Meridional motions and Reynolds stress from SDO/AIA coronal bright points data
Davor Sudar, Steven H. Saar, Ivica Skoki\'c, Ivana Poljan\v{c}i\'c, Beljan, Roman Braj\v{s}a

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution SDO/AIA data to accurately determine solar surface flows, including rotation, meridional motions, and Reynolds stress, revealing insights into solar dynamics over six months.
Contribution
It introduces a precise method for analyzing CBPs to measure solar surface flows and estimates the height of CBPs, contributing to understanding solar rotation and meridional flows.
Findings
Solar rotation profile fitted with high accuracy.
CBPs located approximately 6500 km above the surface.
Meridional motion is predominantly poleward.
Abstract
Context. It is possible to detect and track coronal bright points (CBPs) in SDO/AIA images. Combination of high resolution and high cadence provides a wealth of data that can be used to determine velocity flows on the solar surface with very high accuracy. Aims. We derived a very accurate solar rotation profile and investigated meridional flows, torsional oscillations and horizontal Reynolds stress based on 6 months of SDO/AIA data. Methods. We used a segmentation algorithm to detect CBPs in SDO/AIA images. We also used invariance of the solar rotation profile with central meridian distance (CMD) to determine the height of CBPs in 19.3 nm channel. Results. Best fit solar rotation profile is given by {\degr} day. Height of CBPs in SDO/AIA 19.3 nm channel was found to be 6500 km.…
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