The Extended Solar Cycle: Muddying the Waters of Solar/Stellar Dynamo Modeling Or Providing Crucial Observational Constraints?
A.K. Srivastava, S.W. McIntosh, N. Arge, D. Banerjee, E. Cliver, M., Dikpati, B.N. Dwivedi, M. Guhathakurta, B.B. Karak, R.J. Leamon, P. Martens,, S.K. Matthew, A. Munoz-Jaramillo, D. Nandi, A. Norton, L. Upton, S., Chatterjee, R. Mazumder, Yamini K. Rao, R. Yadav

TL;DR
This paper reviews the observational patterns of the Extended Solar Cycle and discusses their implications for understanding the solar dynamo, aiming to improve models of solar magnetism through data analysis and international collaboration.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the Extended Solar Cycle patterns and explores their potential connection to the solar dynamo, emphasizing the need for combined data analysis and collaborative research.
Findings
Extended Solar Cycle patterns precede sunspot formation by nearly a decade.
ESC patterns extend to higher solar latitudes than traditional sunspot cycles.
Collaborative data analysis may enhance understanding of the solar dynamo.
Abstract
In 1844 Schwabe discovered that the number of sunspots increased and decreased over a period of about 11 years, that variation became known as the sunspot cycle. Almost eighty years later, Hale described the nature of the Sun's magnetic field, identifying that it takes about 22 years for the Sun's magnetic polarity to cycle. It was also identified that the latitudinal distribution of sunspots resembles the wings of a butterfly showing migration of sunspots in each hemisphere that abruptly start at mid-latitudes towards the Sun's equator over the next 11 years. These sunspot patterns were shown to be asymmetric across the equator. In intervening years, it was deduced that the Sun (and sun-like stars) possess magnetic activity cycles that are assumed to be the physical manifestation of a dynamo process that results from complex circulatory transport processes in the star's interior.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
