Are Solar Active Regions with Major Flares More Fractal, Multifractal, or Turbulent than Others?
Manolis K. Georgoulis

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether fractal, multifractal, or turbulent parameters derived from solar magnetograms can predict major solar flares, concluding that these measures do not effectively distinguish flaring from non-flaring active regions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of scale-free and multiscale parameters across a large dataset, demonstrating their limitations in flare prediction.
Findings
Both flaring and non-flaring regions show fractality and turbulence.
Parameters depend on observational resolution and characteristics.
Scale-free and multiscale measures are ineffective for flare prediction.
Abstract
Multiple recent investigations of solar magnetic field measurements have raised claims that the scale-free (fractal) or multiscale (multifractal) parameters inferred from the studied magnetograms may help assess the eruptive potential of solar active regions, or may even help predict major flaring activity stemming from these regions. We investigate these claims here, by testing three widely used scale-free and multiscale parameters, namely, the fractal dimension, the multifractal structure function and its inertial-range exponent, and the turbulent power spectrum and its power-law index, on a comprehensive data set of 370 timeseries of active-region magnetograms (17,733 magnetograms in total) observed by SOHO's Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) over the entire Solar Cycle 23. We find that both flaring and non-flaring active regions exhibit significant fractality, multifractality, and…
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