Abstract

Context. How global faculae and network coverage relates to that of sunspots is relevant to the brightness variations of the Sun and Sun-like stars. Aims. We aim to extend and improve on earlier studies that established that the facular-to-sunspot-area ratio diminishes with total sunspot coverage. Methods. Chromospheric indices and the total magnetic flux enclosed in network and faculae, referred to here as “facular indices”, are modulated by the amount of facular and network present. We probed the relationship between various facular and sunspot indices through an empirical model, taking into account how active regions evolve and the possible non-linear relationship between plage emission, facular magnetic flux, and sunspot area. This model was incorporated into a model of total solar irradiance (TSI) to elucidate the implications for solar and stellar brightness variations. Results. The reconstruction of the facular indices from the sunspot indices with the model presented here replicates most of the observed variability, and is better at doing so than earlier models. Contrary to recent studies, we found the relationship between the facular and sunspot indices to be stable over the past four decades. The model indicates that, like the facular-to-sunspot-area ratio, the ratio of the variation in chromospheric emission and total network and facular magnetic flux to sunspot area decreases with the latter. The TSI model indicates the ratio of the TSI excess from faculae and network to the deficit from sunspots also declines with sunspot area, with the consequence being that TSI rises with sunspot area more slowly than if the two quantities were linearly proportional to one another. This explains why even though solar cycle 23 is significantly weaker than cycle 22, TSI rose to comparable levels over both cycles. The extrapolation of the TSI model to higher activity levels indicates that in the activity range where Sun-like stars are observed to switch from growing brighter with increasing activity to becoming dimmer instead, the activity-dependence of TSI exhibits a similar transition. This happens as sunspot darkening starts to rise more rapidly with activity than facular and network brightening. This bolsters the interpretation of this behaviour of Sun-like stars as the transition from a faculae-dominated to a spot-dominated regime.

Highlights

  • The variation in solar irradiance at timescales greater than a day is believed to be dominantly driven by photospheric magnetism (Solanki et al 2013; Yeo et al 2017a)

  • We look at how the total magnetic flux enclosed in faculae and network as apparent in full-disc solar magnetograms (Yeo et al 2014b), denoted Fφ, relates to the various sunspot indices

  • We see that like facular area, the variation in chromospheric emission and the total magnetic flux enclosed in faculae and network scales with sunspots in such a way that the ratio to sunspot area decreases with increasing sunspot area (Figs. 4b–e)

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Summary

Introduction

The variation in solar irradiance at timescales greater than a day is believed to be dominantly driven by photospheric magnetism (Solanki et al 2013; Yeo et al 2017a). Chapman et al (1997) examined the relationship between total sunspot area and Ca II K plage area, taken as a proxy of facular area, over the declining phase of solar cycle 22 This makes use of the fact that chromospheric emission is strongly enhanced in plage and network features overlaying photospheric faculae and network The more recent investigations by Svalgaard & Hudson (2010), Tapping & Valdés (2011), Livingston et al (2012), and Tapping & Morgan (2017) reported that the relationship between the F10.7 and the international sunspot number and total sunspot area appears to have been changing since solar cycle 23 In each of these studies, the authors modelled the F10.7 implicitly assuming the level at a particular time is a function of.

Models
YSK model
Implication for solar and stellar brightness variations
Findings
Summary
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