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Large ephemeral regions and their tilt angles

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arXiv:2606.01709v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: The ephemeral regions (ERs), which are short-lived bipolar magnetic regions that emerge across the solar cycle but do not appear as sunspots, play a crucial role in the Sun's magnetic flux budget. However, their properties, particularly the tilt distribution, are poorly constrained by observations. In this study, we isolate ERs from the Automatic Tracking Algorithm for Bipolar Magnetic Regions (AutoTAB) catalog during Solar Cycles 24 and 25...

arXiv:2606.01709v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: The ephemeral regions (ERs), which are short-lived bipolar magnetic regions that emerge across the solar cycle but do not appear as sunspots, play a crucial role in the Sun's magnetic flux budget. However, their properties, particularly the tilt distribution, are poorly constrained by observations. In this study, we isolate ERs from the Automatic Tracking Algorithm for Bipolar Magnetic Regions (AutoTAB) catalog during Solar Cycles 24 and 25 by applying flux and footpoint-separation thresholds. Although AutoTAB was designed to track high-flux regions, it also records ephemeral regions with fluxes of 10^19 to 10^20 Mx, placing them at the upper end of the ER spectrum. The isolated ERs have an average lifetime of 1.2 days. Footpoint separation begins at supergranular scales (about 20 Mm), grows during the first half of the lifetime, and then saturates. ERs occur most frequently near solar minima, consistent with earlier studies and likely reflecting AutoTAB's greater sensitivity to weaker regions when strong BMRs are scarce. Tilt properties reveal a more complex picture. For lifetimes shorter than two days, ERs show a broad, noisy distribution with no systematic latitude dependence. Including longer-lived ERs produces a weak, though statistically insignificant, increasing trend with latitude, suggesting that short-lived ERs are shaped by turbulent convection, while stronger, longer-lived ERs may retain Coriolis-imparted tilts. Overall, these results support the view that ERs occupy the low-flux end of the BMR spectrum and contribute meaningfully to the solar dynamo.
Sun (ORG) ER (ORG) Coriolis (ORG) BMR (ORG)
Originally published by arXiv Physics Read original →