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Systematic Time Delay of Hemispheric Solar Activity

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Abstract

Five solar-activity indices – the monthly-mean sunspot numbers from January 1945 to March 2008, the monthly-mean sunspot areas during the period of May 1874 to March 2008, the monthly numbers of sunspot groups from May 1874 to May 2008, the monthly-mean flare indices from January 1966 to December 2006, and the numbers of solar filaments per Carrington rotation in the time interval of solar rotations 876 to 1823 – have been used to show a systematic time delay between northern and southern hemispheric solar activities in a cycle. It is found that solar activity does not occur synchronously in the northern and southern hemispheres, and there is a systematic time lag or lead (phase shift) between northern and southern hemispheric solar activity in a cycle. About an eight-cycle period is inferred to exist in such phase shifts. The activity on the Sun may be governed by two different and coupled processes, not by a single process.

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Correspondence to K. J. Li.

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Li, K.J. Systematic Time Delay of Hemispheric Solar Activity. Sol Phys 255, 169–177 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11207-009-9319-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11207-009-9319-8

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