Average motion of emerging solar active region polarities II: Joy's law
Hannah Schunker, Christian Baumgartner, Aaron C. Birch, Robert H., Cameron, Douglas C. Braun, Laurent Gizon

TL;DR
This study measures the evolution of active region tilt angles on the Sun, revealing that Joy's law emerges about two days after active regions appear and is influenced by initial flux separation speeds and surface buffeting.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on the emergence and evolution of active region tilt angles, challenging existing flux tube models by showing initial east-west alignment.
Findings
Active regions emerge aligned east-west, contrary to flux tube model predictions.
Joy's law becomes evident approximately two days after emergence.
Tilt angle scatter is influenced by flux and surface buffeting.
Abstract
The tilt of solar active regions described by Joy's law is essential for converting a toroidal field to a poloidal field in Babcock-Leighton dynamo models. In thin flux tube models the Coriolis force causes Joy's law, acting on east-west flows as they rise towards the surface. Our goal is to measure the evolution of the average tilt angle of hundreds of active regions as they emerge, so that we can constrain the origins of Joy's law. We measured the tilt angle of the primary bipoles in 153 emerging active regions in the Solar Dynamics Observatory Helioseismic Emerging Active Region survey. We used line-of-sight magnetic field measurements averaged over 6 hours to define the polarities and measure the tilt angle up to four days after emergence. We find that at the time of emergence the polarities are on average aligned east-west, and that neither the separation nor the tilt depends on…
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