Solar dynamo and geomagnetic activity
Katya Georgieva, Boian Kirov

TL;DR
This paper investigates the solar dynamo's behavior over the last 12 solar cycles by analyzing geomagnetic activity and sunspot data, revealing variations in meridional circulation, diffusivity, and the regimes of dynamo operation affecting sunspot maxima.
Contribution
It provides new estimates of meridional circulation speeds, diffusivity, and dynamo regimes, linking geomagnetic activity variations to solar magnetic field dynamics.
Findings
Meridional circulation varied between 5 and 20 m/s at the surface.
Diffusivity in the convection zone was approximately 10^8 m^2/s.
The solar dynamo operated in a diffusion-dominated regime in recent cycles.
Abstract
The correlation between geomagnetic activity and the sunspot number in the 11-year solar cycle exhibits long-term variations due to the varying time lag between the sunspot-related and non-sunspot related geomagnetic activity, and the varying relative amplitude of the respective geomagnetic activity peaks. As the sunspot-related and non-sunspot related geomagnetic activity are caused by different solar agents, related to the solar toroidal and poloidal fields, respectively, we use their variations to derive the parameters of the solar dynamo transforming the poloidal field into toroidal field and back. We find that in the last 12 cycles the solar surface meridional circulation varied between 5 and 20 m/s (averaged over latitude and over the sunspot cycle), the deep circulation varied between 2.5 and 5.5 m/s, and the diffusivity in the whole of the convection zone was ~10**8 m2/s. In the…
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