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Whole Sun Month At Solar Minimum: Results Of A Worldwide Study

05.10.99 | American Geophysical Union

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Scientists have completed a comprehensive study of the Sun during a month of its most recent quiet period, using instruments not previously available. They have compiled data and gained insights that will be useful as the Sun reaches its period of maximum sunspot activity in the year 2000.

Whole Sun Month was a two-year collaborative effort of the Inter-Agency Consultative Group (IACG) Campaign 4 and the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) Working Group Joint Observing Program 44. Under its auspices, an international and interdisciplinary group of scientists studied the Sun from August 8 to September 10, 1996, a period known as solar minimum. Although two workshops have been devoted to Whole Sun Month (WSM) and some results have been reported at meetings of the American Geophysical Union and other organizations and in some journal articles, the first comprehensive, peer reviewed compilation appears in the current issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research.

The Sun exhibits an approximately eleven year cycle of sunspots, with a shorter period from minimum to maximum than for maximum back to minimum. At solar minimum, there are few sunspots and related magnetic activity, such as solar wind. In their introduction to the 237 page special section on WSM, Antoinette B. Galvin of the University of New Hampshire and John L. Kohl of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics state that the project's objective was to gain an understanding of the large-scale, stable structures that dominate the solar corona at solar minimum.

The corona is the outermost layer of the solar atmosphere, and Galvin and Kohl say that understanding the large-scale corona is fundamental to understanding how and where the solar wind is accelerated. The solar wind, an outflow of particles and magnetic fields, can affect communications on Earth, especially during the solar maximum.

The 19 papers in the JGR special section are divided into four major areas of investigation:

Funding for the Whole Sun Month study was provided by NASA, the United Kingdom PPARC, National Science Foundation, European Space Agency, and other agencies.

Copies of the Whole Sun Month study are available to nonmembers of AGU from its Customer Service office (800-966-2481) at a cost of $40. Ask for JGR, volume 104, number A5. The issue, including other papers on space physics, contains 710 pages.

Note: We have a strictly limited number of this issue of JGR available at no charge for science writers and science public information officers (only). Please send your request to Harvey Leifert hleifert@agu.org .

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
American Geophysical Union. (1999, May 10). Whole Sun Month At Solar Minimum: Results Of A Worldwide Study. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3YOV061/whole-sun-month-at-solar-minimum-results-of-a-worldwide-study.html
MLA:
"Whole Sun Month At Solar Minimum: Results Of A Worldwide Study." Brightsurf News, May. 10 1999, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3YOV061/whole-sun-month-at-solar-minimum-results-of-a-worldwide-study.html.