....801223L    Altcode:
  The Sun provides the energy required to sustain life on Earth and drive
  our planet's atmospheric circulation. However, establishing a solid
  physical connection between solar and tropospheric variability has posed
  a considerable challenge. The canon of solar variability is derived
  from the 400 years of observations that demonstrates the waxing and
  waning number of sunspots over an 11( ish) year period. Recent research
  has demonstrated the significance of the underlying 22 years magnetic
  polarity cycle in establishing the shorter sunspot cycle. Integral to
  the manifestation of the latter is the spatiotemporal overlapping and
  migration of oppositely polarized magnetic bands. We demonstrate the
  impact of "terminators"—the end of Hale magnetic cycles—on the
  Sun's radiative output and particulate shielding of our atmosphere
  through the rapid global reconfiguration of solar magnetism. Using
  direct observation and proxies of solar activity going back some
  six decades we can, with high statistical significance, demonstrate
  a correlation between the occurrence of terminators and the largest
  swings of Earth's oceanic indices: the transition from El Niño to La
  Niña states of the central Pacific. This empirical relationship is a
  potential source of increased predictive skill for the understanding
  of El Niño climate variations, a high stakes societal imperative given
  that El Niño impacts lives, property, and economic activity around the
  globe. A forecast of the Sun's global behavior places the next solar
  cycle termination in mid 2020; should a major oceanic swing follow,
  then the challenge becomes: when does correlation become causation
  and how does the process work?

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Title: A clock for the Sun's magnetic Hale cycle and 27 day
    recurrences in the aa geomagnetic index
Authors: Chapman, Sandra; McIntosh, Scott; Leamon, Robert; Watkins,
   Nicholas
2021EGUGA..23.2555C    Altcode:
  We construct a new solar cycle phase clock which maps each of the last
  18 solar cycles onto a single normalized epoch for the approximately
  22 year Hale (magnetic polarity) cycle, using the Hilbert transform
  of daily sunspot numbers (SSN) since 1818. We use the clock to study
  solar and geomagnetic climatology as seen in datasets available
  over multiple solar cycles. The occurrence of solar maxima on the
  clock shows almost no Hale cycle dependence, confirming that the
  clock is synchronized with polarity reversals. The odd cycle minima
  lead the even cycle minima by ~ 1.1 normalized years, whereas the
  odd cycle terminators (when sunspot bands from opposite hemispheres
  have moved to the equator and coincide, thus terminating the cycle,
  McIntosh(2019)) lag the even cycle terminators by ~ 2.3 normalized
  years. The average interval between each minimum and terminator is
  thus relatively extended for odd cycles and shortened for even ones. We
  re-engineer the R27 index that was orignally proposed by Sargent(1985)
  to parameterize 27 day recurrences in the aa index. We perform an epoch
  analysis of autocovariance in the aa index using the Hale cycle clock
  to obtain a high time resolution parameter for 27 day recurrence,
  &lt;acv(27)&gt;. This reveals that the transition to recurrence,
  that is, to an ordered solar wind dominated by high speed streams,
  is fast, occurring within 2-3 solar rotations or less. It resolves an
  extended late declining phase which is approximately twice as long on
  even Schwabe cycles as odd ones. We find that Galactic Cosmic Ray flux
  rises in step with &lt;acv(27)&gt; but then stays high. Our analysis
  also identifies a slow timescale trend in SSN that simply tracks the
  Gleissberg cycle. We find that this trend is in phase with the slow
  timescale trend in the modulus of sunspot latitudes, and in antiphase
  with that of the R27 index.

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Title: Solar Wind Helium Abundance Heralds Solar Cycle Onset
Authors: Alterman, Benjamin L.; Kasper, Justin C.; Leamon, Robert J.;
   McIntosh, Scott W.
2021SoPh..296...67A    Altcode: 2020arXiv200604669A
  We study the solar wind helium-to-hydrogen abundance's (A<SUB>He</SUB>)
  relationship to solar cycle onset. Using OMNI/Lo data, we show that
  A<SUB>He</SUB> increases prior to sunspot number (SSN) minima. We
  also identify a rapid depletion and recovery in A<SUB>He</SUB> that
  occurs directly prior to cycle onset. This A<SUB>He</SUB> shutoff
  happens at approximately the same time across solar wind speeds
  (v<SUB>sw</SUB>) and the time between successive A<SUB>He</SUB> shutoffs
  is typically on the order of the corresponding solar cycle length. In
  contrast to A<SUB>He</SUB>'s v<SUB>sw</SUB>-dependent phase lag with
  respect to SSN (Alterman and Kasper, 2019), A<SUB>He</SUB> shutofff's
  concurrence across v<SUB>sw</SUB> likely implies it is independent of
  solar wind acceleration and driven by a mechanism near or below the
  photosphere. Using brightpoint (BP) measurements to provide context,
  we infer that A<SUB>He</SUB> shutoff is likely related to the overlap
  of adjacent solar cycles and the equatorial flux cancelation of the
  older, extended solar cycle during solar minima.

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Title: Solar Wind Turbulence from 1 to 45 AU
Authors: Pine, Z. B.; Smith, C. W.; Hollick, S.; Argall, M. R.;
   Vasquez, B. J.; Isenberg, P. A.; Schwadron, N.; Joyce, C.; Sokol,
   J. M.; Bzowski, M.; McLaurin, M. L.; Hamilton, K. E.; Leamon, R. J.
2020AGUFMSH0160014P    Altcode:
  We review five recent publications that extend magnetic turbulence
  studies that were pioneered using data from 1 AU to now include Voyager
  observations from 1977 through 1990 and 1 to 45 AU. We examine the
  spectral scale at which evidence of dissipation sets in and evaluate the
  spectral indices, anisotropies, polarizations, and spectral transfer
  of energy. We compare the latter to predictions from transport
  theory and the rate of energy injection through wave excitation by
  newborn interstellar pickup ions. While many of our results agree with
  conclusions from 1 AU, we find that the magnetic spectral anisotropy
  that relates to the underlying anisotropy of the wave vectors exceeds
  theoretical predications for reasons we are unable to determine. We also
  establish that wave energy excitation by newborn interstellar pickup H+
  forms the dominant energy source driving the turbulence beyond 10 AU.

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Title: The Hale Cycle Clock
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.; Chapman, S. C.; Watkins, N. W.
2020AGUFMSH053..02L    Altcode:
  The Sun's variability is controlled by the progression and interaction
  of the magnetized systems that form the 22-year magnetic activity cycle
  (the “Hale Cycle”) as they march from their origin at ∼55 degrees
  latitude to the equator, over some 19 years. We will discuss the end
  point of that progression, dubbed “terminator” events [McIntosh et
  al. 2019], and our means of diagnosing them [McIntosh et al. 2019,
  Leamon et al., 2020]. Based on these terminations of Hale Magnetic
  Cycles, we construct a new solar cycle phase clock which maps all
  solar magnetic activity onto a single normalized epoch [Chapman et al,
  2020]. If the Terminators appear at phase 0 * 2π , then solar polar
  field reversals occur at ∼{}0.2 * 2π , and the geomagnetically
  quiet intervals centered around solar minimum, which start at 0.6 * 2π
  and end at the terminator are thus 40% of the normalized cycle. These
  “pre-terminators” show a radical reduction of complexity of active
  regions and (like the terminators) are well approximated by the time
  when the solar radio flux, F10.7=90 sfu. <P />There is thus immediate
  applicability for the Hale Cycle Clock to predict when the first and
  last X-flares and other severe Space Weather events of Cycle 25 will be
  (with the first possibly already happening before the meeting), and
  we further will discuss the applicability for confirming the length
  of Cycle 25 as early as its polar field reversal near maximum. <P
  />McIntosh et al., "What the Sudden Death of Solar Cycles Can Tell Us
  About the Nature of the Solar Interior," Solar Physics 294, 88 (2020)
  <P />Leamon et al., "Timing Terminators: Forecasting Sunspot Cycle 25
  Onset," Solar Physics 295, 36 (2020)

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Title: Overlapping Magnetic Activity Cycles and the Sunspot Number:
    Forecasting Sunspot Cycle 25 Amplitude
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Chapman, Sandra; Leamon, Robert J.;
   Egeland, Ricky; Watkins, Nicholas W.
2020SoPh..295..163M    Altcode: 2020arXiv200615263M
  The Sun exhibits a well-observed modulation in the number of spots
  on its disk over a period of about 11 years. From the dawn of modern
  observational astronomy, sunspots have presented a challenge to
  understanding—their quasi-periodic variation in number, first
  noted 175 years ago, has stimulated community-wide interest to this
  day. A large number of techniques are able to explain the temporal
  landmarks, (geometric) shape, and amplitude of sunspot "cycles,"
  however, forecasting these features accurately in advance remains
  elusive. Recent observationally-motivated studies have illustrated a
  relationship between the Sun's 22-year (Hale) magnetic cycle and the
  production of the sunspot cycle landmarks and patterns, but not the
  amplitude of the sunspot cycle. Using (discrete) Hilbert transforms on
  more than 270 years of (monthly) sunspot numbers we robustly identify
  the so-called "termination" events that mark the end of the previous
  11-yr sunspot cycle, the enhancement/acceleration of the present cycle,
  and the end of 22-yr magnetic activity cycles. Using these we extract
  a relationship between the temporal spacing of terminators and the
  magnitude of sunspot cycles. Given this relationship and our prediction
  of a terminator event in 2020, we deduce that sunspot Solar Cycle 25
  could have a magnitude that rivals the top few since records began. This
  outcome would be in stark contrast to the community consensus estimate
  of sunspot Solar Cycle 25 magnitude.

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Title: Solar Wind Helium Abundance Heralds the Onset of Solar Cycle 25
Authors: Alterman, B. L.; Kasper, J. C.; Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2020AGUFMSH053..01A    Altcode:
  We study the solar wind helium-to-hydrogen abundance's (A<SUB>he</SUB>)
  relationship to solar cycle onset. We identify a rapid depletion
  and recovery in A<SUB>he</SUB> immediately prior to sunspot number
  (SSN) minima. This depletion happens at approximately the same time
  across solar wind speeds, implying that it is formed by a mechanism
  distinct from the one that drives A<SUB>he</SUB>'s solar cycle scale
  variation and speed-dependent phase offset with respect to SSN. As
  A<SUB>he</SUB>'s rapid depletion and recovery have already occurred
  and A<SUB>he</SUB> is now increasing as it has following previous
  solar minima, we infer that solar cycle 25 has already begun.

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Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity. The Solar Cycle Clock
Authors: Leamon, Robert; McIntosh, Scott; Title, Alan
2020arXiv201215186L    Altcode:
  The Sun's variability is controlled by the progression and interaction
  of the magnetized systems that form the 22-year magnetic activity cycle
  (the "Hale Cycle”) as they march from their origin at $\sim$55 degrees
  latitude to the equator, over $\sim$19 years. We will discuss the end
  point of that progression, dubbed "terminator” events, and our means
  of diagnosing them. Based on the terminations of Hale Magnetic Cycles,
  we construct a new solar activity 'clock' which maps all solar magnetic
  activity onto a single normalized epoch. The Terminators appear at
  phase $0 * 2\pi$ on this clock (by definition), then solar polar
  field reversals commence at $\sim0.2 * 2\pi$, and the geomagnetically
  quiet intervals centered around solar minimum, start at $\sim0.6 *
  2\pi$ and end at the terminator, lasting 40% of the normalized cycle
  length. With this onset of quiescence, dubbed a "pre-terminator,”
  the Sun shows a radical reduction in active region complexity and (like
  the terminator events) is associated with the time when the solar radio
  flux crosses F10.7=90 sfu -- effectively marking the commencement of
  solar minimum conditions. In this paper we use the terminator-based
  clock to illustrate a range of phenomena that further emphasize the
  strong interaction of the global-scale magnetic systems of the Hale
  Cycle. arXiv:2010.06048 is a companion article.

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Title: Solar Wind Turbulence from 1 to 45 au. II. Analysis of
    Inertial-range Fluctuations Using Voyager and ACE Observations
Authors: Pine, Zackary B.; Smith, Charles W.; Hollick, Sophia
   J.; Argall, Matthew R.; Vasquez, Bernard J.; Isenberg, Philip A.;
   Schwadron, Nathan A.; Joyce, Colin J.; Sokół, Justyna M.; Bzowski,
   Maciej; Kubiak, Marzena A.; Hamilton, Kathleen E.; McLaurin, Megan L.;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2020ApJ...900...92P    Altcode:
  We examine both Voyager and Advanced Composition Explorer magnetic
  field measurements at frequencies that characterize the inertial
  range using traditional polarization techniques that are designed to
  characterize plasma waves. Although we find good agreement with both
  the anticipated spectral index of the power spectrum and the scaling
  of magnetic power with heliocentric distance, we do not find that the
  polarization analyses yield results that can be readily described by
  plasma wave theory. The fluctuations are not circularly polarized and
  there is a markedly reduced coherence between the components of the
  fluctuation. The degree of polarization is also generally low, although
  not as low as the coherence, and the minimum variance direction is
  essentially random. We conclude that traditional plasma wave theory
  may not offer a good description for inertial-range fluctuations.

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Title: Solar Wind Turbulence from 1 to 45 au. III. Anisotropy of
    Magnetic Fluctuations in the Inertial Range Using Voyager and ACE
    Observations
Authors: Pine, Zackary B.; Smith, Charles W.; Hollick, Sophia
   J.; Argall, Matthew R.; Vasquez, Bernard J.; Isenberg, Philip A.;
   Schwadron, Nathan A.; Joyce, Colin J.; Sokół, Justyna M.; Bzowski,
   Maciej; Kubiak, Marzena A.; Hamilton, Kathleen E.; McLaurin, Megan L.;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2020ApJ...900...93P    Altcode:
  We examine both Voyager and Advanced Composition Explorer magnetic
  field measurements at frequencies that characterize the inertial range
  and evaluate the anisotropy of the fluctuations as they relate to both
  the compressive component and underlying wavevector anisotropy of the
  turbulence. The magnetic fluctuation anisotropy as it relates to the
  compressive component is directly dependent upon both the plasma beta
  of the thermal proton component and the ratio of magnetic fluctuation
  magnitude to the strength of the mean magnetic field. This has been
  seen before at 1 au. The magnetic fluctuation anisotropy in the plane
  perpendicular to the mean magnetic field, which is a measure of the
  anisotropy of the underlying wavevector distribution, should depend on
  the angle between the mean magnetic field and the radial direction and
  should be confined to values between one and the index of the power
  spectrum, which is typically 5/3. Our results show that the average
  of this anisotropy exceeds the value of the spectral index and is out
  of bounds with the theory. Although the results are suggestive of past
  analyses, we find that spherical expansion of the turbulence may offer
  at least a partial explanation of the apparent amplification of this
  measured anisotropy.

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Title: Advanced Composition Explorer Observations of Turbulence from
1998 through 2002: Data Intervals
Authors: Hamilton, Kathleen E.; Smith, Charles W.; Vasquez, Bernard
   J.; Leamon, Robert J.
2020ApJS..250...15H    Altcode:
  We have published several papers describing solar wind turbulence at
  1 au using data from the Advanced Composition Explorer spacecraft. In
  an oversight that we regret, we never published the list of data
  intervals that constitute the database of observations. As we have
  recently returned to this database of observations in comparisons of
  turbulent observations by the Voyager spacecraft against established
  results from 1 au, we wish to now correct our oversight and publish the
  list of intervals that constitute the 1 au observations. Along with
  this, we show the distribution of some common solar wind parameters
  as contained within the database.

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Title: Solar Wind Turbulence from 1 to 45 au. I. Evidence for
    Dissipation of Magnetic Fluctuations Using Voyager and ACE
    Observations
Authors: Pine, Zackary B.; Smith, Charles W.; Hollick, Sophia
   J.; Argall, Matthew R.; Vasquez, Bernard J.; Isenberg, Philip A.;
   Schwadron, Nathan A.; Joyce, Colin J.; Sokół, Justyna M.; Bzowski,
   Maciej; Kubiak, Marzena A.; Hamilton, Kathleen E.; McLaurin, Megan L.;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2020ApJ...900...91P    Altcode:
  As part of a published effort to study low-frequency magnetic waves
  excited by newborn interstellar pickup ions seen by the Voyager
  spacecraft, we developed a set of control intervals that represent
  the background turbulence when the observations are not dominated
  by wave excitation. This paper begins an effort to better understand
  solar wind turbulence from 1 to 45 au while spanning greater than one
  solar cycle. We first focus on the diagnostics marking the onset of
  dissipation. This includes an expected break in the power spectrum
  at frequencies greater than the proton cyclotron frequency and a
  resultant steepening of the spectrum at higher frequencies. Contrary
  to what is established at 1 au, we only see the spectral break in
  rare instances. The expected scaling of the spectral index with the
  turbulence rate is seen, but it is not as clearly established as it
  was at 1 au. We also find that both Voyager data from 1 to 45 au and
  Advanced Composition Explorer data from 1 au show significant bias of
  the magnetic helicity at dissipation scales when the dissipation-range
  power-law spectral index steepens. We conclude that dissipation dynamics
  are similar throughout the heliosphere in so far as we have examined
  to date.

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Title: Quantifying the Solar Cycle Modulation of Extreme Space Weather
Authors: Chapman, S. C.; McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.; Watkins, N. W.
2020GeoRL..4787795C    Altcode:
  By obtaining the analytic signal of daily sunspot numbers since 1818
  we construct a new solar cycle phase clock that maps each of the last
  18 solar cycles onto a single normalized 11 year epoch. This clock
  orders solar coronal activity and extremes of the aa index, which
  tracks geomagnetic storms at the Earth's surface over the last 14
  solar cycles. We identify geomagnetically quiet intervals that are 40%
  of the normalized cycle, ±2π/5 in phase or ±2.2 years around solar
  minimum. Since 1868 only two severe (aa&gt;300 nT) and one extreme
  (aa&gt;500 nT) geomagnetic storms occurred in quiet intervals; 1-3%
  of severe (aa&gt;300 nT) geomagnetic storms and 4-6% of C-, M-,
  and X-class solar flares occurred in quiet intervals. This provides
  quantitative support to planning resilience against space weather
  impacts since only a few percent of all severe storms occur in quiet
  intervals and their start and end times are quantifiable.

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Title: Timing Terminators: Forecasting Sunspot Cycle 25 Onset
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Chapman, Sandra C.;
   Watkins, Nicholas W.
2020SoPh..295...36L    Altcode: 2019arXiv190906603L
  Recent research has demonstrated the existence of a new type of solar
  event, the "terminator." Unlike the Sun's signature events, flares and
  coronal mass ejections, the terminator most likely originates in the
  solar interior, at or near the tachocline. The terminator signals the
  end of a magnetic activity cycle at the Sun's equator and the start
  of a sunspot cycle at mid-latitudes. Observations indicate that the
  time difference between these events is very short, less than a solar
  rotation, in the context of the sunspot cycle. As the (definitive)
  start and end point of solar activity cycles the precise timing of
  terminators should permit new investigations into the meteorology of
  our star's atmosphere. In this article we use a standard method in
  signal processing, the Hilbert transform, to identify a mathematically
  robust signature of terminators in sunspot records and in radiative
  proxies. Using a linear extrapolation of the Hilbert phase of the
  sunspot number and F10.7 cm solar radio flux time series we can achieve
  higher fidelity historical terminator timing than previous estimates
  have permitted. Further, this method presents a unique opportunity
  to project, from analysis of sunspot data, when the next terminator
  will occur, May 2020 (+4 , −1.5 months), and trigger the growth of
  Sunspot Cycle 25.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Timing Terminators: Forecasting Sunspot Cycle 25 Onset,
    Activity Levels and Overcoming Social Constraints That Hamper Progress
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2019AGUFMSA11C3234L    Altcode:
  Recent research has demonstrated the existence of a new type of
  solar event, the “terminator”. Unlike the Sun's signature events,
  flares and Coronal Mass Ejections, the terminator takes place in
  the solar interior. The terminator signals the end of a magnetic
  activity cycle at the Sun's equator and the start of a sunspot cycle
  at mid latitudes. <P />Observations indicate that the time difference
  between these events is very short, less than a solar rotation, in the
  context of the sunspot cycle. As the (definitive) start and end point of
  solar activity cycles the precise timing of terminators should permit
  new investigations into the meteorology of our star's atmosphere. In
  this letter we use a standard method in signal processing, the Hilbert
  transform, to identify a mathematically robust signature of terminators
  in sunspot records and in radiative proxies. Using this technique we
  can achieve higher fidelity terminator timing than previous estimates
  have permitted. Further, this method presents a unique opportunity to
  project when the next terminator will occur, 2020.33(± 0.16), and
  trigger the growth of sunspot cycle 25. <P />We also will use this
  method to show why Cycle 23 was unusually long, why the Cycle 23-24
  minimum was unusually quiet, and why neither of these occurrences
  will happen with the end of Cycle 24. <P />Ignoring the wealth of
  observational evidence and viewing the solar activity cycle as merely
  the growth and decay of sunspot number is one “social constraint that
  hampers progress" to be overcome.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What the Sudden Death of Solar Cycles Can Tell Us About the
    Nature of the Solar Interior
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Egeland, Ricky;
   Dikpati, Mausumi; Fan, Yuhong; Rempel, Matthias
2019SoPh..294...88M    Altcode: 2019arXiv190109083M
  We observe the abrupt end of solar-activity cycles at the Sun's
  Equator by combining almost 140 years of observations from ground and
  space. These "terminator" events appear to be very closely related to
  the onset of magnetic activity belonging to the next solar cycle at
  mid-latitudes and the polar-reversal process at high latitudes. Using
  multi-scale tracers of solar activity we examine the timing of these
  events in relation to the excitation of new activity and find that the
  time taken for the solar plasma to communicate this transition is of
  the order of one solar rotation - but it could be shorter. Utilizing
  uniquely comprehensive solar observations from the Solar Terrestrial
  Relations Observatory (STEREO) and Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)
  we see that this transitional event is strongly longitudinal in
  nature. Combined, these characteristics suggest that information
  is communicated through the solar interior rapidly. A range of
  possibilities exist to explain such behavior: for example gravity
  waves on the solar tachocline, or that the magnetic fields present
  in the Sun's convection zone could be very large, with a poloidal
  field strengths reaching 50 kG - considerably larger than conventional
  explorations of solar and stellar dynamos estimate. Regardless of the
  mechanism responsible, the rapid timescales demonstrated by the Sun's
  global magnetic-field reconfiguration present strong constraints on
  first-principles numerical simulations of the solar interior and,
  by extension, other stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Terminators: Predicting the end of sunspot cycle 24 and its
    impacts on space weather, weather and climate.
Authors: Leamon, Robert; McIntosh, Scott W.
2019AAS...23430503L    Altcode:
  Recent research has demonstrated the existence of a new type of solar
  "event." Unlike the signature events in the corona, flares and Coronal
  Mass Ejections, this event, the Terminator, takes place in the solar
  interior (at the Sun's equator), signalling the end of a magnetic
  activity cycle and the start of a sunspot cycle at mid latitudes -
  all at the same time. Observations indicate that the hand-over between
  the termination of the magnetic activity cycle and the blooming of the
  next sunspot cycle could be very short, possibly much less than a solar
  rotation. <P />Here we demonstrate the impact of these terminators on
  the Sun's radiative output and particulate shielding of our atmosphere
  through the dramatically rapid reconfiguration of solar magnetism. Using
  direct observation and proxies of solar activity going back six decades
  we can, with high statistical significance, demonstrate an apparent
  correlation between the solar cycle terminations and the largest swings
  of Earth's oceanic indices - a previously overlooked correspondence. <P
  />We then use a standard method in signal processing, the Hilbert
  transform, to investigate the presence, and identify the signature, of
  terminators in solar magnetic and radiative proxies. Using many decades
  of such data we can achieve higher fidelity on terminator timing than
  previous estimates have allowed. <P />The distinct signature presents
  a unique opportunity to project when the next terminator will occur,
  April 2020 (± two months) and sunspot cycle 25 will commence its growth
  phase. Further, April 2020 implies cycle 24 will only be 9.25 years
  long; we offer an explanation as to why cycle 24 is short (or rather,
  why cycle 23 and its "unusual solar minimum" was so long). <P />Finally,
  should a major ENSO swing follow next year, our challenge becomes:
  when does correlation become causation and how does the process work?

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Signature of Extended Solar Cycles as Detected from Ca II K
    Synoptic Maps of Kodaikanal and Mount Wilson Observatory
Authors: Chatterjee, Subhamoy; Banerjee, Dipankar; McIntosh, Scott
   W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Dikpati, Mausumi; Srivastava, Abhishek K.;
   Bertello, Luca
2019ApJ...874L...4C    Altcode: 2019arXiv190303598C
  In recent years there has been a resurgence of the study of extended
  solar cycles (ESCs) through observational proxies mainly in extreme
  ultraviolet. But most of them are limited only to the space-based era
  covering only about two solar cycles. Long-term historical data sets
  are worth examining for the consistency of ESCs. The Kodaikanal Solar
  Observatory (KSO) and the Mount Wilson Observatory (MWO) are two major
  sources of long-term Ca II K digitized spectroheliograms covering the
  temporal spans of 1907-2007 and 1915-1985 respectively. In this study,
  we detected supergranule boundaries, commonly known as networks, using
  the Carrington maps from both KSO and MWO data sets. Subsequently
  we excluded the plage areas to consider only the quiet Sun (QS) and
  detected small-scale bright features through intensity thresholding
  over the QS network. Latitudinal density of those features, which we
  named “Network Bright Elements,” could clearly depict the existence
  of overlapping cycles with equatorward branches starting at latitude
  ≈55° and taking about 15 ± 1 yr to reach the equator. We performed
  a superposed epoch analysis to depict the similarity of those extended
  cycles. Knowledge of such equatorward band interaction, for several
  cycles, may provide critical constraints on solar dynamo models.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Termination of Solar Cycles and Correlated Tropospheric
    Variability
Authors: Leamon, Robert J; McIntosh, Scott W.; Marsh, Daniel R.
2018arXiv181202692L    Altcode:
  The Sun provides the energy required to sustain life on Earth and
  drive our planet's atmospheric circulation. However, establishing a
  solid physical connection between solar and tropospheric variability
  has posed a considerable challenge across the spectrum of Earth-system
  science. The canon of solar variability, the solar fiducial clock, lies
  almost exclusively with the 400 years of human telescopic observations
  that demonstrates the waxing and waning number of sunspots, over an
  11(ish) year period. Recent research has demonstrated the critical
  importance of the underlying 22-year magnetic polarity cycle in
  establishing the shorter sunspot cycle. Integral to the manifestation
  of the latter is the spatio-temporal overlapping and migration of
  oppositely polarized magnetic bands. The points when these bands emerge
  at high solar latitudes and cancel at the equator are separated by
  almost 20 years. Here we demonstrate the impact of these "termination"
  points on the Sun's radiative output and particulate shielding of
  our atmosphere through the dramatically rapid reconfiguration of solar
  magnetism. These events reset the Sun's fiducial clock and present a new
  portal to explore the Sun-Earth connection. Using direct observation
  and proxies of solar activity going back six decades we can, with
  high statistical significance, demonstrate an apparent correlation
  between the solar cycle terminations and the largest swings of Earth's
  oceanic indices---a previously overlooked correspondence. Forecasting
  the Sun's global behavior places the next solar termination in early
  2020; should a major oceanic swing follow, our challenge becomes:
  when does correlation become causation and how does the process work?

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Extended Solar Cycle: Muddying the Waters of Solar/Stellar
    Dynamo Modeling Or Providing Crucial Observational Constraints?
Authors: Srivastava, Abhishek K.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Arge,
   N.; Banerjee, Dipankar; Dikpati, Mausumi; Dwivedi, Bhola N.;
   Guhathakurta, Madhulika; Karak, B. B.; Leamon, Robert J.; Matthew,
   Shibu K.; Munoz-Jaramillo, Andres; Nandy, D.; Norton, Aimee; Upton,
   L.; Chatterjee, S.; Mazumder, Rakesh; Rao, Yamini K.; Yadav, Rahul
2018FrASS...5...38S    Altcode: 2018arXiv180707601S
  In 1844 Schwabe discovered that the number of sunspots increased and
  decreased over a period of about 11 years, that variation became known
  as the sunspot cycle. Almost eighty years later, Hale described the
  nature of the Sun's magnetic field, identifying that it takes about 22
  years for the Sun's magnetic polarity to cycle. It was also identified
  that the latitudinal distribution of sunspots resembles the wings of
  a butterfly showing migration of sunspots in each hemisphere that
  abruptly start at mid-latitudes (about ±35(o) ) towards the Sun's
  equator over the next 11 years. These sunspot patterns were shown
  to be asymmetric across the equator. In intervening years, it was
  deduced that the Sun (and sun-like stars) possess magnetic activity
  cycles that are assumed to be the physical manifestation of a dynamo
  process that results from complex circulatory transport processes in
  the star's interior. Understanding the Sun's magnetism, its origin
  and its variation, has become a fundamental scientific objective
  the distribution of magnetism, and its interaction with convective
  processes, drives various plasma processes in the outer atmosphere
  that generate particulate, radiative, eruptive phenomena and shape the
  heliosphere. In the past few decades, a range of diagnostic techniques
  have been employed to systematically study finer scale magnetized
  objects, and associated phenomena. The patterns discerned became
  known as the “Extended Solar Cycle” (ESC). The patterns of the ESC
  appeared to extend the wings of the activity butterfly back in time,
  nearly a decade before the formation of the sunspot pattern, and to
  much higher solar latitudes. In this short review, we describe their
  observational patterns of the ESC and discuss possible connections
  to the solar dynamo as we depart on a multi-national collaboration to
  investigate the origins of solar magnetism through a blend of archived
  and contemporary data analysis with the goal of improving solar dynamo
  understanding and modeling.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Heliospheric Meteorology Mission: A Mission to DRIVE our
    Understanding of Heliospheric Variability
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.
2018FrASS...5...21M    Altcode:
  To make transformational scientific progress with the space weather
  enterprise the Sun, Earth, and heliosphere must be studied as
  a coupled system, comprehensively. Rapid advances were made in the
  study, and forecasting, of terrestrial meteorology half a century ago
  that accompanied the dawn of earth observing satellites. Those assets
  provided a global perspective on the Earth's weather systems and the
  ability to look ahead of the observer's local time. From a heliospheric,
  or space, weather perspective we have the same fundamental limitation
  as the terrestrial meteorologists had - by far the majority of our
  observing assets are tied to the Sun-Earth line - our planet's "local
  time" with respect to the Sun. This perspective intrinsically limits
  our ability to "see what is coming around the solar limb" far less to
  gain any insight into the global patterns of solar weather and how they
  guide weather throughout the heliosphere. We propose a mission concept
  - the Heliospheric Meteorology Mission (HMM) - to sample the complete
  magnetic and thermodynamic state of the heliosphere inside 1AU using
  a distributed network of deep space hardened smallsats that encompass
  the Sun. The observations and in situ plasma measurements made by the
  fleet of HMM smallsats would be collected, and assimilated into current
  operational space weather models. Further, the HMM measurements would
  also being used in an nationally coordinated research effort - at the
  frontier of understanding the coupled heliospheric system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Longitudinal Evolution of Equatorial Coronal Holes
Authors: Krista, Larisza D.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.
2018AJ....155..153K    Altcode:
  In 2011, three satellites—the Solar-Terrestrial RElations Observatory
  A &amp; B, and the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)—were in a
  unique spatial alignment that allowed a 360° view of the Sun. This
  alignment lasted until 2014, the peak of solar cycle 24. Using extreme
  ultraviolet images and Hovmöller diagrams, we studied the lifetimes
  and propagation characteristics of coronal holes (CHs) in longitude
  over several solar rotations. Our initial results show at least three
  distinct populations of “low-latitude” or “equatorial” CHs
  (below 65^\circ latitude). One population rotates in retrograde
  direction and coincides with a group of long-lived (over sixty days)
  CHs in each hemisphere. These are typically located between 30°
  and 55^\circ , and display velocities of ∼55 m s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  slower than the local differential rotation rate. A second, smaller
  population of CHs rotate prograde, with velocities between ∼20 and
  45 m s<SUP>-1</SUP>. This population is also long-lived, but observed
  ±10° from the solar equator. A third population of CHs are short-lived
  (less than two solar rotations), and they appear over a wide range
  of latitudes (±65°) and exhibit velocities between -140 and 80 m
  s<SUP>-1</SUP>. The CH “butterfly diagram” we developed shows a
  systematic evolution of the longer-lived holes; however, the sample
  is too short in time to draw conclusions about possible connections
  to dynamo-related phenomena. An extension of the present work to the
  22 years of the combined SOHO-SDO archives is necessary to understand
  the contribution of CHs to the decadal-scale evolution of the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Terminator 2020: Get Ready for the "Event" of The Next Decade
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.; Fan, Y.; Rempel, M.;
   Dikpati, M.
2017AGUFMSH22B..06M    Altcode:
  The abrupt end of solar activity cycles 22 and 23 at the Sun's
  equator are observed with instruments from the Solar and Heliospheric
  Observatory (SOHO), Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO),
  and Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). These events are remarkable in
  that they rapidly trigger the onset of magnetic activity belonging
  to the next solar cycle at mid-latitudes. The triggered onset of new
  cycle flux emergence leads to blossoming of the new cycle shortly
  thereafter. Using small-scale tracers of magnetic solar activity we
  examine the timing of the cycle “termination points” in relation
  to the excitation of new activity and find that the time taken
  for the solar plasma to communicate this transition is less than
  one solar rotation, and possibly as little as a eight days. This
  very short transition time implies that the mean magnetic field
  present in the Sun's convection zone is approximately 80 kG. This
  value may be considerably larger than conventional explorations
  estimate and therefore, have a significant dynamical impact on the
  physical appearance of solar activity, and considerably impacting
  our ability to perform first-principles numerical simulations of the
  same. Should solar cycle 24 [and 25] continue in their progression
  we anticipate that a termination event of this type should occur in
  the 2020 timeframe. PSP will have a front row seat to observe this
  systemic flip in solar magnetism and the induced changes in our star's
  radiative and partiuculate output. Such observations may prove to be
  critical in assessing the Sun's ability to force short term evolution
  in the Earth's atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Predicting the La Niña of 2020-21: Termination of Solar
    Cycles and Correlated Variance in Solar and Atmospheric Variability
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2017AGUFMSH42A..05L    Altcode:
  Establishing a solid physical connection between solar and tropospheric
  variability has posed a considerable challenge across the spectrum
  of Earth-system science. Over the past few years a new picture
  to describe solar variability has developed, based on observing,
  understanding and tracing the progression, interaction and intrinsic
  variability of the magnetized activity bands that belong to the Sun's
  22-year magnetic activity cycle. The intra- and extra-hemispheric
  interaction of these magnetic bands appear to explain the occurrence
  of decadal scale variability that primarily manifests itself in the
  sunspot cycle. However, on timescales of ten months or so, those bands
  posses their own internal variability with an amplitude of the same
  order of magnitude as the decadal scale. The latter have been tied to
  the existence of magnetized Rossby waves in the solar convection zone
  that result in surges of magnetic flux emergence that correspondingly
  modulate our star's radiative and particulate output. One of the most
  important events in the progression of these bands is their (apparent)
  termination at the solar equator that signals a global increase in
  magnetic flux emergence that becomes the new solar cycle. We look at
  the particulate and radiative implications of these termination points,
  their temporal recurrence and signature, from the Sun to the Earth,
  and show the correlated signature of solar cycle termination events and
  major oceanic oscillations that extend back many decades. A combined
  one-two punch of reduced particulate forcing and increased radiative
  forcing that result from the termination of one solar cycle and rapid
  blossoming of another correlates strongly with a shift from El Niño to
  La Niña conditions in the Pacific Ocean. This shift does not occur at
  solar minima, nor solar maxima, but at a particular, non-periodic, time
  in between. The failure to identify these termination points, and their
  relative irregularity, have inhibited a correlation to be observed and
  physical processes to be studied. This result potentially opens the door
  to a broader understanding of solar variability on our planet and its
  weather. Ongoing tracking of solar magnetic band migration indicates
  that Cycle 24 will terminate in the 2020 timeframe and thus we may
  expect to see an attendant shift to La Niña conditions at that time.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity: Spotting Solar Cycle 25
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.
2017FrASS...4....4M    Altcode: 2017arXiv170204414M
  We present observational signatures of solar cycle 25 onset. Those
  signatures are visibly following a migratory path from high to
  low latitudes. They had starting points that are asymmetrically
  offset in each hemisphere at times that are 21-22 years after the
  corresponding, same polarity, activity bands of solar cycle 23 started
  their migration. Those bands define the so-called "extended solar
  cycle." The four magnetic bands currently present in the system are
  approaching a mutually cancelling configuration, and solar minimum
  conditions are imminent. Further, using a tuned analysis of the daily
  band latitude-time diagnostics, we are able to utilize the longitudinal
  wave number (m=1) variation in the data to more clearly reveal the
  presence of the solar cycle 25 bands. This clarification illustrates
  that prevalently active longitudes (different in each hemisphere) exist
  at mid-latitudes presently, lasting many solar rotations, that can be
  used for detailed study over the next several years with instruments
  like the Spectrograph on IRIS, the Spectropolarimeter on Hinode, and,
  when they come online, similar instruments on the Daniel K. Inouye
  Solar Telescope (DKIST) as we watch those bands evolve following the
  cancellation of the solar cycle 24 activity bands at the equator late
  in 2019.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The detection of Rossby-like waves on the Sun
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Cramer, William J.; Pichardo Marcano,
   Manuel; Leamon, Robert J.
2017NatAs...1E..86M    Altcode:
  Rossby waves are a type of global-scale wave that develops in planetary
  atmospheres, driven by the planet's rotation<SUP>1</SUP>. They propagate
  westward owing to the Coriolis force, and their characterization enables
  more precise forecasting of weather on Earth<SUP>2,3</SUP>. Despite
  the massive reservoir of rotational energy available in the Sun's
  interior and decades of observational investigation, their solar
  analogue defies unambiguous identification<SUP>4-6</SUP>. Here we
  analyse a combined set of images obtained by the Solar TErrestrial
  RElations Observatory (STEREO) and the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)
  spacecraft between 2011 and 2013 in order to follow the evolution
  of small bright features, called brightpoints, which are tracers of
  rotationally driven large-scale convection<SUP>7</SUP>. We report the
  detection of persistent, global-scale bands of magnetized activity
  on the Sun that slowly meander westward in longitude and display
  Rossby-wave-like behaviour. These magnetized Rossby waves allow us to
  make direct connections between decadal-scale solar activity and that
  on much shorter timescales. Monitoring the properties of these waves,
  and the wavenumber of the disturbances that they generate, has the
  potential to yield a considerable improvement in forecast capability
  for solar activity and related space weather phenomena.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal Holes and Open Magnetic Flux over Cycles 23 and 24
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, Jiong; Leamon, Robert
2017SoPh..292...18L    Altcode: 2016arXiv161207595L
  As the observational signature of the footprints of solar magnetic
  field lines open into the heliosphere, coronal holes provide a
  critical measure of the structure and evolution of these lines. Using a
  combination of Solar and Heliospheric Observatory/Extreme ultraviolet
  Imaging Telescope (SOHO/EIT), Solar Dynamics Observatory/Atmospheric
  Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA), and Solar Terrestrial Relations
  Observatory/Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (STEREO/EUVI A/B) extreme
  ultraviolet (EUV) observations spanning 1996 - 2015 (nearly
  two solar cycles), coronal holes are automatically detected and
  characterized. Coronal hole area distributions show distinct behavior
  in latitude, defining the domain of polar and low-latitude coronal
  holes. The northern and southern polar regions show a clear asymmetry,
  with a lag between hemispheres in the appearance and disappearance of
  polar coronal holes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Driving the Heliospheric Jellyfish
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; Mcintosh, S. W.
2016AGUFMSH31B2550L    Altcode:
  Recent observational work has demonstrated that the enigmatic
  sunspotcycle and global magnetic environment of the Sun which source
  theeruptive events and modulate the solar wind, respectively,
  can beexplained in terms of the intra- and extra-hemispheric
  interaction ofmagnetic activity bands that belong to the 22-year
  magnetic polaritycycle. Those activity bands appear to be anchored
  deep in the Sun'sconvective interior and governed by the rotation of
  our star's radiativezone. We have also observed that those magnetic
  bands exhibit strongquasi-annual variability in the rotating convecting
  system which resultsin a significant local modulation of solar surface
  magnetism, forcingthe production of large eruptive events in each
  hemisphere that mouldsthe global-scale solar magnetic field and the
  solar-wind-inflatedheliosphere. Together with significant changes
  in the Sun's ultraviolet(UV), extreme ultraviolet (EUV), and X-Ray
  irradiance, these eruptivefluctuations ensnare all the Heliosphere
  (all of Heliophysics) like thetentacles of a jellyfish, and can be
  inferred in variations of suchwide-ranging phenomena as the South
  Atlantic Anomaly, the thermosphere,the radiation belts, and the can
  address “Has Voyager left theHeliosphere?”

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal Holes and Magnetic Flux Ropes Interweaving Solar Cycles
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Yeates, Anthony; Leamon, Robert; Qiu, Jiong
2016usc..confE..67L    Altcode:
  Coronal holes, dark patches observed in solar observations in extreme
  ultraviolet and x-ray wavelengths, provide an excellent proxy for
  regions of open magnetic field rooted near the photosphere. Through a
  multi-instrument approach, including SDO data, we are able to stitch
  together high resolution maps of coronal hole boundaries spanning
  the past two solar activity cycles. These observational results
  are used in conjunction with models of open magnetic field to probe
  physical solar parameters. Magnetic flux ropes are commonly defined
  as bundles of solar magnetic field lines, twisting around a common
  axis. Photospheric surface flows and magnetic reconnection work in
  conjunction to form these ropes, storing magnetic stresses until
  eruption. With an automated methodology to identify flux ropes within
  observationally driven magnetofrictional simulations, we can study
  their properties in detail. Of particular interest is a solar-cycle
  length statistical description of eruption rates, spatial distribution,
  magnetic orientation, flux, and helicity. Coronal hole observations
  can provide useful data about the distribution of the fast solar wind,
  with magnetic flux ropes yielding clues as to ejected magnetic field
  and the resulting space weather geo-effectiveness. With both of these
  cycle-spanning datasets, we can begin to form a more detailed picture of
  the evolution and consequences of both sets of solar magnetic features.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity: On Grand Minima in
    Solar Activity
Authors: Mcintosh, Scott; Leamon, Robert
2015FrASS...2....2M    Altcode: 2015arXiv150502326M
  The Sun provides the energy necessary to sustain our existence. While
  the Sun provides for us, it is also capable of taking away. The weather
  and climatic scales of solar evolution and the Sun-Earth connection are
  not well understood. There has been tremendous progress in the century
  since the discovery of solar magnetism - magnetism that ultimately
  drives the electromagnetic, particulate and eruptive forcing of our
  planetary system. There is contemporary evidence of a decrease in solar
  magnetism, perhaps even indicators of a significant downward trend,
  over recent decades. Are we entering a minimum in solar activity that is
  deeper and longer than a typical solar minimum, a "grand minimum"? How
  could we tell if we are? What is a grand minimum and how does the Sun
  recover? These are very pertinent questions for modern civilization. In
  this paper we present a hypothetical demonstration of entry and exit
  from grand minimum conditions based on a recent analysis of solar
  features over the past 20 years and their possible connection to the
  origins of the 11(-ish) year solar activity cycle.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Quasi-Annual Forcing of The Sun’s Eruptive, Radiative,
and Particulate Output: Pervasive Throughout The Heliosphere
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.
2015TESS....130806L    Altcode:
  The eruptive, radiative, and particulate output of the Sun are modulated
  by our star’s enigmatic 11-year sunspot cycle. Over the past year
  we have identified observational signatures which illustrate the ebb
  and flow of the 11-year cycle - arising from the temporal overlap of
  migrating activity bands which belong to the 22-year magnetic activity
  cycle. (At the 2012 Fall AGU Meeting, Leamon &amp; McIntosh presented
  a prediction of minimum conditions developing in 2017 and Cycle 25
  sunspots first appearing in late 2019.) As a consequence of this work we
  have deduced that the latitudinal interaction of the oppositely signed
  magnetic activity bands in each hemisphere (and across the equator near
  solar minimum) dramatically impacts the production of Space Weather
  events such as flares and Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs). The same set
  of observations also permits us to identify a quasi-annual variability
  in the rotating convecting system which results in a significant local
  modulation of solar surface magnetism. That modulation, in turn, forces
  prolonged periods of significantly increased flare and CME production,
  as well as significant changes in the Sun's ultraviolet (UV), extreme
  ultraviolet (EUV), and X-Ray irradiance. These fluctuations manifest
  themselves throughout the Heliosphere (throughout Heliophysics)
  and can be inferred in variations of such wide-ranging phenomena as
  the South Atlantic Anomaly, the thermosphere, the radiation belts,
  and the can address "Has Voyager left the Heliosphere?"

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modified Rossby Waves in the Solar Interior
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Title, Alan M.; Leamon, Robert J.
2015TESS....110501M    Altcode:
  Using a combination of STEREO/SECCHI/EUVI and SDO/AIA imaging we reveal
  patterns in the imaging data that are consistent in appearance with
  global scale rotationally driven waves on the activity bands of the
  solar magnetic polarity cycle.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The solar magnetic activity band interaction and instabilities
    that shape quasi-periodic variability
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Krista, Larisza D.;
   Title, Alan M.; Hudson, Hugh S.; Riley, Pete; Harder, Jerald W.; Kopp,
   Greg; Snow, Martin; Woods, Thomas N.; Kasper, Justin C.; Stevens,
   Michael L.; Ulrich, Roger K.
2015NatCo...6.6491M    Altcode: 2015NatCo...6E6491M
  Solar magnetism displays a host of variational timescales of which
  the enigmatic 11-year sunspot cycle is most prominent. Recent work
  has demonstrated that the sunspot cycle can be explained in terms of
  the intra- and extra-hemispheric interaction between the overlapping
  activity bands of the 22-year magnetic polarity cycle. Those
  activity bands appear to be driven by the rotation of the Sun's
  deep interior. Here we deduce that activity band interaction can
  qualitatively explain the `Gnevyshev Gap'--a well-established feature
  of flare and sunspot occurrence. Strong quasi-annual variability in the
  number of flares, coronal mass ejections, the radiative and particulate
  environment of the heliosphere is also observed. We infer that this
  secondary variability is driven by surges of magnetism from the activity
  bands. Understanding the formation, interaction and instability of
  these activity bands will considerably improve forecast capability in
  space weather and solar activity over a range of timescales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Grand Minima: Is The Sun Going To Sleep?
Authors: Mcintosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.
2014AGUFMSH21C4128M    Altcode:
  We explore recent observational work which indicate that the energetics
  of the sun's outer atmosphere have been on a steady decline for the past
  decade and perhaps longer. Futher, we show that new investigations into
  evolution of the Sun's global magnetic activity appear to demonstrate a
  path through which the Sun can go into, and exit from, a grand activity
  minimum without great difficulty while retaining an activity cycle -
  only losing sunspots. Are we at the begining of a new grand(-ish)
  minimum? Naturally, only time will tell, but the observational
  evidence hint that one may not be far off to what impact on the
  Sun-Earth Connection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Coronal Holes and Open Magnetic Flux
Authors: Lowder, C.; Qiu, J.; Leamon, R. J.; Longcope, D. W.
2014AGUFMSH13A4081L    Altcode:
  Using SDO/AIA and STEREO/EUVI EUV data in conjunction with an
  instrument-specific adaptive intensity thresholding algorithm, we are
  able to track coronal hole boundaries across the entire solar surface at
  a cadence of 12 hours. SOHO/EIT provides earlier era data, allowing the
  building EUV coronal hole maps over the course of a solar rotation. We
  find that for solar cycle 23 the unsigned magnetic flux enclosed
  by coronal hole boundaries ranges from (2-5)x10^{22} Mx, covering
  5%-17% of the solar surface. For solar cycle 24 this flux ranges from
  (2-4)x10^{22} Mx, covering 5%-10% of the solar surface. Using a surface
  flux transport model, we compare observational coronal hole boundaries
  and computed potential open field for solar cycles 23 and 24. From both
  our observed coronal holes and modeled open magnetic field, we find that
  low-latitude regions are significant in area, contributing to the total
  open magnetic flux, and should be considered in more significant detail.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On Magnetic Activity Band Overlap, Interaction, and the
    Formation of Complex Solar Active Regions
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.
2014ApJ...796L..19M    Altcode: 2014arXiv1410.6411M
  Recent work has revealed a phenomenological picture of the how the
  ~11 yr sunspot cycle of the Sun arises. The production and destruction
  of sunspots is a consequence of the latitudinal-temporal overlap and
  interaction of the toroidal magnetic flux systems that belong to the 22
  yr magnetic activity cycle and are rooted deep in the Sun's convective
  interior. We present a conceptually simple extension of this work,
  presenting a hypothesis on how complex active regions can form as a
  direct consequence of the intra- and extra-hemispheric interaction
  taking place in the solar interior. Furthermore, during specific
  portions of the sunspot cycle, we anticipate that those complex active
  regions may be particularly susceptible to profoundly catastrophic
  breakdown, producing flares and coronal mass ejections of the most
  severe magnitude.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deciphering Solar Magnetic Activity. I. On the Relationship
    between the Sunspot Cycle and the Evolution of Small Magnetic Features
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Wang, Xin; Leamon, Robert J.; Davey,
   Alisdair R.; Howe, Rachel; Krista, Larisza D.; Malanushenko, Anna V.;
   Markel, Robert S.; Cirtain, Jonathan W.; Gurman, Joseph B.; Pesnell,
   William D.; Thompson, Michael J.
2014ApJ...792...12M    Altcode: 2014arXiv1403.3071M
  Sunspots are a canonical marker of the Sun's internal magnetic
  field which flips polarity every ~22 yr. The principal variation of
  sunspots, an ~11 yr variation, modulates the amount of the magnetic
  field that pierces the solar surface and drives significant variations
  in our star's radiative, particulate, and eruptive output over that
  period. This paper presents observations from the Solar and Heliospheric
  Observatory and Solar Dynamics Observatory indicating that the 11
  yr sunspot variation is intrinsically tied to the spatio-temporal
  overlap of the activity bands belonging to the 22 yr magnetic activity
  cycle. Using a systematic analysis of ubiquitous coronal brightpoints
  and the magnetic scale on which they appear to form, we show that the
  landmarks of sunspot cycle 23 can be explained by considering the
  evolution and interaction of the overlapping activity bands of the
  longer-scale variability.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Coronal Holes and Open Magnetic Flux
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, Jiong; Leamon, Robert; Longcope, Dana;
   Liu, Yang
2014shin.confE..27L    Altcode:
  Coronal holes are regions on the Sun"s surface that map the footprints
  of open magnetic field lines. Using SDO/AIA and STEREO/EUVI EUV data
  coupled with an adaptive thresholding routine we are able to track the
  boundaries of coronal holes across the entire solar surface at a cadence
  of 12 hours. Notably, the combination of AIA and EUVI data allows
  for the continuous tracking of coronal hole boundary evolution on the
  far-side of the sun. Incorporating SOHO/EIT data allows access to these
  boundaries spanning the previous solar cycle. We find that for solar
  cycle 23 the unsigned magnetic flux enclosed by coronal hole boundaries
  ranges from (2-5)x10^22 Mx, covering 5%-17% of the solar surface. For
  solar cycle 24 this flux ranges from (2-4)x10^22 Mx, covering 5%-10%
  of the solar surface. Notably, from both observational coronal hole
  boundaries and modeled open magnetic field regions the low-latitude open
  field contributes significantly to the total open magnetic flux. Using
  a flux transport model in conjunction with a potential field model,
  we compare observational coronal holes and computed open field for
  solar cycles 23 and 24, paying particular attention to the latitudinal
  distribution of open magnetic field. Carrington rotations 2099 and
  2106 are additionally explored in more detail.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Comparison of EUV Coronal Hole Measurements and Modeled
    Open Magnetic Field
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, Jiong; Leamon, Robert; Longcope, Dana;
   Liu, Yang
2014AAS...22432338L    Altcode:
  Coronal holes are regions on the Sun's surface that map the footprints
  of open magnetic field lines. We have developed an automated routine
  to detect and track boundaries of long-lived coronal holes using
  full-disk extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) images obtained by SOHO/EIT,
  SDO/AIA, and STEREO/EUVI. Using these observations in conjunction
  with the potential field source surface (PFSS) model, we find that
  from 1996 through 2010, coronal holes extend between 5% and 17% of
  the solar surface area, with total unsigned open flux varying between
  (2-5)x10<SUP>22</SUP> Mx. AIA/EUVI measurements spanning 2010 through
  2013 mark coronal hole coverage areas of 5% to 10% of total solar
  surface area, with total unsigned open magnetic flux ranging from
  (2-4)x10<SUP>22</SUP> Mx. A detailed comparison indicates that coronal
  holes in low latitudes significantly contribute to the total open
  magnetic flux. Previous studies using the He I 10830 line or EIT EUV
  images do not always accurately measure these low latitude coronal
  holes. Enhanced observations from AIA/EUVI in conjunction with an
  observation-driven flux transport model allow a more accurate measure
  of these low latitude coronal holes and their resulting contribution
  to solar open magnetic flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Quasi-Annual Forcing of The Sun’s Eruptive, Radiative,
    and Particulate Output
Authors: Leamon, Robert; McIntosh, Scott W.
2014AAS...22442205L    Altcode:
  The eruptive, radiative, and particulate output of the Sun are modulated
  by our star’s enigmatic 11-year sunspot cycle. Over the past year
  we have identified observational signatures which illustrate the ebb
  and flow of the 11-year cycle - arising from the temporal overlap of
  migrating activity bands which belong to the 22-year magnetic activity
  cycle. (At the 2012 Fall AGU Meeting, Leamon &amp; McIntosh presented
  a prediction of minimum conditions developing in 2017 and Cycle 25
  sunspots first appearing in late 2019.) As a consequence of this work we
  have deduced that the latitudinal interaction of the oppositely signed
  magnetic activity bands in each hemisphere (and across the equator near
  solar minimum) dramatically impacts the production of Space Weather
  events such as flares and Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs). The same set
  of observations also permits us to identify a quasi-annual variability
  in the rotating convecting system which results in a significant local
  modulation of solar surface magnetism. That modulation, in turn,
  forces prolonged periods of significantly increased flare and CME
  production, as well as significant changes in the Sun's ultraviolet
  (UV), extreme ultraviolet (EUV), and X-Ray irradiance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Identifying Potential Markers of the Sun's Giant Convective
    Scale
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Wang, Xin; Leamon, Robert J.; Scherrer,
   Philip H.
2014ApJ...784L..32M    Altcode: 2014arXiv1403.0692M
  Line-of-sight magnetograms from the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager
  (HMI) of the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) are analyzed using a
  diagnostic known as the magnetic range of influence (MRoI). The MRoI
  is a measure of the length over which a photospheric magnetogram
  is balanced and so its application gives the user a sense of the
  connective length scales in the outer solar atmosphere. The MRoI maps
  and histograms inferred from the SDO/HMI magnetograms primarily exhibit
  four scales: a scale of a few megameters that can be associated with
  granulation, a scale of a few tens of megameters that can be associated
  with super-granulation, a scale of many hundreds to thousands of
  megameters that can be associated with coronal holes and active regions,
  and a hitherto unnoticed scale that ranges from 100 to 250 Mm. We
  infer that this final scale is an imprint of the (rotationally driven)
  giant convective scale on photospheric magnetism. This scale appears
  in MRoI maps as well-defined, spatially distributed concentrations that
  we have dubbed "g-nodes." Furthermore, using coronal observations from
  the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly on SDO, we see that the vicinity of
  these g-nodes appears to be a preferred location for the formation of
  extreme-ultraviolet (and likely X-Ray) brightpoints. These observations
  and straightforward diagnostics offer the potential of a near real-time
  mapping of the Sun's largest convective scale, a scale that possibly
  reaches to the very bottom of the convective zone.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measurements of EUV Coronal Holes and Open Magnetic Flux
Authors: Lowder, C.; Qiu, J.; Leamon, R.; Liu, Y.
2014ApJ...783..142L    Altcode: 2015arXiv150206038L
  Coronal holes are regions on the Sun's surface that map the footprints
  of open magnetic field lines. We have developed an automated routine
  to detect and track boundaries of long-lived coronal holes using
  full-disk extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) images obtained by SOHO/EIT,
  SDO/AIA, and STEREO/EUVI. We measure coronal hole areas and magnetic
  flux in these holes, and compare the measurements with calculations
  by the potential field source surface (PFSS) model. It is shown that,
  from 1996 through 2010, the total area of coronal holes measured with
  EIT images varies between 5% and 17% of the total solar surface area,
  and the total unsigned open flux varies between (2-5)× 10<SUP>22</SUP>
  Mx. The solar cycle dependence of these measurements is similar to the
  PFSS results, but the model yields larger hole areas and greater open
  flux than observed by EIT. The AIA/EUVI measurements from 2010-2013 show
  coronal hole area coverage of 5%-10% of the total surface area, with
  significant contribution from low latitudes, which is under-represented
  by EIT. AIA/EUVI have measured much enhanced open magnetic flux in
  the range of (2-4)× 10<SUP>22</SUP> Mx, which is about twice the flux
  measured by EIT, and matches with the PFSS calculated open flux, with
  discrepancies in the location and strength of coronal holes. A detailed
  comparison between the three measurements (by EIT, AIA-EUVI, and PFSS)
  indicates that coronal holes in low latitudes contribute significantly
  to the total open magnetic flux. These low-latitude coronal holes are
  not well measured with either the He I 10830 line in previous studies,
  or EIT EUV images; neither are they well captured by the static PFSS
  model. The enhanced observations from AIA/EUVI allow a more accurate
  measure of these low-latitude coronal holes and their contribution to
  open magnetic flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal electron temperature in the protracted solar minimum,
    the cycle 24 mini maximum, and over centuries
Authors: Schwadron, N. A.; Goelzer, M. L.; Smith, C. W.; Kasper,
   J. C.; Korreck, K.; Leamon, R. J.; Lepri, S. T.; Maruca, B. A.;
   McComas, D.; Steven, M. L.
2014JGRA..119.1486S    Altcode:
  Recent in situ observations of the solar wind show that
  charge states (e.g., the O<SUP>7+</SUP>/O<SUP>6+</SUP>and
  C<SUP>6+</SUP>/C<SUP>5+</SUP>abundance ratios) evolved through the
  extended, deep solar minimum between solar cycles 23 and 24 (i.e.,
  from 2006 to 2009) reflecting cooler electron temperatures in the
  corona. We extend previous analyses to study the evolution of the
  coronal electron temperature through the protracted solar minimum and
  observe not only the reduction in coronal temperature in the cycles
  23-24 solar minimum but also a small increase in coronal temperature
  associated with increasing activity during the "mini maximum" in cycle
  24. We use a new model of the interplanetary magnetic flux since 1749 to
  estimate coronal electron temperatures over more than two centuries. The
  reduction in coronal electron temperature in the cycles 23-24 protracted
  solar minimum is similar to reductions observed at the beginning of
  the Dalton Minimum (∼1805-1840). If these trends continue to reflect
  the evolution of the Dalton Minimum, we will observe further reductions
  in coronal temperature in the cycles 24-25 solar minimum. Preliminary
  indications in 2013 do suggest a further post cycle 23 decline in
  solar activity. Thus, we extend our understanding of coronal electron
  temperature using the solar wind scaling law and compare recent
  reductions in coronal electron temperature in the protracted solar
  minimum to conditions that prevailed in the Dalton Minimum.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evolving Magnetic Scales of the Outer Solar Atmosphere
    and Their Potential Impact on Heliospheric Turbulence
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Bethge, Christian; Threlfall, James;
   De Moortel, Ineke; Leamon, Robert J.; Tian, Hui
2013arXiv1311.2538M    Altcode:
  The presence of turbulent phenomena in the outer solar atmosphere
  is a given. However, because we are reduced to remotely sensing the
  atmosphere of a star with instruments of limited spatial and/or spectral
  resolution, we can only infer the physical progression from macroscopic
  to microscopic phenomena. Even so, we know that many, if not all,
  of the turbulent phenomena that pervade interplanetary space have
  physical origins at the Sun and so in this brief article we consider
  some recent measurements which point to sustained potential source(s)
  of heliospheric turbulence in the magnetic and thermal domains. In
  particular, we look at the scales of magnetism that are imprinted on
  the outer solar atmosphere by the relentless magneto-convection of the
  solar interior and combine state-of-the-art observations from the Solar
  Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and the Coronal Multi-channel Polarimeter
  (CoMP) which are beginning to hint at the origins of the wave/plasma
  interplay prevalent closer to the Earth. While linking these disparate
  scales of observation and understanding of their connection is near
  to impossible, it is clear that the constant evolution of subsurface
  magnetism on a host of scales guides and governs the flow of mass
  and energy at the smallest scales. In the near future significant
  progress in this area will be made by linking observations from high
  resolution platforms like the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph
  (IRIS) and Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) with full-disk
  synoptic observations such as those presented herein.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Connecting Global EUV Coronal Hole Measurements and Open
    Magnetic Field Boundaries
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, J.; Leamon, R.
2013SPD....44..114L    Altcode:
  This study seeks to further quantify the relationship between the
  boundaries of coronal holes and open magnetic field regions. Utilizing
  the combined observations of the SDO:AIA and STEREO:EUVI A/B
  instruments, nearly full coverage of the solar surface in several
  EUV filters is available. Using this data we have devised a
  routine to define global observations of coronal hole boundaries
  at high cadence. For comparison, several methods of global coronal
  magnetic field extrapolation were considered, both potential and
  non-potential. We considered both a direct spatio-temporal comparison
  of boundaries as well as associated magnetic flux quantities.Abstract
  (2,250 Maximum Characters): This study seeks to further quantify the
  relationship between the boundaries of coronal holes and open magnetic
  field regions. Utilizing the combined observations of the SDO:AIA and
  STEREO:EUVI A/B instruments, nearly full coverage of the solar surface
  in several EUV filters is available. Using this data we have devised
  a routine to define global observations of coronal hole boundaries
  at high cadence. For comparison, several methods of global coronal
  magnetic field extrapolation were considered, both potential and
  non-potential. We considered both a direct spatio-temporal comparison
  of boundaries as well as associated magnetic flux quantities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV Coronal Holes as a Proxy for Open Magnetic Field Regions
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, Jiong; Leamon, Robert
2013enss.confE.101L    Altcode:
  Coronal holes are regions marked by a decreased intensity in the
  extreme ultraviolet and x-ray wavelengths. Associated with regions of
  open magnetic field, plasma is allowed to escape along open magnetic
  field lines resulting in a rarefied plasma below. This study seeks
  to quantify the relationship between boundaries of coronal holes and
  open magnetic field. Using a combination of STEREO and SDO data in
  EUV wavelengths, we can provide a full solar surface map of coronal
  hole boundaries. These boundaries in conjunction with charts of radial
  magnetic field can be used to calculate open magnetic fluxes. Direct
  comparison is made with potential magnetic extrapolations as well as a
  non-potential, magneto-frictional model. There is strong agreement both
  in the geometry of regions as well as associated magnetic fluxes. These
  data provide a unique opportunity to study the far side dynamics of
  coronal holes and open magnetic field evolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Modulation of the Solar Activity Cycles, and Hemispheric
    Asymmetry of Solar Magnetism during the Cycle 23/24 Minimum
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.
2013enss.confE.140L    Altcode:
  We address the origin of the 11-year (quasi-)periodicity of the sunspot
  cycle by tying it to the significant temporal overlap of activity bands
  belonging to the 22-year magnetic activity cycle. Using a systematic
  analysis of ubiquitous coronal brightpoints, and the prevalent
  magnetic scale on which they form, we are able to observationally
  demonstrate the entirety of the 22-year magnetic activity cycle. The
  phases of the sunspot cycle occur as landmarks in the interaction and
  evolution of the overlapping activity bands in each hemisphere. The
  unusual conditions of the recent Cycle 23/24 minimum can be directly
  attributed to the asymmetry (southern lag) between the two hemispheres
  of the sun. The work presented establishes significant observational
  constraints for models of the origins of solar magnetic activity and
  will, as a result, improve our understanding of the structure of the
  heliosphere and the modulation of our star's radiative and particulate
  output. We demonstrate how the Sun can descend into, and recover from,
  Grand Minima. Even if that is not where we're headed, we show why
  Cycle 25 is likely to be even weaker than Cycle 24.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hemispheric Asymmetries of Solar Photospheric Magnetism:
    Radiative, Particulate, and Heliospheric Impacts
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Gurman, Joseph B.;
   Olive, Jean-Philippe; Cirtain, Jonathan W.; Hathaway, David H.;
   Burkepile, Joan; Miesch, Mark; Markel, Robert S.; Sitongia, Leonard
2013ApJ...765..146M    Altcode: 2013arXiv1302.1081M
  Among many other measurable quantities, the summer of 2009 saw
  a considerable low in the radiative output of the Sun that was
  temporally coincident with the largest cosmic-ray flux ever measured
  at 1 AU. Combining measurements and observations made by the Solar and
  Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)
  spacecraft we begin to explore the complexities of the descending phase
  of solar cycle 23, through the 2009 minimum into the ascending phase of
  solar cycle 24. A hemispheric asymmetry in magnetic activity is clearly
  observed and its evolution monitored and the resulting (prolonged)
  magnetic imbalance must have had a considerable impact on the structure
  and energetics of the heliosphere. While we cannot uniquely tie the
  variance and scale of the surface magnetism to the dwindling radiative
  and particulate output of the star, or the increased cosmic-ray flux
  through the 2009 minimum, the timing of the decline and rapid recovery
  in early 2010 would appear to inextricably link them. These observations
  support a picture where the Sun's hemispheres are significantly out
  of phase with each other. Studying historical sunspot records with
  this picture in mind shows that the northern hemisphere has been
  leading since the middle of the last century and that the hemispheric
  "dominance" has changed twice in the past 130 years. The observations
  presented give clear cause for concern, especially with respect to
  our present understanding of the processes that produce the surface
  magnetism in the (hidden) solar interior—hemispheric asymmetry is the
  normal state—the strong symmetry shown in 1996 was abnormal. Further,
  these observations show that the mechanism(s) which create and transport
  the magnetic flux are slowly changing with time and, it appears, with
  only loose coupling across the equator such that those asymmetries can
  persist for a considerable time. As the current asymmetry persists and
  the basal energetics of the system continue to dwindle we anticipate
  new radiative and particulate lows coupled with increased cosmic-ray
  fluxes heading into the next solar minimum.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Full Surface Automated Coronal Hole Detection and
    Characterization to Constrain Global Magnetic Field Models
Authors: Lowder, Chris; Qiu, J.; Leamon, R.; Liu, Y.
2012AAS...22041106L    Altcode:
  One of the primary mission goals of the Solar Terrestrial Relations
  Observatory (STEREO) : Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUVI) is to
  provide full extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) coverage of the solar surface
  in conjunction with the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)
  : Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) or the Solar Dynamics
  Observatory (SDO) : Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA). Now, five years
  after launch, sufficient orbital separation has occurred for this
  to come to fruition. Using EUV images from STEREO:EUVI in 195Å and
  SDO:AIA in 193Å, we can create full surface maps of coronal holes. Our
  method employs an intensity thresholding technique in conjunction with
  line-of-sight magnetic field measurements to automatically distinguish
  coronal holes from filament channels. This full surface coverage
  provides a unique opportunity to compare observed coronal holes with
  the predicted open magnetic field regions from both potential field
  models in addition to non-potential models. Our method is able to
  detect and characterize both long-term coronal hole structures, as well
  as shorter lived, transient coronal holes. <P />Here, this method is
  described in detail, with comparisons drawn between observed coronal
  hole boundaries and open-field boundaries derived from models. In
  addition, quantities that are crucially dependent on these boundaries
  are considered, namely the open magnetic flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Cycle Variations in the Elemental Abundance of Helium
    and Fractionation of Iron in the Fast Solar Wind - Indicators of an
    Evolving Energetic Release of Mass from the Lower Solar Atmosphere
Authors: Kiefer, K. K.; Mcintosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.; Kasper, J. C.;
   Stevens, M. L.
2011AGUFMSH21B1915K    Altcode:
  We present and discuss the strong correspondence between evolution of
  the emission length scale in the lower transition region and in situ
  measurements of the fast solar wind composition during this most recent
  solar minimum. We combine recent analyses demonstrating the variance
  in the (supergranular) network emission length scale measured by SOHO
  (and STEREO) with that of the Helium abundance (from WIND) and the
  degree of Iron fractionation in the solar wind (from the ACE and Ulysses
  spacecrafts). The net picture developing is one where a decrease in the
  Helium abundance and the degree of fractionation (approaching values
  expected of the photosphere) in the fast wind indicate a significant
  change in the process loading material into the fast solar wind during
  the recent solar minimum. This result is compounded by a study of the
  Helium abundance during the space age using the NASA OMNI database
  which shows a slowly decaying amount of Helium being driven into the
  heliosphere over the course of several solar cycles.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The highest cosmic ray fluxes ever recorded: What happened
    to the earth's deflector shield?
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; Mcintosh, S. W.; Burkepile, J.; Sitongia,
   L.; Markel, R. S.; Gurman, J. B.; Olive, J.
2011AGUFMSH23D..08L    Altcode:
  The summer of 2009 saw the largest cosmic ray flux ever measured
  at 1AU. Observed by neutron monitors this solar minimum flux was
  6% larger than that of the last solar minimum in 1996, and 4%
  larger than the previous high of the space age. Clearly, something
  dramatically affected the cosmic ray "deflector shield" of the Earth
  this time around, but what was it? Using a combination of serendipitous
  observations made by the solid state recorder of the SOHO spacecraft,
  an analysis of SOHO/MDI magnetograms combined with SOHO/EIT and SDO/AIA
  coronal imaging, we deduce that a pronounced north-south asymmetry
  in the meridional circulation flow resulted in the evolution of
  the photospheric magnetic to a prolonged prevalence of the negative
  magnetic polarity in the equatorial region that were the root cause
  of the observed cosmic ray flux increase. The negative sign, weakness
  and low rigidity of the interplanetary magnetic field, driven by the
  excess of open magnetic flux resulting from the flow asymmetry in the
  solar interior, enabled more cosmic rays of the energy range measured
  at Earth to creep into our atmosphere than previously measured.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Snapshot of the Sun Near Solar Minimum: The Whole Heliosphere
    Interval
Authors: Thompson, Barbara J.; Gibson, Sarah E.; Schroeder, Peter C.;
   Webb, David F.; Arge, Charles N.; Bisi, Mario M.; de Toma, Giuliana;
   Emery, Barbara A.; Galvin, Antoinette B.; Haber, Deborah A.; Jackson,
   Bernard V.; Jensen, Elizabeth A.; Leamon, Robert J.; Lei, Jiuhou;
   Manoharan, Periasamy K.; Mays, M. Leila; McIntosh, Patrick S.; Petrie,
   Gordon J. D.; Plunkett, Simon P.; Qian, Liying; Riley, Peter; Suess,
   Steven T.; Tokumaru, Munetoshi; Welsch, Brian T.; Woods, Thomas N.
2011SoPh..274...29T    Altcode: 2011SoPh..tmp..413T
  We present an overview of the data and models collected for the
  Whole Heliosphere Interval, an international campaign to study the
  three-dimensional solar-heliospheric-planetary connected system near
  solar minimum. The data and models correspond to solar Carrington
  Rotation 2068 (20 March - 16 April 2008) extending from below the
  solar photosphere, through interplanetary space, and down to Earth's
  mesosphere. Nearly 200 people participated in aspects of WHI studies,
  analyzing and interpreting data from nearly 100 instruments and
  models in order to elucidate the physics of fundamental heliophysical
  processes. The solar and inner heliospheric data showed structure
  consistent with the declining phase of the solar cycle. A closely
  spaced cluster of low-latitude active regions was responsible for an
  increased level of magnetic activity, while a highly warped current
  sheet dominated heliospheric structure. The geospace data revealed an
  unusually high level of activity, driven primarily by the periodic
  impingement of high-speed streams. The WHI studies traced the solar
  activity and structure into the heliosphere and geospace, and provided
  new insight into the nature of the interconnected heliophysical system
  near solar minimum.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Whole Heliosphere Interval in the Context of a Long and
Structured Solar Minimum: An Overview from Sun to Earth
Authors: Gibson, S. E.; de Toma, G.; Emery, B.; Riley, P.; Zhao, L.;
   Elsworth, Y.; Leamon, R. J.; Lei, J.; McIntosh, S.; Mewaldt, R. A.;
   Thompson, B. J.; Webb, D.
2011SoPh..274....5G    Altcode: 2011SoPh..tmp..427G
  Throughout months of extremely low solar activity during the recent
  extended solar-cycle minimum, structural evolution continued to be
  observed from the Sun through the solar wind and to the Earth. In
  2008, the presence of long-lived and large low-latitude coronal holes
  meant that geospace was periodically impacted by high-speed streams,
  even though solar irradiance, activity, and interplanetary magnetic
  fields had reached levels as low as, or lower than, observed in past
  minima. This time period, which includes the first Whole Heliosphere
  Interval (WHI 1: Carrington Rotation (CR) 2068), illustrates the
  effects of fast solar-wind streams on the Earth in an otherwise quiet
  heliosphere. By the end of 2008, sunspots and solar irradiance had
  reached their lowest levels for this minimum (e.g., WHI 2: CR 2078),
  and continued solar magnetic-flux evolution had led to a flattening
  of the heliospheric current sheet and the decay of the low-latitude
  coronal holes and associated Earth-intersecting high-speed solar-wind
  streams. As the new solar cycle slowly began, solar-wind and geospace
  observables stayed low or continued to decline, reaching very low
  levels by June - July 2009. At this point (e.g., WHI 3: CR 2085) the
  Sun-Earth system, taken as a whole, was at its quietest. In this article
  we present an overview of observations that span the period 2008 -
  2009, with highlighted discussion of CRs 2068, 2078, and 2085. We show
  side-by-side observables from the Sun's interior through its surface and
  atmosphere, through the solar wind and heliosphere and to the Earth's
  space environment and upper atmosphere, and reference detailed studies
  of these various regimes within this topical issue and elsewhere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Cycle Variations in the Elemental Abundance of Helium
and Fractionation of Iron in the Fast Solar Wind: Indicators of an
    Evolving Energetic Release of Mass from the Lower Solar Atmosphere
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Kiefer, Kandace K.; Leamon, Robert J.;
   Kasper, Justin C.; Stevens, Michael L.
2011ApJ...740L..23M    Altcode: 2011arXiv1109.1408M
  We present and discuss the strong correspondence between evolution of
  the emission length scale in the lower transition region and in situ
  measurements of the fast solar wind composition during the most recent
  solar minimum. We combine recent analyses demonstrating the variance
  in the (supergranular) network emission length scale measured by the
  Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (and STEREO) with that of the helium
  abundance (from Wind) and the degree of iron fractionation in the solar
  wind (from the Advanced Composition Explorer and Ulysses). The net
  picture developing is one where a decrease in the helium abundance
  and the degree of iron fractionation (approaching values expected
  of the photosphere) in the fast wind indicate a significant change
  in the process loading material into the fast solar wind during the
  recent solar minimum. This result is compounded by a study of the
  helium abundance during the space age using the NASA OMNI database,
  which shows a slowly decaying amount of helium being driven into the
  heliosphere over the course of several solar cycles.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Decade of Solar Wind Dissipation Range Dynamics
Authors: Smith, Charles William; Vasquez, Bernard J.; Stemkowski,
   Matthew R.; Stawarz, Joshua E.; Leamon, Robert J.; Matthaeus, William
   H.; Hamilton, Kathleen; Forman, Miriam A.; MacBride, Benjamin T.
2011shin.confE..99S    Altcode:
  In light of recent suggestions that the so-called ion dissipation range
  for interplanetary magnetic fluctuations is, in fact, not representative
  of dissipation processes, but arises only due to dispersion effects
  associated with perpendicular Kinetic Alfven Waves (KAW), we review 13
  years of study that points to a fundamentally different interpretation
  of the observations. We present evidence that thermal protons are
  heated from 0.3 to 100 AU by means that are in excellent agreement
  with the computed rate at which the inertial range transports energy to
  the ion dissipation scales. We discuss the role of the power spectrum
  and variance anisotropy in determining changes in the wave modes as
  energy passes from the inertial to the dissipation range. We review
  the single-spacecraft technique for determining the distribution of
  energy between parallel and perpendicular wave vectors and show how this
  distribution changes between inertial and dissipation scales. Moreover,
  we present direct evidence that the multi-dimensional autocorrelation
  function supports these conclusions. Lastly, we will review the basic
  energy budget analysis that arises when one attempts to balance cascade
  with dissipation processes that are separately polarization-dependent,
  such as cyclotron damping, and polarization-independent. We conclude
  that energy dissipation and ion heating occurs via a wide range of
  dynamical processes at scales comparable to the ion inertial scale. We
  do not preclude there being a secondary inertial range at electron
  scales, but we do argue that the bulk of the inertial range cascade
  energy dissipates at ion scales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observing Evolution in the Supergranular Network Length Scale
    During Periods of Low Solar Activity
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Hock, Rachel A.;
   Rast, Mark P.; Ulrich, Roger K.
2011ApJ...730L...3M    Altcode: 2011arXiv1102.0303M
  We present the initial results of an observational study into the
  variation of the dominant length scale of quiet solar emission:
  supergranulation. The distribution of magnetic elements in the lanes
  that from the network affects, and reflects, the radiative energy in
  the plasma of the upper solar chromosphere and transition region at
  the magnetic network boundaries forming as a result of the relentless
  interaction of magnetic fields and convective motions of the Suns'
  interior. We demonstrate that a net difference of ~0.5 Mm in the
  supergranular emission length scale occurs when comparing observation
  cycle 22/23 and cycle 23/24 minima. This variation in scale is
  reproduced in the data sets of multiple space- and ground-based
  instruments and using different diagnostic measures. By means of
  extension, we consider the variation of the supergranular length
  scale over multiple solar minima by analyzing a subset of the Mount
  Wilson Solar Observatory Ca II K image record. The observations and
  analysis presented provide a tantalizing look at solar activity in
  the absence of large-scale flux emergence, offering insight into
  times of "extreme" solar minimum and general behavior such as the
  phasing and cross-dependence of different components of the spectral
  irradiance. Given that the modulation of the supergranular scale
  imprints itself in variations of the Suns' spectral irradiance, as well
  as in the mass and energy transport into the entire outer atmosphere,
  this preliminary investigation is an important step in understanding
  the impact of the quiet Sun on the heliospheric system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Spectroscopic Footprint of the Fast Solar Wind
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; De Pontieu, Bart
2011ApJ...727....7M    Altcode: 2010arXiv1011.3066M
  We analyze a large, complex equatorial coronal hole (ECH) and its
  immediate surroundings with a focus on the roots of the fast solar
  wind. We start by demonstrating that our ECH is indeed a source of the
  fast solar wind at 1 AU by examining in situ plasma measurements in
  conjunction with recently developed measures of magnetic conditions
  of the photosphere, inner heliosphere, and the mapping of the solar
  wind source region. We focus the bulk of our analysis on interpreting
  the thermal and spatial dependence of the non-thermal line widths
  in the ECH as measured by SOHO/SUMER by placing the measurements in
  context with recent studies of ubiquitous Alfvén waves in the solar
  atmosphere and line profile asymmetries (indicative of episodic heating
  and mass loading of the coronal plasma) that originate in the strong,
  unipolar magnetic flux concentrations that comprise the supergranular
  network. The results presented in this paper are consistent with a
  picture where a significant portion of the energy responsible for
  the transport of heated mass into the fast solar wind is provided by
  episodically occurring small-scale events (likely driven by magnetic
  reconnection) in the upper chromosphere and transition region of the
  strong magnetic flux regions that comprise the supergranular network.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Highest Cosmic Ray Fluxes Ever Recorded: What Happened
    to the Earth's Deflector Shield?
Authors: Burkepile, J.; McIntosh, S. W.; Gurman, J. B.; Leamon, R. J.
2010AGUFMSH51B1676B    Altcode:
  The summer of 2009 saw the largest cosmic ray flux ever measured at
  Earth. Cosmic ray intensities in the 270-450 MeV/nucleon range were
  nearly 20% larger than anything previously recorded. Clearly, something
  dramatically affected the cosmic ray 'deflector shield' of the Earth
  during the most recent solar activity minimum. We explore the cause
  of this marked increase by examining properties of the global solar
  magnetic field and conditions in the solar wind during the previous
  solar minimum and compare these to previous solar cycles using in-situ
  and remote sensing observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Impact of New EUV Diagnostics on CME-Related Kinematics
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; De Pontieu, Bart; Leamon, Robert J.
2010SoPh..265....5M    Altcode: 2010SoPh..tmp...74M; 2010arXiv1001.2022M
  We present the application of novel diagnostics to the spectroscopic
  observation of a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) on disk by the Extreme
  Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) on the Hinode spacecraft. We
  apply a recently developed line profile asymmetry analysis to the
  spectroscopic observation of NOAA AR 10930 on 14 - 15 December 2006
  to three raster observations before and during the eruption of a 1000
  km s<SUP>−1</SUP> halo CME. We see the impact that the observer's
  line-of-sight and magnetic field geometry have on the diagnostics
  used. Further, and more importantly, we identify the on-disk signature
  of a high-speed outflow behind the CME in the dimming region arising
  as a result of the eruption. Supported by recent coronal observations
  of the STEREO spacecraft, we speculate about the momentum flux
  resulting from this outflow as a secondary momentum source to the
  CME. The results presented highlight the importance of spectroscopic
  measurements in relation to CME kinematics, and the need for full-disk
  synoptic spectroscopic observations of the coronal and chromospheric
  plasmas to capture the signature of such explosive energy release as
  a way of providing better constraints of CME propagation times to L1,
  or any other point of interest in the heliosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: STEREO observations of quasi-periodically driven high velocity
    outflows in polar plumes
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Innes, D. E.; de Pontieu, B.; Leamon, R. J.
2010A&A...510L...2M    Altcode: 2010arXiv1001.3377M
  Context. Plumes are one of the most ubiquitous features seen at the
  limb in polar coronal holes and are considered to be a source of
  high density plasma streams to the fast solar wind. <BR /> Aims: We
  analyze STEREO observations of plumes and aim to reinterpret and place
  observations with previous generations of EUV imagers within a new
  context that was recently developed from Hinode observations. <BR />
  Methods: We exploit the higher signal-to-noise, spatial and temporal
  resolution of the EUVI telescopes over that of SOHO/EIT to study
  the temporal variation of polar plumes in high detail. We employ
  recently developed insight from imaging (and spectral) diagnostics of
  active region, plage, and quiet Sun plasmas to identify the presence
  of apparent motions as high-speed upflows in magnetic regions as
  opposed to previous interpretations of propagating waves. <BR />
  Results: In almost all polar plumes observed at the limb in these
  STEREO sequences, in all coronal passbands, we observe high speed
  jets of plasma traveling along the structures with a mean velocity of
  135 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> at a range of temperatures from 0.5-1.5 MK. The
  jets have an apparent brightness enhancement of ~5% above that of the
  plumes they travel on and repeat quasi-periodically, with repeat-times
  ranging from five to twenty-five minutes. We also notice a very
  weak, fine scale, rapidly evolving, but ubiquitous companion of the
  plumes that covers the entire coronal hole limb. <BR /> Conclusions:
  The observed jets are remarkably similar in intensity enhancement,
  periodicity and velocity to those observed in other magnetic regions
  of the solar atmosphere. They are multi-thermal in nature. We infer
  that the jets observed on the plumes are a source of heated mass
  to the fast solar wind. Further, based on the previous results that
  motivated this study, we suggest that these jets originated in the
  upper chromosphere. <P />Five movies are only available in electronic
  form at <A href="http://www.aanda.org">http://www.aanda.org</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: More of the Inconvenient Truth About Coronal Dimmings
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Burkepile, J.; Leamon, R. J.
2009ASPC..415..393M    Altcode: 2009arXiv0901.2817M
  We continue the investigation of a CME-driven coronal dimming
  from December 14 2006 using unique high resolution imaging of the
  chromosphere and corona from the Hinode spacecraft. Over the course
  of the dimming event we observe the dynamic increase of non-thermal
  line broadening of multiple emission lines as the CME is released
  and the corona opens; reaching levels seen in coronal holes. As
  the corona begins to close, refill and brighten, we see a reduction
  of the non-thermal broadening towards the pre-eruption level. The
  dynamic evolution of non-thermal broadening is consistent with the
  expected change of Alfvén wave amplitudes in the magnetically open
  rarefied dimming region, compared to the dense closed corona prior to
  the CME. The presented data reinforce the belief that coronal dimmings
  must be temporary sources of the fast solar wind. It is unclear if such
  a rapid transition in the thermodynamics of the corona to a solar wind
  state has an effect on the CME itself.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: How the Solar Wind Ties to its Photospheric Origins
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.
2009ApJ...697L..28L    Altcode: 2009arXiv0904.0614L
  We present a new method of visualizing the solar photospheric
  magnetic field based on the "Magnetic Range of Influence" (MRoI). The
  MRoI is a simple realization of the magnetic environment in the
  photosphere, reflecting the distance required to balance the integrated
  magnetic field contained in any magnetogram pixel. It provides a new
  perspective on where subterrestrial field lines in a Potential Field
  Source Surface (PFSS) model connect to the photosphere, and thus
  the source of Earth-directed solar wind (within the limitations of
  PFSS models), something that is not usually obvious from a regular
  synoptic magnetogram. In each of three sample solar rotations,
  at different phases of the solar cycle, the PFSS footpoint either
  jumps between isolated areas of high MRoI or moves slowly within one
  such area. Footpoint motions are consistent with Fisk's interchange
  reconnection model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: How the Solar Wind Ties to Its Photospheric Origins
Authors: Leamon, Robert; McIntosh, S. W.
2009SPD....40.3101L    Altcode:
  We present a new method of visualizing the solar photospheric magnetic
  field based on the "Magnetic Range of Influence" (MRoI). The MRoI is
  a simple realization of the magnetic environment in the photosphere,
  reflecting the distance required to balance the integrated magnetic
  field contained in any magnetogram pixel. It provides a new perspective
  on where sub-terrestrial field lines in a Potential Field Source
  Surface (PFSS) model connect to the photosphere, and thus the
  source of Earth-directed solar wind (within the limitations of
  PFSS models), something that is not usually obvious from a regular
  synoptic magnetogram. In each of three sample solar rotations,
  at different phases of the solar cycle, the PFSS footpoint either
  jumps between isolated areas of high MRoI or moves slowly within one
  such area. Footpoint motions are consistent with Fisk's interchange
  reconnection model. We explore the relationships between the MRoI and
  flux at the footpoint and the in situ composition of the resulting wind.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Spectroscopic Footprint of the Fast Solar Wind
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.; de Pontieu, B.
2008AGUFMSH41A1612M    Altcode:
  We explore a large, complex equatorial coronal hole (ECH) and its
  immediate surroundings through the temperature dependence of the
  non-thermal line widths of three transition region emission lines
  observed by SOHO/SUMER, placing them in context with recent studies of
  the other spectroscopic measures taken. Using a recent semi-empirical
  model of the solar wind as a basis, we explore the structure of the
  solar wind during the observing period and seek to gain a better
  understanding of the interaction of this region with the nascent
  solar wind.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Center-to-Limb Variation of TRACE Travel-Times
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2008AGUFMSH41A1610L    Altcode:
  We explore the limb-to-limb behavior of multi-frequency Transition
  Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE) travel-time measurements of
  magneto-atmospheric waves in the solar chromosphere. We establish that
  while the higher frequency acoustic travel-times (~ 7~mHz) show little
  or no limb-to-limb variation, the previously documented variations of
  travel-time measurements on the magnetic environment through which the
  waves propagate are evident: increased travel-times in coronal holes;
  decreased travel-times in strong closed magnetic concentrations. For
  frequencies approaching the classical acoustic cut-off frequency
  (5.2~mHz) and below there is an increasing dependence of the measured
  travel-time with viewing angle and decreasing frequency. In this
  paper we demonstrate, using supporting observations from the Solar
  Optical Telescope on Hinode, that the center-to-limb variation of
  the low-frequency travel-times is the signature of propagating waves
  on magnetic network structures at granular spatial scales [i.e.,
  structures close the spatial Nyquist frequency of TRACE] whose signal
  is a result of sub-resolution UV emission line 'contamination' in the
  1600Å passband. Further, these structures must have a line-of-sight
  extension normal to the solar surface that increases across the disk
  as we approach the limb. We deduce that the low- frequency travel-time
  signal is directly caused by spicule motions which are increasingly
  inclined to the TRACE line-of-sight. Similarly, using SOT support,
  we propose that the apparent TRACE travel-time enhancement in coronal
  holes from TRACE, at same granular network locations, is the result
  of a change in vertical stratification in the coronal hole compared
  to quiet Sun counterpart emission. This effort is of particular
  relevance to full-disk travel-time investigations from the Solar
  Dynamics Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Could We Have Forecast "The Day the Solar Wind Died"?
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; McIntosh, Scott W.
2008ApJ...679L.147L    Altcode:
  In 1999 May an interval of unusually slow (&lt;300 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>)
  and rarefied (&lt;1 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>) solar wind was observed upstream
  of Earth by the ACE spacecraft. The event has been dubbed "The Day
  the Solar Wind Died." We apply our solar wind forecast model to the
  interval in question, to ask whether we could have predicted the
  phenomenon. The model fails, but by the manner in which it fails, we
  support the conclusion that the rarefaction was caused by a suppression
  of coronal outflow from a region that earlier provided fast wind flow,
  possibly caused by a rapid restructuring of solar magnetic fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Anisotropies and helicities in the solar wind inertial and
    dissipation ranges at 1 AU
Authors: Hamilton, Kathleen; Smith, Charles W.; Vasquez, Bernard J.;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2008JGRA..113.1106H    Altcode:
  We have constructed a database of ACE observations at 1 AU based on 960
  intervals spanning the broadest possible range of solar wind conditions
  including magnetic clouds. Using spectral analysis of high-resolution
  magnetic field data we compare inertial range characteristics with
  properties in the measured dissipation range. We find that previous
  conclusions by Leamon et al. (1998a, 1998b, 1998c) are upheld: average
  wave vectors are more field-aligned in the dissipation range than
  in the inertial range, magnetic fluctuations are less transverse
  to the mean field in the dissipation range, and cyclotron damping
  plays an important but not exclusive role in the formation of the
  dissipation range. However, field-aligned wave vectors play a larger
  role in the formation of the dissipation range than was previously
  found. In the process we find significant contrast between these
  inertial range results and the conclusions of Dasso et al. (2005) who
  examine larger-scale fluctuations within the inertial range. Dasso et
  al. found a dominance of field-aligned wave vectors in the high-speed
  wind and a dominance of quasi-perpendicular (two-dimensional) wave
  vectors in low-speed winds. We find that the orientation of the wave
  vectors for the smallest scales within the inertial range are not
  organized by wind speed and that on average all samples show the same
  distribution of energy between perpendicular and field-aligned wave
  vectors. We conclude that this is due to the time required to evolve
  the spectrum toward a two-dimensional state where the smaller inertial
  range scales examined here evolve more quickly than the larger scales
  of earlier analysis. Likewise, we find no such organization within
  the dissipation range.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Anisotropies and Helicities in the Solar Wind Inertial and
    Dissipation Ranges at 1 AU
Authors: Smith, C. W.; Vasquez, B. J.; Leamon, R. J.; Hamilton, K.
2007AGUFMSH32B..01S    Altcode:
  We have constructed a data base of ACE observations at 1 AU based
  on 960 intervals spanning the broadest possible range of solar
  wind conditions including magnetic clouds. Using spectral analysis
  of high resolution magnetic field data we compare inertial range
  characteristics with properties in the measured dissipation range. We
  find that previous conclusions by Leamon et al. [1998a,b,c] are upheld:
  average wave vectors are more field-aligned in the dissipation range
  than in the inertial range, magnetic fluctuations are less transverse
  to the mean field in the dissipation range, and cyclotron damping
  plays an important, but not exclusive role in the formation of the
  dissipation range. However, field-aligned wave vectors play a larger
  role in the formation of the dissipation range than was previously
  found. In the process we examine characteristics of the inertial
  range that are relevant to the manner in which the dissipation range
  is created. We find significant contrast between these inertial range
  results and the conclusions of Dasso et al. [2005] who examine larger
  scale fluctuations within the inertial range. Dasso et al. found a
  dominance of field-aligned wave vectors in the high-speed wind and
  a dominance of 2D wave vectors in low-speed winds. We find that the
  orientation of the wave vectors for the smallest scales within the
  inertial range are not organized by wind speed and that on average all
  samples show the same distribution of energy between perpendicular and
  field-aligned wave vectors. We conclude that this is due to the time
  required to evolve the spectrum toward a 2D state where the smaller
  inertial range scales examined here evolve more quickly than the larger
  scales of earlier analysis. Likewise, we find no such organization by
  to wind speed within the dissipation range.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Turbulence spectrum of interplanetary magnetic fluctuations
    and the rate of energy cascade
Authors: Smith, Charles W.; Vasquez, Bernard J.; Hamilton, Kathleen;
   MacBride, Benjamin T.; Tessein, Jeffrey A.; Forman, Miriam A.; Leamon,
   Robert J.
2007AIPC..932...96S    Altcode:
  There is growing evidence that a turbulent cascade of energy from large
  to small scales accounts for the dissipation of fluid energy (magnetic
  and velocity fluctuations) that heats the background plasma. However,
  much remains to be done to understand the dynamics of that cascade. We
  apply a structure function formalism originally derived for hydrodynamic
  turbulence and recently extended to include magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)
  to map the cascade of energy in the inertial range at 1 AU. We also
  examine the anisotropies associated with inertial range magnetic
  fluctuations in the hope of better understanding inertial- and
  dissipation-range dynamics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evaluation of the turbulent energy cascade rates from the
    upper inertial range in the solar wind at 1 AU
Authors: Vasquez, Bernard J.; Smith, Charles W.; Hamilton, Kathleen;
   MacBride, Benjamin T.; Leamon, Robert J.
2007JGRA..112.7101V    Altcode: 2007JGRA..11207101V
  We construct a database from ACE spacecraft measurements of solar
  wind magnetic field fluctuations at 1 AU which resolves ∼2 decades
  in frequency at the high end of the inertial range. Using magnetic
  field measurements outside of magnetic clouds in combination with
  plasma measurements, we evaluate expressions for the Kolmogorov
  and Kraichnan cascade rates at 0.01 Hz from magnetic field power
  spectra and consider both isotropic and cross-field rates. We examine
  these rates as functions of proton temperature and solar wind speed,
  comparing them to the expected rate based on the heating of protons at
  1 AU. The average Kolmogorov rate is consistently more than a factor
  of 10 greater than expected. We conclude that the cascade rate cannot
  be estimated using the Kolmogorov prescription and power spectra. The
  Kraichnan rate is close to the expected rate and is potentially a good
  way to estimate the cascade rate. No distinction is found between
  the isotropic and cross-field rates at 1 AU. However, consideration
  of the likely dependence of cascade rates with distance from the Sun
  shows that a distinction should exist at distances closer than 1 AU but
  not outside 1 AU. Moreover, we find that inside 1 AU, the cross-field
  Kraichnan prediction can maintain agreement with the expected heating
  rate whereas the isotropic prediction cannot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Posteruptive Evolution of a Coronal Dimming
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Leamon, Robert J.; Davey, Alisdair R.;
   Wills-Davey, Meredith J.
2007ApJ...660.1653M    Altcode: 2007astro.ph..1347M
  We discuss the posteruptive evolution of a “coronal dimming” based
  on observations of the EUV corona from the Solar and Heliospheric
  Observatory and the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE). This
  discussion highlights the roles played by magnetoconvection-driven
  magnetic reconnection and the global magnetic environment of the
  plasma in the “filling” and apparent motion of the region following
  the eruption of a coronal mass ejection (CME). A crucial element in
  our understanding of the dimming region's evolution is developed by
  monitoring the disappearance and reappearance of bright TRACE “moss”
  around the active region that gives rise to the CME. We interpret the
  change in the TRACE moss as a proxy of the changing coronal magnetic
  field topology behind the CME front. We infer that the change in the
  global magnetic topology also results in a shift of the energy balance
  in the process responsible for the production of the moss emission while
  the coronal magnetic topology evolves from closed to open and back to
  closed again because, following the eruption, the moss reforms around
  the active region in almost exactly its pre-event configuration. As a
  result of the moss's evolution, combining our discussion with recent
  spectroscopic results of an equatorial coronal hole, we suggest that
  the interchangeable use of the term “transient coronal hole” to
  describe a coronal dimming is more than just a simple coincidence.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Empirical Solar Wind Forecasting from the Chromosphere
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2007ApJ...659..738L    Altcode: 2007astro.ph..1348L
  Recently, we correlated the inferred structure of the solar
  chromospheric plasma topography with solar wind velocity and composition
  data measured at 1 AU. We now offer a physical justification of these
  relationships and present initial results of an empirical prediction
  model based on them. While still limited by the fundamentally complex
  physics behind the origins of the solar wind and how its structure
  develops in the magnetic photosphere and expands into the heliosphere,
  our model provides a near-continuous range of solar wind speeds and
  composition quantities that are simply estimated from the inferred
  structure of the chromosphere. We suggest that the derived quantities
  may provide input to other, more sophisticated, prediction tools or
  models such as those that study coronal mass ejection (CME) propagation
  and solar energetic particle (SEP) generation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An Empirical Solar Wind Forecast Model From The Chromosphere
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2006AGUFMSH44A..08L    Altcode:
  Recently, we [McIntosh and Leamon, ApJL, 624, 117, 2005] correlated
  the inferred topography of the solar chromospheric plasma with in situ
  solar wind velocity and composition data measured at 1~AU. Specifically,
  the measured separation in height of the TRACE 1600Å\ and 1700Å\
  UV band pass filters correlate very strongly with solar wind
  velocity and inversely with the ratio of ionic oxygen (O^{7+/O^{6+}})
  densities. Here, we build on our previous results by presenting initial
  results of a model developed to so predict interplanetary solar wind
  conditions, using SOHO/MDI magnetograms with 96 minute cadence as
  proxies of chromospheric topography as input. Specifically, we use the
  observed correlation between the measured chromospheric travel-time
  and the magnetic field strength to allow us to convert the into a
  (reasonable) full-disk travel-time diagnostic (in place of limited
  field of view TRACE observations). Maps of full-disk travel-time are
  scaled to wind diagnostic maps which are then "forward" mapped into
  the heliosphere using a PFSS model. The resulting wind forecast matches
  the observed state of the solar wind remarkably well for a simple model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Role of Magnetoconvection in the Evolution of Active
    Regions Before, During and After the Eruption of Coronal Mass
    Ejections
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.
2006AGUFMSH43B1529M    Altcode:
  We discuss the pre-eruptive evolution of an active region filament
  and the evolution of the ensuing post-eruptive "coronal dimming"
  based on observations of the EUV corona from the Solar and Heliospheric
  Observatory and the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer. We speculate
  that the erosion of coronal loop footpoints anchored in the weakest
  magnetic portions of an active region by magneto-convective flux
  emergence driven reconnection acts as a stochastic "tether cutting"
  mechanism. We discuss how this erosion of tethering magnetic flux is
  capable of creating a topological instability and eventual coronal
  mass ejection (CME) eruption. The magnetoconvection-driven magnetic
  reconnection and the global magnetic enviroment of the plasma are
  equally important in the "filling" and apparent motion of the region
  following the eruption of the CME. Further, we speculate that coronal
  dimmings could pose a potential secondary source of driving momentum
  to the CMEs that cause their initial appearance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Two New Results in Solar Wind Turbulence
Authors: Smith, C. W.; Vasquez, B. J.; Hamilton, K.; Leamon, R. J.
2006AGUFMSH12A..02S    Altcode:
  We have created a data base of interplanetary magnetic field spectra
  from over 900 separate solar wind intervals at 1 AU using data from
  the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) spacecraft. These intervals
  embrace a broad range of solar wind conditions including fast-
  and slow-wind conditions, rarefaction regions, shocked plasma, and
  magenetic clouds. Every attempt was made to identify samples from the
  broadest possible range of solar wind conditions without regard for
  occurrence frequency. We have examined the ratio of magnetic power
  in the component perpendicular to the mean field to that parallel
  to the mean field (the so-called variance anisotropy) as measured
  in the high-frequency regime of the inertial range and find it to be
  strongly correlated to the proton beta. The variance anisotropy may
  be a proxy for the spectrum of density fluctuations in this region of
  the spectrum that is unresolved by ACE instruments and that is often
  unresolved by current flight hardware. The observed correlation with
  proton beta appears to be in keeping with predictions derived from
  magnetohydrodynamic turbulence concepts where the compressive component
  is driven by the incompressible turbulence in the low turbulent Mach
  number regime. This apparent agreement strongly suggests that the
  compressive component arises from in situ dynamics and has little if
  anything to do with solar origins. We have also investigated the nature
  of turbulent magnetic dissipation range. Focussing on the spectral
  properties at spacecraft frequencies ≥ 0.5 Hz, we show that while
  the inertial range at lower frequencies displays a tightly constrained
  range of spectral indexes, the dissipation range exhibits a broad
  range of power law indexes. We show that the explanation for this
  variation lies with the dependence of the dissipation range spectrum
  on the rate of energy cascade through the inertial range such that
  steeper spectral forms result from greater cascade rates.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Turbulent Cascade Rates in the Upper Inertial Range
Authors: Hamilton, K.; Vasquez, B. J.; Smith, C. W.; MacBride, B. T.;
   Leamon, R. J.
2006AGUFMSH11B..05H    Altcode:
  We have constructed a data base from ACE spacecraft measurements of
  solar wind magnetic field fluctuations at the high end of the inertial
  range near 1 AU. Using magnetic field measurements outside of magnetic
  clouds in combination with plasma measurements, we have evaluated
  expressions for the Kolmogorov and Kraichnan cascade rates at 0.01
  Hz from magnetic field power spectra. We have examined these rates
  as a function of proton temperature and solar wind speed and have
  compared them to the expected rate based on the heating of protons
  at 1 AU. We find that the average Kolmogorov rate is consistently
  more than a factor of 10 greater than expected. We conclude that the
  cascade rate cannot be estimated using a Kolmogorov prescription and
  power spectra. The Kraichnan rate is close to the expected rate and
  is potentially a valid way to estimate the cascade rate.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Empirical Solar Wind Forecasting from the Chromosphere
Authors: Leamon, R.; McIntosh, S. W.
2006ESASP.617E..13L    Altcode: 2006soho...17E..13L
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dependence of the Dissipation Range Spectrum of Interplanetary
    Magnetic Fluctuationson the Rate of Energy Cascade
Authors: Smith, Charles W.; Hamilton, Kathleen; Vasquez, Bernard J.;
   Leamon, Robert J.
2006ApJ...645L..85S    Altcode:
  We investigate the nature of turbulent magnetic dissipation in the solar
  wind. We employ a database describing the spectra of over 800 intervals
  of interplanetary magnetic field and solar wind measurements recorded
  by the ACE spacecraft at 1 AU. We focus on the spectral properties of
  the dissipation range that forms at spacecraft frequencies &gt;=0.3 Hz
  and show that while the inertial range at lower frequencies displays
  a tightly constrained range of spectral indexes, the dissipation
  range exhibits a broad range of power-law indexes. We show that
  the explanation for this variation lies with the dependence of the
  dissipation range spectrum on the rate of energy cascade through the
  inertial range such that steeper spectral forms result from greater
  cascade rates.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Two New Results in Solar Wind Turbulence
Authors: Smith, Charles W.; Hamilton, K.; Vasquez, B. J.; Leamon, R. J.
2006SPD....37.1105S    Altcode: 2006BAAS...38..239S
  We have created a data base of interplanetary magnetic field spectra
  from over 900 separate solar wind intervals at 1 AU using data from
  the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) spacecraft. These intervals
  embrace a broad range of solar wind conditions including fast- and
  slow-wind conditions, rarefaction regions, shocked plasma, and magenetic
  clouds. Every attempt was made to develop a data base that samples the
  broadest possible range of solar wind conditions without regard for
  occurrence frequency. We have examined the ratio of magnetic power
  in the component perpendicular to the mean field to that parallel
  to the mean field (the so-called variance anisotropy) as measured
  in the high-frequency regime of the inertial range and find it to be
  strongly correlated to the proton beta. The variance anisotropy may
  be a proxy for the spectrum of density fluctuations in this region of
  the spectrum that is unresolved by ACE instruments and that is often
  unresolved by current flight hardware. The observed correlation with
  proton beta appears to be in keeping with predictions derived from
  magnetohydrodynamic turbulence concepts where the compressive component
  is driven by the incompressible turbulence in the low turbulent Mach
  number regime. This apparent agreement strongly suggests that the
  compressive component arises from in situ dynamics and has little
  if anything to do with solar origins. We have also investigated the
  nature of turbulent magnetic dissipation range. We show that while the
  inertial range at lower frequencies displays a tightly constrained
  range of spectral indexes, the dissipation range exhibits a broad
  range of power law indexes. We show that the explanation for this
  variation lies with the dependence of the dissipation range spectrum
  on the rate of energy cascade through the inertial range such that
  steeper spectral forms result from greater cascade rates.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dissipation Range Spectral Characteristics at 1 AU
Authors: Hamilton, K.; Smith, C. W.; Leamon, R. J.
2005ESASP.592..547H    Altcode: 2005soho...16E.103H; 2005ESASP.592E.103H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Origins of the Solar Wind: Composition and
    Correlations
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; McIntosh, S. W.
2005AGUSMSH11C..04L    Altcode:
  Diagnostics of atmospheric "depth" in the chromosphere are made
  for several observing periods in active, coronal hole and quiet Sun
  regions. We track the coronal outflows from these regions to 1 AU using
  a ballistic travel time approximation and correlate the chromospheric
  quantities with counterpart in situ quantities from the same packets
  of plasma Recently, we1 have shown that derived diagnostic quantities
  correlate very strongly with solar wind velocity and inversely with the
  ratio of ionic oxygen composition (O7+/O6+). We extend this work to show
  that strong correlations exist between the state of the chromosphere
  and other in situ observables, including proton temperatures, alpha
  particle temperatures and alpha/proton ratios. (1) McIntosh and Leamon,
  ApJL, submitted 2005

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The TRACE Inter-Network Oscillations (INO) Program II:
    Observations of Limb and Coronal Hole Regions
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Crotser, D.; Leamon, R. J.; Fleck, B.;
   Tarbell, T. D.
2005AGUSMSH13C..06M    Altcode:
  We will present results of the TRACE Inter-Network Oscillations (INO)
  observing program from 2003 to the present. The INO program uses
  near-simultaneous observations in the 1600Å and 1700Å UV continuum
  pass bands as an acoustic probe of chromospheric structure. In
  this poster we will discuss the INO observations of limb, polar and
  coronal hole regions and show the key results found, thus far. These
  observations offer us a remote means to study the structure and behavior
  of the chromopsheric plasma topography at a potential driving base
  for the heliospheric plasma system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Is There a Chromospheric Footprint of the Solar Wind?
Authors: McIntosh, S. W.; Leamon, R. J.
2005ApJ...624L.117M    Altcode:
  We correlate the inferred structure of the solar chromospheric
  plasma topography with in situ solar wind velocity and composition
  data measured at 1 AU. Diagnostics of atmospheric “depth” in the
  chromosphere are made for several observing periods in active,
  coronal hole, and quiet-Sun regions. We demonstrate that the
  inferred chromospheric diagnostics correlate very strongly with
  solar wind velocity and inversely with the ratio of ionic oxygen
  (O<SUP>+7</SUP>/O<SUP>+6</SUP>) densities. These correlations suggest
  that the structure of the solar wind is rooted deeper in the outer
  solar atmosphere than has been previously considered.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Statistical Relationships in Characteristics of a Sample of
    Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections Detected Near Earth
Authors: McKenzie, D. E.; Wilson, K. G.; Leamon, R. J.
2005AGUSMSH32A..02M    Altcode:
  Using in situ measurements of solar wind conditions near Earth, we
  compared the signatures of a sample of transients, which we tentatively
  identify as magnetic clouds. Images from several solar observatories
  were utilized to identify the source eruptions which launched each
  ICME from the Sun. The plasma conditions within these structures were
  compared, and trends were sought that would correlate with the type of
  solar progenitor structure that spawned the eruptions. Additionally,
  a magnetic model was fitted to the measurements of each ICME detected
  near Earth. We present findings that suggest a systematic difference
  in cloud structure, depending on progenitor type; also, we present
  results indicating a relationship between the speed of transit from
  Sun to Earth and the magnetic field strength in the ICME.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Importance of Topology and Reconnection in Active
    Region CMEs
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.
2005IAUS..226..302L    Altcode:
  A distinctive characteristic of interplanetary magnetic clouds is
  their rope-like magnetic structure, &lt;e1&gt;i.e.&lt;/e1&gt;, their
  smoothly-varying helical field lines whose pitch increases from their
  core to their boundary. Because this regular structure helps to make
  MCs particularly geo-effective, it is important to understand how it
  arises.&lt;/p&gt;We discuss recent work which relates the magnetic and
  topological parameters of MCs to associated solar active regions. This
  work strongly supports the notion that MCs associated with active region
  eruptions are formed by magnetic reconnection between these regions
  and their larger-scale surroundings, rather than simple eruption or
  entrainment of pre-existing structures in the corona or chromosphere. We
  discuss our findings in the context of other recent works on both the
  solar and interplanetary sides, including ion composition and various
  MHD models of magnetic cloud formation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helicity of Magnetic Clouds and Their Associated Active Regions
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Canfield, Richard C.; Jones, Sarah L.;
   Lambkin, Keith; Lundberg, Brian J.; Pevtsov, Alexei A.
2005HiA....13..132L    Altcode:
  Magnetic clouds are closely associated with Coronal Mass Ejections
  (CMEs). Most CMEs are associated with active regions. What is the
  relationship between the topology of these clouds and the associated
  active region? For our purposes magnetic clouds can be modeled
  adequately by a cylindrical force-free magnetic configuration (Lepping
  1990). We have modeled the magnetic field topology of 14 magnetic
  clouds and their associated active regions to determine values of
  the force-free field parameter for both as well as total currents and
  fluxes. We find that the number of turns of the magnetic field in the
  full length of the cloud is typically an order of magnitude greater
  than the same quantity in the associated active region. This finding
  compels us to reject models of flux rope formation that do not invoke
  magnetic reconnection and helicity conservation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dissipation Range Observations in Interplanetary Magnetic
    Clouds
Authors: Hamilton, K.; Smith, C. W.; Leamon, R. J.
2004AGUFMSH51C0289H    Altcode:
  In two earlier papers Leamon et al. [1998a,b] examined the properties
  of the dissipation range for interplanetary magnetic fluctuations at
  1 AU. In the first paper they focused on 33 1-hour samples of open
  field line measurements chosen without any regard for context other
  than being sufficiently well-behaved for sufficient time to yield
  good spectra. All 33 intervals were chosen from WIND/MFI measurements
  in the solar wind near 1 AU. They found that the dissipation range
  typically set in at frequencies slightly greater than the proton
  cyclotron frequency, had consistently steeper forms than the associated
  inertial range spectra with power law indexes generally between -3 and
  -5, were consistently more compressive than the inertial range, and
  possessed wave vectors more nearly field aligned than in the inertial
  range. In the second paper they chose to examine intervals from within
  a single magnetic cloud. They found that the cloud spectra showed
  generally less steepening in the dissipation range than did the open
  field line examples. Inertial range fluctuations were significantly
  less compressive in the cloud examples. Very little energy was seen
  to reside with wave vectors parallel to the mean magnetic field
  in either the inertial or dissipation ranges. We have examined 30
  additional magnetic clouds observed by ACE in order to develop a
  more statistically significant characterization of magnetic cloud
  dissipation range spectra near 1 AU. We find that the Leamon results
  characterize frequently observed aspects of cloud spectra, but that
  they constitute a common example within a range of possible results. In
  an effort to better understand the in situ heating of magnetic clouds,
  we present the statistics we have gathered and compare these results
  with typical open field line observations. Leamon et al., JGR, A103,
  4775--4787, 1998a Leamon et al., GRL, 25, 2505--2509, 1998b

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Geoeffective CMEs, Filaments, and Sigmoids
Authors: McKenzie, D. E.; Leamon, R. J.
2004AAS...204.3801M    Altcode: 2004BAAS...36..712M
  Coronal mass ejections--particularly those with flux rope
  structures--have the potential to trigger geomagnetic storms, depending
  on the properties of the flux ropes. Eruptions of both filaments and
  coronal sigmoids have been indicated as important drivers of space
  weather, and both filaments and sigmoids have been modeled with flux
  rope structure. However, the analysis reported by Leamon et al. (2002)
  suggested that magnetic clouds associated with filament eruptions are
  different from magnetic clouds associated with erupting sigmoids. In
  this investigation, we are exploring the possibility of predicting
  the geoeffectiveness of CMEs through analysis of the pre-eruption
  magnetic structures.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helicity of magnetic clouds and their associated active regions
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Canfield, Richard C.; Jones, Sarah L.;
   Lambkin, Keith; Lundberg, Brian J.; Pevtsov, Alexei A.
2004JGRA..109.5106L    Altcode:
  In this work we relate the magnetic and topological parameters of twelve
  interplanetary magnetic clouds to associated solar active regions. We
  use a cylindrically symmetric constant-α force-free model to derive
  field line twist, total current, and total magnetic flux from in situ
  observations of magnetic clouds. We compare these properties with those
  of the associated solar active regions, which we infer from solar
  vector magnetograms. Our comparison of fluxes and currents reveals:
  (1) the total flux ratios Φ<SUB>MC</SUB>/Φ<SUB>AR</SUB> tend to be of
  order unity, (2) the total current ratios I<SUB>MC</SUB>/I<SUB>AR</SUB>
  are orders of magnitude smaller, and (3) there is a statistically
  significant proportionality between them. Our key findings in comparing
  total twists αL are that (1) the values of (αL)<SUB>MC</SUB> are
  typically an order of magnitude greater than those of (αL)<SUB>AR</SUB>
  and (2) there is no statistically significant sign or amplitude
  relationship between them. These findings compel us to believe that
  magnetic clouds associated with active region eruptions are formed by
  magnetic reconnection between these regions and their larger-scale
  surroundings, rather than simple eruption of preexisting structures
  in the corona or chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Physics of superfast coronal mass ejections observed during
    cycle 23
Authors: Lawrence, G.; Gallagher, P.; Leamon, R.; Stenborg, G.
2004cosp...35.2882L    Altcode: 2004cosp.meet.2882L
  Between January 1996 and the present time the Large Angle Spectrometric
  Coronagraphs (LASCO) onboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory
  (SOHO) have observed over 6000 coronal mass ejections (CMEs). The
  typical speed of these CMEs has been found to vary between 400-500 km/s
  during the present solar cycle, and the vast majority of all CMEs are
  found to have speeds below 1,000 km/s. However, a high-speed tail to
  the distribution is clearly present, and a small fraction of all CMEs,
  20 events in total, are found to have speeds in the range 2,000 - 2,500
  km/s. This category of 'superfast CMEs' is doubly significant because
  they appear to correspond the extreme limits of physics involved in the
  initiation and acceleration processes, and because such events when
  directed earthwards have characteristically short transit times and
  hence leave little reaction/assessment time for potentially sensitive
  systems. The superfast CMEs are all associated with significant solar
  flares, and the large flare/very fast CME paradigm is studied. Of
  particular interest is the acceleration of such very fast CMEs and
  the nature, magnitude and timing of the acceleration process is
  characterised within the limits of the observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What Is the Role of the Kink Instability in Solar Coronal
    Eruptions?
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Canfield, Richard C.; Blehm, Zachary;
   Pevtsov, Alexei A.
2003ApJ...596L.255L    Altcode:
  We report the results of two simple studies that seek observational
  evidence that solar coronal loops are unstable to the MHD kink
  instability above a certain critical value of the total twist. First,
  we have used Yohkoh soft X-ray telescope image sequences to measure the
  shapes of 191 X-ray sigmoids and to determine the histories of eruption
  (evidenced by cusp and arcade signatures) of their associated active
  regions. We find that the distribution of sigmoid shapes is quite
  narrow and the frequency of eruption does not depend significantly on
  shape. Second, we have used Mees Solar Observatory vector magnetograms
  to estimate the large-scale total twist of active regions in which
  flare-related signatures of eruption are observed. We find no evidence
  of eruption for values of large-scale total twist remotely approaching
  the threshold for the kink instability.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Cloud and Active Region Topology Compared
Authors: Canfield, R. C.; Leamon, R. J.; Jones, S. L.; Lambkin, K.;
   Lundberg, B.
2003SPD....34.0518C    Altcode: 2003BAAS...35..817C
  Magnetic clouds are closely associated with Coronal Mass Ejections
  (CMEs). Most CMEs are associated with active regions. What is
  the relationship between the topology of these clouds and the
  associated active region? For our purposes magnetic clouds can be
  modeled adequately by a cylindrical force-free magnetic configuration
  (Lepping, 1990). We have modeled the magnetic field topology of 14
  magnetic clouds and their associated active regions to determine
  values of the force-free field parameter for both, as well as total
  currents and fluxes. We find that the number of turns of the twisted
  magnetic field in the full length of the cloud is typically an order of
  magnitude greater than the same quantity across the associated active
  region. This finding compels us to reject models of flux rope formation
  that do not invoke magnetic reconnection and helicity conservation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Cloud and Active Region Topology Compared
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Canfield, Richard C.; Jones, Sarah L.;
   Lundberg, Brian
2003IAUJD...3E..24L    Altcode:
  Magnetic clouds are closely associated with Coronal Mass Ejections
  (CMEs). Most CMEs are associated with active regions. What is the
  relationship between the topology of these clouds and the associated
  active region? For our purposes magnetic clouds can be modeled
  adequately by a cylindrical force-free magnetic configuration (Lepping
  1990). We have modeled the magnetic field topology of 14 magnetic
  clouds and their associated active regions to determine values of
  the force-free field parameter for both as well as total currents and
  fluxes. We find that the number of turns of the magnetic field in the
  full length of the cloud is typically an order of magnitude greater
  than the same quantity in the associated active region. This finding
  compels us to reject models of flux rope formation that do not invoke
  magnetic reconnection and helicity conservation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Properties of magnetic clouds and geomagnetic storms associated
    with eruption of coronal sigmoids
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Canfield, Richard C.; Pevtsov, Alexei A.
2002JGRA..107.1234L    Altcode:
  We study 46 solar coronal eruptions associated with sigmoids seen
  in images from the Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT). We relate
  the properties of the sigmoids to in situ measurements at 1 AU and
  geomagnetic storms. Our primary result is that erupting sigmoids tend
  to produce geoeffective magnetic clouds (MCs): 85% of the erupting
  sigmoidal structures studied spawned at least a "moderate" (|Dst| ≥
  50 nT) geomagnetic storm. A collateral result is that MCs associated
  with sigmoids do not show the same solar-terrestrial correlations
  as those associated with filaments and, as such, form a distinct
  class of events. First, rather than reversing with the global solar
  dipole (at solar maximum), the leading field in MCs weakly (2:1)
  shows a solar cycle (Hale polarity) based correlation (reversing at
  solar minimum). Second, whereas the handedness of MCs associated with
  filament eruptions is strongly (95%) related to their launch hemisphere,
  that of MCs associated with sigmoid eruptions is only weakly (∼70%)
  so related. Finally, we are unaware of any model of the magnetic fields
  of sigmoids and their eruption that gives a useful prediction of the
  leading field orientation of their associated MC.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What is the role of the kink instability in eruption of
    X-ray sigmoids?
Authors: Leamon, R.; Canfield, R.; Blehm, Z.; Pevtsov, A.
2002AGUSMSH32D..03L    Altcode:
  Observers see ample evidence of helical structures in erupting solar
  filaments, X-ray sigmoids and CMEs. It has been argued that the total
  amount of twist in a given loop is a factor in its MHD stability
  [Priest, 1984]. A simple model illustrates this point. Consider a
  cylindrical force-free magnetic field with constant α = T /L, where
  L is the length of the tube and T is the total twist contained within
  it. The tube is stable to the MHD kink instability for total twist
  below a critical value T<SUB>c</SUB> ~ 2 π . Rust and Kumar [1996]
  compared the shape of 49 transient, bright sigmoid structures to the
  signature of a helically kinked flux rope. From a study of the aspect
  ratios of these transient sigmoid brightenings, they inferred that the
  cause of CMEs is the eruption of an unstable, kinked magnetic field. We
  have analyzed 155 X-ray sigmoids in the the Yohkoh SXT data, measuring
  the angle γ at which the sigmoid crosses its central axis and the
  length of the sigmoid along that axis (which is not identical to L,
  but is closely related to it). In a simple 2D force-free analysis,
  Pevtsov et al. [1997] showed that α = ( π / L ) sin γ , implying
  that sin γ is a measure of the total twist T. By simple visual
  inspection of the Yohkoh SXT movies, we have identified well-known
  signatures of eruption, i.e., X-ray cusps and arcades. We find no
  relationship between the frequency of occurrence of such signatures
  of eruption and sin γ . {Pevtsov, A. A.}, {Canfield, R. C.}, and
  {McClymont, A. N.}, Astrophys J., 481, 973, 1997. {Priest, E. R.},
  {Solar Magneto-Hydrodynamics}, {Reidel: Dordrecht}, {1984}. {Rust,
  D. M.}, and {Kumar, A.}, Astrophys J., 464, L199, 1996.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What is the role of the kink instability in eruption of
    X-ray sigmoids?
Authors: Canfield, R. C.; Leamon, R. J.; Blehm, Z.; Pevtsov, A. A.
2002AAS...200.2001C    Altcode: 2002BAAS...34..672C
  Observers see ample evidence of helical structures in erupting solar
  filaments, X-ray sigmoids and CMEs. It has been argued that the total
  amount of twist in a given loop is a factor in its MHD stability
  [Priest, 1984]. A simple model illustrates this point. Consider
  a cylindrical force-free magnetic field with constant α = T /L,
  where L is the length of the tube and T is the total twist contained
  within it. The tube is stable to the MHD kink instability for total
  twist below a critical value T<SUB>c</SUB> ~ 2 π . Rust and Kumar
  [1996] compared the shape of 49 transient, bright sigmoid structures
  to the signature of a helically kinked flux rope. From a study of the
  aspect ratios of these transient sigmoid brightenings, they inferred
  that the cause of CMEs is the eruption of an unstable, kinked magnetic
  field. We have analyzed 191 X-ray sigmoids in the the Yohkoh SXT data,
  measuring the angle γ at which the sigmoid crosses its central axis
  and the length of the sigmoid along that axis (which is not identical
  to L, but is closely related to it). In a simple 2D force-free analysis,
  Pevtsov et al. [1997] showed that α = ( π / L ) sin γ , implying that
  sin γ is a measure of the total twist T. By simple visual inspection
  of the Yohkoh SXT movies, we have identified well-known signatures of
  eruption, i.e., X-ray cusps and arcades. We find no relationship between
  the frequency of occurrence of such signatures of eruption and sin γ .

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Properties of Magnetic Clouds Resulting from Eruption of
    Coronal Sigmoids
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; Canfield, R. C.; Pevtsov, A. A.
2001AGUSM..SH31C08L    Altcode:
  We study over 40 eruptions which originated with coronal sigmoids seen
  in Yohkoh SXT images, with subsequently observed in situ magnetic
  clouds (MCs) and geomagnetic storms at 1~AU. We correlate solar and
  interplanetary features so as to infer terrestrial event properties
  from their solar sources. A collateral result from studying this
  database is that CMEs and MCs resulting from erupting sigmoids seem
  not to adhere to rules such as leading B<SUB>z</SUB> versus solar
  dipole orientation and, as such, form a distinct class of events. %
  Instead of a large-scale dipole rule, we find there is a weak (3:2)
  solar cycle (Hale polarity)-based rule for leading interplanetary
  field in MCs. We find that the helicity of magnetic clouds is much more
  strongly correlated (&gt;90%) with launch hemisphere than the 60--70%\
  rule of photospheric active region helicity. This rule appears to hold
  for all CMEs, taking the 28 years of events of Bothmer &amp;\ Rust
  [“Coronal Mass Ejections,” AGU Monograph Series 99, 139, 1997]. %
  At least half of Bothmer &amp;\ Rust's events are associated with
  disparitions brusques, outside active regions. We therefore suggest
  that active region sigmoids and disappearing filaments are the origins
  of two different classes of CMEs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD-driven Kinetic Dissipation in the Solar Wind and Corona
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; Matthaeus, W. H.; Smith, C. W.; Zank, G. P.;
   Mullan, D. J.; Oughton, S.
2000ApJ...537.1054L    Altcode:
  Mechanisms for the deposition of heat in the lower coronal plasma
  are discussed, emphasizing recent attempts to reconcile the fluid and
  kinetic perspectives. Structures at magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) scales may
  drive a nonlinear cascade, preferentially exciting high perpendicular
  wavenumber fluctuations. Relevant dissipative kinetic processes must be
  identified that can absorb the associated energy flux. The relationship
  between the MHD cascade and direct cyclotron absorption, including
  cyclotron sweep, is discussed. We conclude that for coronal and solar
  wind parameters the perpendicular cascade cannot be neglected and may
  be more rapid than cyclotron sweep. Solar wind observational evidence
  suggests the relevance of the ion inertial scale, which is associated
  with current sheet thickness during reconnection. We conclude that a
  significant fraction of dissipation in the corona and solar wind likely
  proceeds through a perpendicular cascade and small-scale reconnection,
  coupled to kinetic processes that act at oblique wavevectors.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dissipation of magnetic fluctuations in the solar wind
Authors: Leamon, Robert James
2000PhDT........10L    Altcode:
  The dissipation range for interplanetary magnetic field fluctuations
  is formed by those fluctuations with spatial scales comparable to
  the gyroradius of a thermal ion. The dissipation range represents
  the final fate of magnetic energy that is transferred from the
  largest spatial scales via nonlinear processes until resonance with
  the thermal ions removes the energy from the spectrum and heats
  the background distribution. Typically, the dissipation range at
  1 AU sets in at spacecraft frame frequencies of a few tenths of a
  Hertz. It is characterized by a steepening of the power spectrum
  and often demonstrates a bias of the polarization or magnetic
  helicity spectrum. We examine WIND observations of inertial and
  dissipation range spectra in an attempt to better understand the
  processes that form the dissipation range and how these processes
  depend on the ambient solar wind parameters (e.g., IMF intensity,
  ambient proton density and temperature, etc.). Despite the commonly
  held belief that parallel-propagating waves such as Alfvén waves
  form the bulk of inertial range fluctuations, we argue that such
  waves are inconsistent with spectral break location data. Instead,
  we show that kinetic Alfvén waves propagating at large angles to
  the background magnetic field are consistent with the observations,
  and we describe some possible motivations for this solution. We also
  show that MHD turbulence consisting of a slab/2-D composite geometry is
  consistent with the observations and may form the dissipation range,
  thereby being responsible for heating the background ions. Lastly,
  we demonstrate that heating of the background electrons is a likely,
  or possibly, necessary, byproduct of magnetic dissipation.

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Title: Dissipation range dynamics: Kinetic Alfvén waves and the
    importance of β<SUB>e</SUB>
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Smith, Charles W.; Ness, Norman F.; Wong,
   Hung K.
1999JGR...10422331L    Altcode:
  In a previous paper we argued that the damping of obliquely
  propagating kinetic Alfvén waves, chiefly by resonant mechanisms,
  was a likely explanation for the formation of the dissipation range for
  interplanetary magnetic field fluctuations. This suggestion was based
  largely on observations of the dissipation range at 1 AU as recorded
  by the Wind spacecraft. We pursue this suggestion here with both a
  general examination of the damping of obliquely propagating kinetic
  Alfvén waves and an additional examination of the observations. We
  explore the damping rates of kinetic Alfvén waves under a wide range of
  interplanetary conditions using numerical solutions of the linearized
  Maxwell-Vlasov equations and demonstrate that these waves display the
  nearly isotropic dissipation properties inferred from the previous
  paper. Using these solutions, we present a simple model to predict
  the onset of the dissipation range and compare these predictions to
  the observations. In the process we demonstrate that electron Landau
  damping plays a significant role in the damping of interplanetary
  magnetic field fluctuations which leads to significant heating of the
  thermal electrons.

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Title: Considerations limiting cyclotron-resonant damping of cascading
    interplanetary turbulence and why the `slab' approximation fails
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Matthaeus, William H.; Smith, Charles W.;
   Wong, Hung K.
1999AIPC..471..465L    Altcode: 1999sowi.conf..465L
  In attempting to understand the dissipation of MHD scale fluctuation
  energy in the solar wind, the challenge is to harness kinetic
  theory (1, 2) effects in a way that is consistent with the presence
  of an active spectral cascade in a collisionless plasma. Recent
  observational studies (3, 4) have begun the task of sorting out the
  constraints that spacecraft observations place on dissipation range
  dynamical processes. Here we examine some implications of inertial-
  and dissipation-range correlation and spectral analyses extracted from
  33 intervals of WIND magnetic field data (4). When field polarity and
  signatures of cross helicity and magnetic helicity are examined most
  of the data sets suggest some role of resonant dissipative processes
  involving thermal protons. Here we seek an explanation for this effect
  by postulating that an active spectral cascade into the dissipation
  range is balanced by a combination of resonant and nonresonant kinetic
  dissipation mechanisms. By solving a pair of rate equations, and
  employing constraints from the data, this theory suggests that the ratio
  of the two methods of dissipation is of order unity. With an additional
  assumption that mixed cross helicity corresponds to random directional
  sweeping, the theory approximates the relationship between magnetic and
  cross helicities seen in the WIND datasets. Although highly simplified,
  this approach appears to account for several observed features, and
  explains why complete absorption, and the corresponding pure signature
  in the magnetic helicity spectrum, is usually not observed. The results
  of the theory are consistent with magnetic fluctuations having oblique
  wave vectors, which is strongly supported by the inability of models
  based on parallel-propagating waves to adequately predict the onset
  of the dissipation range.

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Title: Dynamics of the dissipation range for solar wind magnetic
    fluctuations
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Ness, Norman F.; Smith, Charles W.; Wong,
   Hung K.
1999AIPC..471..469L    Altcode: 1999sowi.conf..469L
  The dissipation range of interplanetary magnetic field (IMF)
  fluctuations is perhaps the least-studied aspect of the IMF. This is
  undoubtedly due, at least in part, to the large volume of data required
  to perform thorough studies of the high-frequency spectrum. We examine
  the properties of the dissipation range at 1 AU as observed by the
  WIND spacecraft, which include: (1) a general steepening of the power
  spectrum at spacecraft-frame frequencies comparable to, but greater
  than, the proton cyclotron frequency; (2) magnetic fluctuations that
  are largely transverse to the mean magnetic field, but less transverse
  than is seen in the high-frequency extent of the inertial range; (3)
  significant, but not maximal helicity and polarization signatures that
  indicate that ion-resonant dissipation is contributing to the magnetic
  spectrum; (4) a dominant fraction of the total magnetic energy is
  associated with wavevectors at large angles to the mean magnetic field;
  and (5) strong plasma β effects in the above results. In addition,
  we present a comparison of the observed onset of dissipation with a
  theory based on Kinetic Alfvén waves.

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Title: The Dynamics of Dissipation Range Fluctuations with Application
    to Cosmic Ray Propagation Theory
Authors: Leamon, Robert
1999ICRC....6..366L    Altcode: 1999ICRC...26f.366L
  Unlike larger spatial scales of the interplanetary magnetic field
  fluctuation spectrum, study of the smallest scale fluctuations
  (comparable to the gyroradius of a thermal proton) which form
  the so-called dissipation range has been somewhat neglected. This
  spectral range is characterized by a steeply falling power spectrum
  and frequently nonzero magnetic helicity, features thought to result
  from the dissipation of magnetic fluctuations by thermal particle
  populations. Although this range contains relatively little energy,
  it is relevant to energetic particle scattering because low-rigidity
  particles and all particles at large pitch angles become resonant with
  these fluctuations. Analyzing power and helicity spectra of WIND data,
  we deduce the orientation of the wavevectors and find that most of
  the wave energy is associated with wavevectors at large angles to the
  mean magnetic field. We place these observations within an existing
  framework for turbulent scattering of cosmic rays.

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Title: Fluctuations, Dissipation and Heating in the Corona
Authors: Matthaeus, W. H.; Zank, G. P.; Leamon, R. J.; Smith, C. W.;
   Mullan, D. J.; Oughton, S.
1999SSRv...87..269M    Altcode:
  Mechanisms for the deposition of heat in the lower coronal plasma
  are discussed, emphasizing recent attempts to reconcile the fluid
  and kinetic perspectives. Structures at the MHD scales are believed
  to act as reservoirs for fluctuation energy, which in turn drive a
  nonlinear cascade process. Kinetic processes act at smaller spatial
  scales and more rapid time scales. Cascade-driven processes are
  contrasted with direct cyclotron absorption, and this distinction is
  echoed in the contrast between frequency and wavenumber spectra of the
  fluctuations. Observational constraints are also discussed, along with
  estimates of the relative efficiency of cascade and cyclotron processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Contribution of Cyclotron-resonant Damping to Kinetic
    Dissipation of Interplanetary Turbulence
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Matthaeus, William H.; Smith, Charles W.;
   Wong, Hung K.
1998ApJ...507L.181L    Altcode: 1998astro.ph..9017L
  We examine some implications of inertial range and dissipation range
  correlation and spectral analyses extracted from 33 intervals of Wind
  magnetic field data. When field polarity and signatures of cross
  helicity and magnetic helicity are examined, most of the data sets
  suggest some role of cyclotron-resonant dissipative processes involving
  thermal protons. We postulate that an active spectral cascade into the
  dissipation range is balanced by a combination of cyclotron-resonant
  and noncyclotron-resonant kinetic dissipation mechanisms, of which
  only the former induces a magnetic helicity signature. A rate balance
  theory, constrained by the data, suggests that the ratio of the two
  mechanisms is of order unity. While highly simplified, this approach
  appears to account for several observed features and explains why
  complete cyclotron absorption, and the corresponding pure magnetic
  helicity signature, is usually not observed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Characteristics of magnetic fluctuations within coronal mass
ejections: The January 1997 event
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Smith, Charles W.; Ness, Norman F.
1998GeoRL..25.2505L    Altcode:
  We determine the geometry of the fluctuations of the magnetic field at
  frequencies just above the proton gyrofrequency for the January 10, 1997
  CME and the magnetic cloud within. The transverse magnetic fluctuations
  represent a greater fraction of the magnetic energy than is the case in
  the typical undisturbed solar wind. The break in the power spectrum that
  is associated with the the onset of magnetic dissipation falls within
  the frequency range of interest. The fluctuation geometry is markedly
  different above and below the spectral break frequency. The inertial
  range geometry remains unchanged in the cloud with only ∼30% of the
  energy associated with field-aligned wave vectors. The dissipation
  range wave vectors are highly oblique to the mean magnetic field B
  with up to 96% of the energy associated with oblique wave vectors.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observational constraints on the dynamics of the interplanetary
    magnetic field dissipation range
Authors: Leamon, Robert J.; Smith, Charles W.; Ness, Norman F.;
   Matthaeus, William H.; Wong, Hung K.
1998JGR...103.4775L    Altcode:
  The dissipation range for interplanetary magnetic field fluctuations
  is formed by those fluctuations with spatial scales comparable
  to the gyroradius or ion inertial length of a thermal ion. It is
  reasonable to assume that the dissipation range represents the
  final fate of magnetic energy that is transferred from the largest
  spatial scales via nonlinear processes until kinetic coupling with
  the background plasma removes the energy from the spectrum and heats
  the background distribution. Typically, the dissipation range at
  1 AU sets in at spacecraft frame frequencies of a few tenths of a
  hertz. It is characterized by a steepening of the power spectrum and
  often demonstrates a bias of the polarization or magnetic helicity
  spectrum. We examine Wind observations of inertial and dissipation
  range spectra in an attempt to better understand the processes that
  form the dissipation range and how these processes depend on the
  ambient solar wind parameters (interplanetary magnetic field intensity,
  ambient proton density and temperature, etc.). We focus on stationary
  intervals with well-defined inertial and dissipation range spectra. Our
  analysis shows that parallel-propagating waves, such as Alfvén waves,
  are inconsistent with the data. MHD turbulence consisting of a partly
  slab and partly two-dimensional (2-D) composite geometry is consistent
  with the observations, while thermal particle interactions with the
  2-D component may be responsible for the formation of the dissipation
  range. Kinetic Alfvén waves propagating at large angles to the
  background magnetic field are also consistent with the observations
  and may form some portion of the 2-D turbulence component.

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Title: Origin and dynamics of field nulls detected in the jovian
    magnetospheres
Authors: Southwood, D. J.; Dougherty, M. K.; Leamon, R. J.; Haynes,
   P. L.
1995AdSpR..16d.177S    Altcode: 1995AdSpR..16..177S
  A surprise discovery during the Ulysses flyby of Jupiter was the
  presence of what have been called null field events in the outer
  magnetosphere. The signatures are quite distinct from those of the
  multiple magnetodisk encounters seen closer to the planet. Subsequently,
  similar events have been identified in both Pioneer and Voyager
  spacecraft magnetometer data. We propose that these events are formed
  by the breaking off of material from the outer edge of the magnetodisk
  current sheet. We discuss their likely origin, evolution, dynamics
  and internal structure.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic nulls in the outer magnetosphere of Jupiter:
    Detections by Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft
Authors: Leamon, R. J.; Dougherty, M. K.; Southwood, D. J.; Haynes,
   P. L.
1995JGR...100.1829L    Altcode:
  First reported during the Ulysses flyby of Jupiter in February 1992,
  null events are sporadic dropouts in the magnetic field strength
  detected in the outer Jovian magnetospehre, with the magnitude of the
  field strength decreasing to values that can be less than 0.2 nT. The
  events occur in regions where the ambient field is primarily southward,
  that is, aligned with the local planetary dipole field direction and
  are distinct from the field depressions encountered in the center of
  the magnetodisk in the middle magnetosphere. They also appear distinct
  from the field structures encountered at the magnetopause. Here we
  report a survey of the occurrence of such events in the magnetic field
  data recorded by the earlier Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft passages
  through the Jovian system. All of the previous spacecraft to fly through
  the Jovian magnetosphere recorded field null events on their inbound
  passes where the field magnitude dropped below 2 nT. There is little
  or no evidence of any field reversal in the center of events. Only
  Pioneer 11, which was the only spacecraft to exit on the dayside of
  the magnetosphere, recorded events on its outbound pass.