DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053947
Evidence for low dimensional chaos in sunspot cycles
C. Letellier1, L. A. Aguirre2, J. Maquet1 and R. Gilmore31 CORIA/CNRS UMR 6614, Université et INSA de Rouen, Av. de l'Université, BP 12, 76801 Saint-Etienne du Rouvray Cedex, France
e-mail: Christophe.Letellier@coria.fr
2 Departamento de Engenharia Eletrônica, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Antônio Carlos 6627, 31.270-901 Belo Horizonte, MG., Brazil
3 Physics Department, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
(Received 29 July 2005 / Accepted 25 November 2005 )
Abstract
Sunspot cycles are widely used for investigating solar
activity. In 1953 Bracewell argued that it is sometimes desirable to
introduce the inversion of the magnetic field polarity, and that can
be done with a sign change at the beginning of each cycle. It will be
shown in this paper that, for topological reasons, this so-called
Bracewell index is inappropriate and that the symmetry must be
introduced in a more rigorous way by a coordinate transformation. The
resulting symmetric dynamics is then favourably compared with a
symmetrized phase portrait reconstructed from the z-variable of the
Rössler system. Such a link with this latter variable - which is
known to be a poor observable of the underlying dynamics - could
explain the general difficulty encountered in finding evidence of
low-dimensional dynamics in sunspot data.
Key words: chaos -- Sun: magnetic fields -- Sun: activity -- Sun: sunspots
© ESO 2006

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