Solar Magnetic Tracking. IV. The Death of Magnetic Features
Derek A. Lamb, Timothy A. Howard, Craig E. DeForest, Clare E. Parnell,, Brian T. Welsch

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetic features in the quiet Sun decay, revealing that dispersal rather than cancellation dominates flux removal, and introduces the concept of partial lifetime to better estimate flux turnover.
Contribution
It provides new insights into magnetic flux removal processes, showing dispersal dominates over cancellation and that flux dispersal occurs on larger timescales than previously thought.
Findings
Dispersal is the main process removing magnetic flux.
Partial lifetime due to cancellation is about 22 hours.
Flux dispersal to smaller scales is more significant than cancellation.
Abstract
The removal of magnetic flux from the quiet-sun photosphere is important for maintaining the statistical steady-state of the magnetic field there, for determining the magnetic flux budget of the Sun, and for estimating the rate of energy injected into the upper solar atmosphere. Magnetic feature death is a measurable proxy for the removal of detectable flux. We used the SWAMIS feature tracking code to understand how nearly 20000 detected magnetic features die in an hour-long sequence of Hinode/SOT/NFI magnetograms of a region of quiet Sun. Of the feature deaths that remove visible magnetic flux from the photosphere, the vast majority do so by a process that merely disperses the previously-detected flux so that it is too small and too weak to be detected. The behavior of the ensemble average of these dispersals is not consistent with a model of simple planar diffusion, suggesting that…
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