Solar magnetic helicity injected into the heliosphere: Magnitude, balance, and periodicities over solar cycle 23

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Abstract

Relying purely on solar photospheric magnetic field measurements that cover most of solar cycle 23 (1996-2005), we calculate the total relative magnetic helicity injected into the solar atmosphere, and eventually shed into the heliosphere, over the latest cycle. Large active regions dominate the helicity injection process with ∼5.7 × 1045 Mx2 of total injected helicity. The net helicity injected is ≲1% of the above output. Peculiar active-region plasma flows account for ∼80% of this helicity; the remaining ∼20% is due to solar differential rotation. The typical helicity per active-region CME ranges between (1.8-7) × 1042 Mx 2 depending on the CME velocity. Accounting for various minor underestimation factors, we estimate a maximum helicity injection of ∼6.6 × 1045 Mx2 for solar cycle 23. Although no significant net helicity exists over both solar hemispheres, we recover the well-known hemispheric helicity preference, which is significantly enhanced by the solar differential rotation. We also find that helicity injection in the solar atmosphere is an inherently disorganized, impulsive, and aperiodic process. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Georgoulis, M. K., Rust, D. M., Pevtsov, A. A., Bernasconi, P. N., & Kuzanyan, K. M. (2009). Solar magnetic helicity injected into the heliosphere: Magnitude, balance, and periodicities over solar cycle 23. Astrophysical Journal, 705(1 PART 2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/705/1/L48

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