Hemispheric sunspot numbers 1874--2020
Astrid M. Veronig, Shantanu Jain, Tatiana Podladchikova, Werner, Poetzi, Frederic Clette

TL;DR
This paper constructs a comprehensive, validated series of hemispheric sunspot numbers from 1874 to 2020, revealing hemispheric asymmetries, phase shifts, and improving solar cycle predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a new continuous dataset of hemispheric sunspot numbers from 1874 to 2020, derived from historical measurements and validated against existing data.
Findings
High correlation (r=0.94) between reconstructed and observed HSNs.
Hemispheric asymmetry averages 16% over cycles 12-24.
Northern hemisphere often reaches cycle maximum earlier.
Abstract
We create a continuous series of daily and monthly hemispheric sunspot numbers (HSNs) from 1874 to 2020, which will be continuously expanded in the future with the HSNs provided by SILSO. Based on the available daily measurements of hemispheric sunspot areas from 1874 to 2016 from Greenwich Royal Observatory and NOAA, we derive the relative fractions of the northern and southern activity. These fractions are applied to the international sunspot number (ISN) to derive the HSNs. This method and obtained data are validated against published HSNs for the period 1945--2020. We provide a continuous data series and catalogue of daily, monthly mean, and 13-month smoothed monthly mean HSNs for the time range 1874--2020 that are consistent with the newly calibrated ISN. Validation of the reconstructed HSNs against the direct data available since 1945 reveals a high level of consistency, with a…
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