How to Estimate the Far-Side Open Flux using STEREO Coronal Holes
Stephan G. Heinemann, Manuela Temmer, Stefan J. Hofmeister, Aleksandar, Stojakovic, Laurent Gizon, Dan Yang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method to estimate the Sun's far-side open magnetic flux within coronal holes using STEREO EUV observations, improving the understanding of solar magnetic field evolution during active periods.
Contribution
The study presents a new empirical approach linking transition region features in EUV images to open magnetic flux, calibrated across SDO and STEREO data for better far-side flux estimation.
Findings
Coronal hole properties correlate with magnetic flux density (cc = 0.59).
Open flux can be modeled as |Phi_ch| = 0.25 A_ch exp(0.032 A_of).
Estimated uncertainty in flux measurement is 40-60%.
Abstract
Global magnetic field models use as input synoptic data, which usually show "aging effects" as the longitudinal 360{\deg} information is not obtained simultaneously. Especially during times of increased solar activity, the evolution of the magnetic field may yield large uncertainties. A significant source of uncertainty is the Sun's magnetic field on the side of the Sun that is not visible to the observer. Various methods have been used to complete the picture: synoptic charts, flux-transport models, and far side helioseismology. In this study, we present a new method to estimate the far-side open flux within coronal holes using STEREO EUV observations. First, we correlate the structure of the photospheric magnetic field as observed with the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (HMI/SDO) with features in the transition region. From the 304A intensity…
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