Submitted to
International Journal of Geomagnetism and Aeronomy

Relation of cyclic variations of the solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field to the cycles of solar magnetic fields

Yu. R. Rivin and L. I. Gromova

Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere, and Radio Wave Propagation, Troitsk, Moscow Region, Russia

Received June 7, 1999


Contents


Abstract

Annual mean values of dynamical parameters of the solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field during 1984-1996 and the errors of their determination were obtained from the data of the King catalogue electron version presented in Internet. 11-year cycles of all characteristics of the interplanetary plasma and their relation to cycles of various solar magnetic fields were analyzed from them. Using this analysis, the difference in cycles of various characteristics of the interplanetary medium is demonstrated. Attention is attracted to systematic errors in determination of the plasma density performed before the beginning of the 1970s and to nonadequacy of variations of the initial interplanetary magnetic field vector to variations of its components.


Introduction

The current knowledge on plasma flows from the Sun (these flows will below be called solar wind, the definition being broader than the Parker [1976] definition which referred to the plasma flow related only to the corona hydrodynamical expansion into the interplanetary space: quiet solar wind with a velocity of sim 300 km s -1 ) show that the flows are rather complicated formations which are influenced by the variations of the large-scale solar magnetic fields including the cyclic variation with T approx 11 years. The variation of the annual dynamical parameters of the solar wind (SW) and also "frozen" into it interplanetary magnetic field (IMF, BI ) are below analyzed from these positions. The relation (different for different parameters) between the cyclic variations of the solar magnetic fields and interplanetary medium parameters is demonstrated, and some features of the experimental data in the King catalogue which aggravate their analysis are indicated.


Dynamical Parameters of the Plasma

fig01 The initial and smoothed annual values of three dynamical parameters of solar wind (the velocity V, density n, and momentum nV ) calculated for 1964-1996 from the data of the King catalogue (http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/omniweb) and [Rivin, 1989] are shown in Figure 1a. The annual parameters and their root mean square error ( s ) were determined in the calculation, the smoothing being performed with a running interval ( L = 3 years). Figure 1a shows the errors only for the initial curve of the solar wind velocity. Their average value for the entire temporal interval is langle srangle approx pm 10 km s-1 ; this value is almost by a factor of 1.5 higher in 1986-1996 than earlier during 1964-1985. The values of s for the plasma density has smaller representation scale ( langle srangle sim 0.5 cm-3 and slightly changes in the entire temporal interval.)

fig02 The comparison of the momentum variations with the velocity and density variations shown in Figure 1a and also the analyses of the dependencies nV(t) = f(V), nV(t) = f(n) shown in Figure 2 make it possible to conclude that the cyclic variations of nV are not an independent characteristic since they are determined mainly by the cyclic variations of the plasma density:

eqn001.gif(1)

where V approx const, and in the following consideration the main attention should be paid only to analyses of V and n.

fig03 Figure 3 shows the spectra of three dynamical parameters of the plasma. They were obtained by an expansion of the curves in Figure 1a into Fourier series with fractional harmonics. The harmonic with T approx 10-11 years is quite visually (in comparison with other harmonics) seen in the spectrum of V , the spectra of n and nV are distorted by the lower-frequency (than the cycle) variation which may be related to the variations of these two parameters before the beginning of the 1970s (Figure 1a). Its exclusion (by shortening of the series expanded into spectrum) shows presence of a harmonic with T approx 11 years (which is visually seen in the initial data (Figure 1a)) in the variations of these two parameters. The nature of the trend in curve n is not probably related to cyclisity, that fact being discussed below.

Figure 1b shows (smoothed by the same   L ) curves of the annual values of: 1) the Wolf numbers ( W ) as the characteristic of the cyclic variation of the toroidal component of the dipole solar magnetic field, 2) the magnitude of the radial component of the large-scale magnetic field BR caused by the quadrupole star Bs which plays a determining role in processes in the interplanetary medium. Obridko and Rivin [1996] and Rivin [1998a, 1998b, 1999a, 1999b] discussed these characteristics in detail. A complete comparison of the cycles of these magnetic fields with the interplanetary medium parameters is difficult because of the short series of observations (2-3 cycles). However to distinguish cycles of various fields, the difference in their amplitude modulation was taken into account: for BR the amplitude of cycle 22 is several times lower than the amplitude of cycle 21, for W and Bs the amplitudes in both cycles are approximately equal, or the amplitude of Bs is even slightly higher in cycle 22. These differences and also the phase variations are used in the interpretation below.

fig04 The comparison of cyclic variations of V and n with the cycles of the large-scale solar magnetic fields was carried out on the correlation plane (Figure 4) and by calculation of inter-correlation function r(t) fig05 (Figure 5). Taking into account the spectra in Figure 3, one can derive the following conclusions from this comparison:

1) In the main dynamical parameters of SW there exists a ~11-year cycle which is mainly in antiphase to the cyclic variations of BR. Its amplitude decreases in n and V from cycle 20 to cycle 22 and the spectral amplitude exceeds by several times the amplitudes of other harmonics including the harmonics with T approx 22 years.

2) The cycle with T approx 11 years in the data on V is additionally shifted in phase by 2-3 years (it lags) relative the cycle of BR, that is, by ~3-4 years relative to the W cycle. Its spectral amplitude for 3 cycles is ~20 km s-1 and that is only slightly higher than langle srangle.

3) The properties of the ~11-year cycle in n till the beginning of the 1970s are considerably different from the properties of the following two cycles (on the n-W plane in Figure 3 the data for the years before the beginning of the 1970s form such a point distribution which is approximated by a straight line having essentially different coefficients than those for the following cycles). That requires individual consideration of this parameter before and after the years indicated. It is possible that this difference is the cause of the distortion of the n and nV spectra in Figure 3. The cycle of the plasma density according to the data from 1971 (practically after the doubtful interval) occurs strictly in antiphase to the BR cycle without any delays. Its approximate average amplitude is 0.5-1 cm -3 that is close to langle srangle as in case of the SW velocity.

Hence some properties of the n and V cycles (properties 1-3) correspond to the properties of the cycles of the quadrupole magnetic field, however, it is possible, that the correlation is more informant at the n-W plane than at the n- BR plane.


Interplanetary Magnetic Field

More than 30 years ago Severnyy [1966] suggested that the interplanetary magnetic field is a continuation of the total magnetic field of the Sun Bs into the interplanetary space and proposed observations of this solar field as a field of a star for diagnostics of IMF variations. The modern experimental data on IMF and Bs cycles support this suggestion.

fig06 Figure 6 shows the initial and smoothed by the L interval annual values of the vector of the interplanetary magnetic field BI and its three orthogonal components Bx, By, and Bz. Comparing variations of the latter with the former makes it possible to conclude that there is no coordination in their occurrence: the vector variations demonstrate the 11-year cyclisity, such cyclisity being absent in the components. At the same time the BI variations agree well with the modulus values of the vector and the component fig07 module (Figure 7). Also the variations of the By and Bx components (particularly the former which occur in phase with the IMF variations and so may be used as an analog of the initial IMF variations near the Earth) are well correlated with the variation of the total magnetic field of the Sun which is shown at the bottom of Figure 6.

Figure 7 shows variations of the modules of the IMF vector and components and also variations of the solar magnetic fields. Here the identity of the variations of the vector and its components with the variations of Bs is already visually seen.

fig08 Figure 8 shows the results of consideration of the relation between BI and Bs on the correlation plane separately for each cycle. The adjacent points are connected by line, and the arrows and dates show the motion direction in time. The absence of phase shifts between two fields is seen even from this figure. The linear approximation of this distribution results in a high correlation coefficient ( r = 0.95 pm 0.06 ) and a regression equation BI = [(5.2 pm 0.15) + (6.02 pm 0.46) times 10-5 Bs ], where BI is in nT and Bs is in Gs (1 Gs  = 105 nT). The following conclusions were derived from the analysis performed:

1) The amplitude attenuation of the cyclic variation of the modulus of the total magnetic field of the Sun near the Earth is by a factor of ~ 2times 104.

2) The amplitude of the ~11-year cycle of IMF increases from cycle 20 to cycle 22 and is approximately equal in cycles 21 and 22 (even is slightly higher in the latter), this fact being principally different from the amplitude modulation of the V and n cycles.

3) No phase shifts between the BI and Bs cycles were discovered.

4) The cyclic variation of the modulus of the total magnetic field of the Sun ( Bs ) is the main source of the cyclic variation of IMF.

5) The variations of the initial annual values of BI and its components do not contain explicitly expressed cyclisity with T approx 11-22 years. The best correlation is detected between the phase of the total solar magnetic field variation with the By component of the interplanetary magnetic field.

6) The scatter of points relative the approximating line in Figure 8 has a tendency to be lower in the middle part of the cycle and to increase in the epochs of its extremes.


Discussion

The cyclic variation of Bs contains a superposition of the dipole and quadrupole magnetic fields: the dipole input prevails in the amplitude variations and the quadrupole input is manifested in the phase shift of the Bs cycle relative the W cycle by 1-2 years [Rivin, 1998b, 1999a, 1999b]. Herein one cannot exclude that this shift is due to another cause: the phase shift between the toroidal and poloidal components of the dipole magnetic field of the Sun. The corresponding properties of the cyclisity of the solar magnetic fields are "inherited" by the modulus of the interplanetary magnetic field, that is, the variations of BI with Tapprox 11 years are on the whole identical to similar variations of Bs. At the same time the variations of the By and Bx (the latter in antiphase) components of the initial IMF correspond to the variations of  Bs.

It is principally important and in some way unexpected that probably the cyclic variations of the two main dynamic parameters of SW, first, differ from the variations of BI and, second, have somewhat different properties: the phase of the V cycle is shifted by ~3 year relative the phase of the W cycle, whereas the phase of the n cycle coincides with the phase of the quadrupole magnetic field cycle. Probably, this difference indicate to similar but slightly different formation sources of the cycles of these two parameters. At the same time the amplitude attenuation of the cycles of both parameters shows that probably the quadrupole field influences each of them stronger than the dipole field, this is, the plasma has a much deeper origin.

Specifying the King catalogue for further analyses, it is desirable to recalculate the hourly mean (and from them annual and monthly mean) values of n for the period before the beginning of the 1970s. It seems that these values were systemically underestimated by a factor of ~3-4 cm-3 for 1968-1970.

The results of this paper correct partially the assumptions (made by Rivin [1989] earlier) on the cyclisity nature of the interplanetary medium parameters varying with T approx 11 years.


Acknowledgments

This work was performed under partial financing by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (projects 99-02-18346, 99-05-64296) and the Astronomy program (project 4-264). The authors thank A. E. Levitin for his help.


References

Obridko, V. N., and Yu. R. Rivin, Magnetic field in the near-equatorial solar photosphere, Astron. Zh., 73, 812, 1996.

Parker, E. N., Basic mechanisms of solar activity, in Proceedings of the Symposium 71 IAU, Prague, August 1975, edited by V. Bumba and I. Klechek, D. Reidel Publ. Company, 1976.

Rivin, Yu. R., Earth's and Sun's Cycles, 165 pp., Nauka, Moscow, 1989.

Rivin, Yu. R., Specification of the analytical model of the cyclic variations of the magnetic fields at middle and low latitudes of the Sun, Izv. Akad. Nauk Ross. Ser. Fiz., 63, 1263, 1998a.

Rivin, Yu. R., Principal construction elements of the mechanism of cyclic changes generation in large-scale and local solar magnetic fields, Izv. Akad. Nauk Ross. Ser. Fiz., 63, 1867, 1998b.

Rivin, Yu. R., Principal contradiction between the experimental data on solar activity cyclisity and current theoretical models of its description, Pis'ma Astron. Zh., 25 (4), 314, 1999a (in press).

Rivin, Yu. R., 11-year cycles of the low-latitude large-scale solar magnetic field, its origin and sources in the convection zone, Sol. Phys., 1999b (in press).

Severnyy, A. B., Magnetic fields of the Sun and stars, Usp. Fiz. Nauk, 88, 3, 1966.


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