The Solar Cycle Variation of Topological Structures in the Global Solar Corona
Sarah J. Platten, Clare E. Parnell, Andrew L. Haynes, Eric R. Priest,, Duncan H. Mackay

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the topological structures of the solar corona's magnetic field vary throughout the solar cycle, revealing complex configurations at maximum and simpler, dipole-influenced structures at minimum.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of the global coronal magnetic topology over three solar cycles using potential-field source-surface models.
Findings
At solar maximum, the coronal field exhibits numerous topological structures.
At solar minimum, the topology is dominated by the solar dipole, resulting in simpler large-scale structures.
Weak dipoles lead to complex low-latitude open-field regions even at solar minimum.
Abstract
The distribution of magnetic flux across the solar photosphere results in a complex web of coronal magnetic field structures. To understand this complexity, the magnetic skeleton of the coronal field can be calculated. The skeleton highlights the separatrix surfaces that divide the field into topologically distinct regions, allowing open-field regions on the solar surface to be located. Furthermore, separatrix surfaces and their intersections (separators) are important likely energy release sites. This paper investigates, throughout the solar cycle, the nature of coronal magnetic-field topologies that arise under the potential-field source-surface approximation. In particular, we characterise the typical global fields at solar maximum and minimum. Global magnetic fields are extrapolated from observed Kitt Peak and SOLIS synoptic magnetograms, from Carrington rotations 1645 to 2144,…
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