On the size distribution of spots within sunspot groups
Sudip Mandal, Natalie A. Krivova, Robert Cameron, and Sami K. Solanki

TL;DR
This study analyzes the size distribution of sunspots within groups, revealing that the largest spot typically occupies about 60% of the group area, providing insights into magnetic field emergence and starspot features.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the ratio of the largest spot to the total group area across multiple solar cycles, highlighting a scale-invariant emergence pattern.
Findings
Largest spot occupies ~60% of group area at maximum size.
The ratio R peaks at about 0.65 for groups around 200 μHem.
Giant starspots may consist of multiple smaller spots, with the largest covering 55-75%.
Abstract
Size distribution of sunspots provides key information about the generation and emergence processes of the solar magnetic field. Previous studies on the size distribution have primarily focused on either the whole group or individual spot areas. In this paper, we investigate the organization of spot areas within sunspot groups. In particular, we analyze the ratio, , of the area of the biggest spot () inside a group, to the total area of that group (). We use sunspot observations from Kislovodsk, Pulkovo and Debrecen observatories, together covering solar cycles 17 to 24. We find that at the time when the group area reaches its maximum, the single biggest spot in a group typically occupies about 60% of the group area. For half of all groups, lies in the range between roughly 50% and 70%. We also find R to change with the group area,…
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