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Small Synoptic Charts of the Line-of-Sight Component of the Photospheric Magnetic Field

(2011). Small Synoptic Charts of the Line-of-Sight Component of the Photospheric Magnetic Field [Data set]. Joint Science Operations Center (JSOC), Stanford University. https://doi.org/10.48322/sjvb-rb76. Accessed on .

Note: Proper references, including those in BibTex or other formats, should include the "Accessed on date" as shown above to identify the version of the resource being cited in a given publication.

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/SDO/HMI/Synoptic/LOS_Magnetic_Field_Small

Description

This map is produced by applying a boxcar average to the high-resolution line-of-sight synoptic map, hmi.Synoptic_Ml_720s.

Synoptic charts are maps of the entire Sun produced in Carrington coordinates. Synoptic maps are constructed by merging together solar observations taken over many days. Magnetic-field synoptic charts are produced using central meridian data from HMI full-disk magnetograms.

Synoptic maps are constructed from HMI 720s line-of-sight Magnetograms collected over a 27-day solar rotation. Near-central-meridian data from 20 magnetograms contribute to each point in the final map.

HMI 720s line-of-sight magnetograms are first converted to 'radial field magnetograms' by dividing by the cosine of the angle from disk center, i.e. for this purpose we assume that HMI measures the line-of-sight component of a purely radial magnetic field. Individual 'radial' magnetograms are then remapped and interpolated onto a very high-resolution Carrington coordinate grid. For each Carrington longitude the values from the 20 magnetograms obtained closest in time to the central meridian passage (CMP) of that longitude are averaged. By using a constant number of contributing magnetograms, the variation of the noise over the entire map is minimized. Generally all data are taken within about 2 degrees of CMP. The effective temporal width of the HMI synoptic map contribution is about three hours, i.e. 20 720-s magnetograms are obtained within about 90 minutes of central meridian passage. The final HMI synoptic maps have a size of 3600 x 1440, which means the resolution is lower than the disk-center resolution of a single HMI magnetogram. A two-dimensional Gaussian function is applied to high-resolution remapped data to reduce the spatial resolution before generating the 3600*1440 synoptic maps. The width of the Gaussian is 3 pixels. The upper limit of the noise is 2.3 Mx cm2.

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Details

Version:2.6.1

NumericalData

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/SDO/HMI/Synoptic/LOS_Magnetic_Field_Small
ResourceHeader
ResourceName
Small Synoptic Charts of the Line-of-Sight Component of the Photospheric Magnetic Field
DOI
https://doi.org/10.48322/sjvb-rb76
ReleaseDate
2024-11-01 00:08:46
RevisionHistory
RevisionEvent
ReleaseDate
2024-11-01 00:08:46
Note
Metadata created by SY
RevisionEvent
ReleaseDate
2024-11-18 00:08:46
Note
Added DOI by SY
Description

This map is produced by applying a boxcar average to the high-resolution line-of-sight synoptic map, hmi.Synoptic_Ml_720s.

Synoptic charts are maps of the entire Sun produced in Carrington coordinates. Synoptic maps are constructed by merging together solar observations taken over many days. Magnetic-field synoptic charts are produced using central meridian data from HMI full-disk magnetograms.

Synoptic maps are constructed from HMI 720s line-of-sight Magnetograms collected over a 27-day solar rotation. Near-central-meridian data from 20 magnetograms contribute to each point in the final map.

HMI 720s line-of-sight magnetograms are first converted to 'radial field magnetograms' by dividing by the cosine of the angle from disk center, i.e. for this purpose we assume that HMI measures the line-of-sight component of a purely radial magnetic field. Individual 'radial' magnetograms are then remapped and interpolated onto a very high-resolution Carrington coordinate grid. For each Carrington longitude the values from the 20 magnetograms obtained closest in time to the central meridian passage (CMP) of that longitude are averaged. By using a constant number of contributing magnetograms, the variation of the noise over the entire map is minimized. Generally all data are taken within about 2 degrees of CMP. The effective temporal width of the HMI synoptic map contribution is about three hours, i.e. 20 720-s magnetograms are obtained within about 90 minutes of central meridian passage. The final HMI synoptic maps have a size of 3600 x 1440, which means the resolution is lower than the disk-center resolution of a single HMI magnetogram. A two-dimensional Gaussian function is applied to high-resolution remapped data to reduce the spatial resolution before generating the 3600*1440 synoptic maps. The width of the Gaussian is 3 pixels. The upper limit of the noise is 2.3 Mx cm2.

PublicationInfo
Authors
The HMI Consortium: Stanford University (USA); NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (USA); Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory (USA); National Center for Atmospheric Research (USA);
PublicationDate
2011-01-21 00:00:00
PublishedBy
Joint Science Operations Center (JSOC), Stanford University
Contacts
RolePersonStartDateStopDateNote
1.PrincipalInvestigatorspase://SMWG/Person/Philip.H.Scherrer
2.GeneralContactspase://SMWG/Person/Rick.Bogart
InformationURL
Name
The HMI website at Stanford
URL
InformationURL
Name
The SDO/HMI Instrument paper
URL
AccessInformation
RepositoryID
Availability
Online
AccessRights
Open
AccessURL
Format
FITS
InstrumentIDs
MeasurementType
Magnetogram
TemporalDescription
TimeSpan
StartDate
2010-05-19 23:59:06
RelativeStopDate
-P28D
Cadence
P27D
ObservedRegion
Sun
ObservedRegion
Sun.Photosphere
InputResourceID
InputResourceID
Parameter #1
Name
FITS Data Array
Description

Line-Of-Sight component of the photospheric magnetic field for an observer located at the solar equator

Units
gauss
Field
FieldQuantity
Magnetic
SpatialCoverage
CoordinateSystem
CoordinateRepresentation
Cartesian
CoordinateSystemName
Carrington
Description

The maps are 720 points in Carrington longitude by 360 points equally spaced in sine latitude.