Predicting the Amplitude of a Solar Cycle Using the North-South Asymmetry in the Previous Cycle: II. An Improved Prediction for Solar Cycle~24
J. Javaraiah

TL;DR
This paper improves solar cycle 24 amplitude predictions by analyzing north-south asymmetry in sunspot areas, achieving higher accuracy and earlier forecasts than previous methods.
Contribution
It introduces a new relationship based on north-south asymmetry that enhances the accuracy and lead time of solar cycle amplitude predictions.
Findings
The new relationship predicts cycle 24 amplitude as 87 ± 7.
Using asymmetry improves prediction accuracy.
Earlier prediction possible with the new method.
Abstract
Recently, using Greenwich and Solar Optical Observing Network sunspot group data during the period 1874-2006, (Javaraiah, MNRAS, 377, L34, 2007: Paper I), has found that: (1) the sum of the areas of the sunspot groups in 0-10 deg latitude interval of the Sun's northern hemisphere and in the time-interval of -1.35 year to +2.15 year from the time of the preceding minimum of a solar cycle n correlates well (corr. coeff. r=0.947) with the amplitude (maximum of the smoothed monthly sunspot number) of the next cycle n+1. (2) The sum of the areas of the spot groups in 0-10 deg latitude interval of the southern hemisphere and in the time-interval of 1.0 year to 1.75 year just after the time of the maximum of the cycle n correlates very well (r=0.966) with the amplitude of cycle n+1. Using these relations, (1) and (2), the values 112 + or - 13 and 74 + or -10, respectively, were predicted in…
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