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North–South Asymmetry in Solar Activity and Solar Cycle Prediction, IV: Prediction for Lengths of Upcoming Solar Cycles

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We analyzed the daily sunspot-group data reported by the Greenwich Photoheliographic Results (GPR) during the period 1874 – 1976 and Debrecen Photoheliographic Data (DPD) during the period 1977 – 2017 and studied North–South asymmetry in the maxima and minima of the Solar Cycles 12 – 24. We derived the time series of the 13-month smoothed monthly mean corrected whole-spot areas of the sunspot groups in the Sun’s whole sphere (WSGA), northern hemisphere (NSGA), and southern hemisphere (SSGA). From these smoothed time series we obtained the values of the maxima and minima, and the corresponding epochs, of the WSGA, NSGA, and SSGA Cycles 12 – 24. We find that there exists a 44 – 66 years periodicity in the North–South asymmetry of the minimum. A long periodicity (130 – 140 years) may exist in the asymmetry of the maximum. A statistically significant correlation exists between the maximum of SSGA Cycle \(n\) and the rise time of WSGA Cycle \(n+2\). A reasonably significant correlation also exists between the maximum of WSGA Cycle \(n\) and the decline time of WSGA Cycle \(n+2\). These relations suggest that the solar dynamo carries memory over at least three solar cycles. Using these relations we obtained the values \(11.7\pm 0.15~\text{years}\), \(11.2\pm 0.2~\text{years}\), and \(11.45\pm 0.3~\text{years}\) for the lengths of WSGA Cycles 24, 25, and 26, respectively, and hence, July 2020, October 2031, and March 2043 for the minimum epochs (start dates) of WSGA Cycles 25, 26, and 27, respectively. We also obtained May 2025 and March 2036 for the maximum epochs of WSGA Cycles 25 and 26, respectively. It seems during the late Maunder Minimum sunspot activity was absent around the epochs of the maxima of the NSGA-cycles and the minima of the SSGA-cycles, and some activity was present at the epochs of the maxima of some SSGA-cycles and the minima of some NSGA-cycles.

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Acknowledgments

The author thanks the anonymous referee for useful comments and suggestions. The author acknowledges the work of all the people contribute and maintain the GPR and DPD Sunspot databases. The sunspot-number data are provided by WDC-SILSO, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels.

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Correspondence to J. Javaraiah.

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Previous address: Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Bengaluru 560 034, India

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Javaraiah, J. North–South Asymmetry in Solar Activity and Solar Cycle Prediction, IV: Prediction for Lengths of Upcoming Solar Cycles. Sol Phys 294, 64 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11207-019-1442-6

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