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A&A 460, 875-885 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20065399
Kinematic frames and "active longitudes": does the Sun have a face?
J. Pelt1, J. M. Brooke2, 3, M. J. Korpi4, and I. Tuominen41 Tartu Observatory, 61602 Tõravere, Estonia
e-mail: pelt@aai.ee
2 Manchester Computing, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
3 School of Computer Science, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
4 Observatory, PO Box 14, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
(Received 10 April 2006 / Accepted 5 September 2006 )
Abstract
Context.It has recently been claimed that analysis of Greenwich sunspot data
over 120 years reveals that sunspot activity clusters around two longitudes separated
by 180° ("active longitudes") with clearly defined differential
rotation during activity cycles. In previous work we demonstrated that
such effects can be observed in synthetic data without such features,
as an artefact of the method of analysis.
Aims.In the present work we extend this critical examination of methodology to
the actual Greenwich sunspot data and also consider newly proposed methods of analysis
claiming to confirm the original identification of active longitudes.
Methods.We performed fits of different kinematic frames onto the actual sunspot data.
Firstly, a cell-counting statistic was used to analyse a comoving system of frames
and show that such frames extract useful information from the data.
Secondly, to check the
claim of century-scale persistent active longitudes in a contramoving frame
system, we made a comprehensive exploration of parameter space following the
original methodology as closely as possible.
Results.Our analysis revealed that values obtained for
the parameters of differential rotation are not stable across different methods of
analysis proposed to track persistent active longitudes.
Also, despite a very thorough search in parameter space, we were unable
to reproduce results claiming to reveal the century-persistent active longitudes.
Previous parameter space exploration has been restricted to frames whose latitudinal
profile is opposite to solar surface differential rotation.
Relaxing this restriction we found that the
highest values of nonaxisymmetry occur for frames comoving with the solar surface flow.
Further analysis indicates that even these solutions
are the result of purely statistical fluctuations.
Conclusions.We can therefore say that strong and well substantiated evidence for
an essential and century-scale persistent nonaxisymmetry in the sunspot
distribution does not exist.
Key words: Sun: activity -- Sun: magnetic fields -- methods: statistical
© ESO 2006
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