Limits to solar cycle predictability: Cross-equatorial flux plumes
R.H. Cameron, M. Dasi-Espuig, J. Jiang, E. I\c{s}{\i}k, D. Schmitt and, M. Sch\"ussler

TL;DR
This paper investigates the impact of cross-equatorial flux plumes, large sunspot events crossing the equator, on the predictability of solar cycle strength within the Babcock-Leighton dynamo framework, highlighting their role in flux transport uncertainties.
Contribution
It quantifies the contribution of large cross-equatorial flux plumes to magnetic flux transport and their effect on solar cycle predictability.
Findings
Large flux plumes carry significant flux across the equator.
Few such events occur per cycle, causing uncertainty in flux transport estimates.
These events impact the accuracy of solar cycle strength predictions.
Abstract
Within the Babcock-Leighton framework for the solar dynamo, the strength of a cycle is expected to depend on the strength of the dipole moment or net hemispheric flux during the preceding minimum, which depends on how much flux was present in each hemisphere at the start of the previous cycle and how much net magnetic flux was transported across the equator during the cycle. Some of this transport is associated with the random walk of magnetic flux tubes subject to granular and supergranular buffeting, some of it is due to the advection caused by systematic cross-equatorial flows such as those associated with the inflows into active regions, and some crosses the equator during the emergence process. We aim to determine how much of the cross-equatorial transport is due to small-scale disorganized motions (treated as diffusion) compared with other processes such as emergence flux across…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
