Title: GONG Measurements
1GONG Measurements Pre-eruptive signatures
- Frank Hill, Rudi Komm and the GONG Team
- fhill_at_noao.edu
2What is GONG?
- The Global Oscillation Network Group
- Deployed in 1995 to continually observe solar
oscillations and infer internal solar structure
and dynamics (helioseismology) - Six instruments located around the world
3What does GONG observe?
- Full-disk Doppler velocity, line-of-sight
magnetic field, and intensity - Uses Ni I 676.8-nm spectral line
- Solar image is 800x800 pixels (2.5 pixels)
- One data set every 60 sec at each site
- Semi-automated operation
4GONG temporal coverage
1995
2007
Overall average duty cycle 0.849 Last year
0.893 No day without data since July 2001 Data
loss due to instrumental problems is 0.02
5GONG Space Weather Products
- High-cadence (60 sec) surface magnetic field
measurements and field extrapolations provide
rapid changes in the field geometry - Images of far-side magnetic field from
helioseismology show large active regions see
poster S-14 by Irene Gonzalez-Hernandez - Helioseismology ring diagrams can measure
subsurface vorticity, which is an excellent flare
indicator, and may be able to predict the time of
flare onset - Considering adding 1 pixel high-cadence (15-60
sec) full-disk H? imaging
6Helioseismology
- Sun is filled with 5,000,000 distinct sound waves
- Sound is trapped in a cavity defined by the
internal thermal structure - Each wave samples a different range of depths
- Can invert wave properties to infer internal
conditions, such as bulk plasma velocity
7Ring Diagrams - I
- Three-dimensional power spectrum of solar
oscillations - Subsurface flow displaces rings
No tracking for solar rotation
With tracking
8Ring Diagrams II
- Perform analysis over solar disk
- Invert for horizontal flows as function of
location and depth
On a single day, can reach 60 in heliocentric
longitude and latitude.
9Flows below strong flare producers
AR 10069
AR 10486
10Flare activity, vorticity and B
Each point identifies the observed vorticity and
surface magnetic field strength B for a unique
active region. Filled symbols multiple
flares Open symbols single flare Sample
approximately 700 active regions covering
2001-2004
11Flare occurrence probabilities as a function of
vorticity and surface magnetic field
The vorticity and surface B measurements are
placed in bins, each containing 28 unique active
regions. The numbers in the bins are the
percentage of active regions with at least one
flare with a magnitude above the indicated class.
Colors indicate the probability levels in steps
of 10, white is 0.
12Temporal behavior of kinetic helicity before a
flare
Time history of kinetic helicity (KH) below 9
solar areas preceding the Halloween flare. The
flaring region was located in the ellipse. The KH
was anomalously high before the flare, then
abruptly decreased at the time of the flare. The
KH may be a predictor of strong flares. Different
colors indicate different depths.
13Next steps
- Fully test added value of combining vorticity
with surface magnetic field measurements - Beginning collaboration with KD Leka, G Barnes
and A Reinard to apply discriminant analysis and
investigate correlation with spot complexity - Start statistical analysis of temporal predictor
- Develop automated pipeline at remote sites to
estimate the vorticity below active regions on an
8-hour cadence would produce six observations
per 24 hours - Work with NOAA towards an operational product
- GONG facing funding challenges, uncertain future
could result in loss of a useful space weather
asset