Behaviour of the quiet day geomagnetic variation at Livingston Island and variability of the Sq focus position in the South American-Antarctic Peninsula region
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Publication date
2009-08-24Abstract
The characteristics of the regular daily variation at the relatively new geomagnetic observatory of Livingston Island have been studied. They include the seasonal and solar cycle variabilities. Studies of the solar cycle variability have been carried out thanks to the fact that there are presently more than eleven years of definitive data already available. The seasonal behaviour of the quiet-time daily field variations are those expected from earlier studies for a mid-latitude observatory placed at the south of the southern hemisphere current focus. There is also a clear dependence of the Sq amplitude on solar activity, though the Sq amplitude maximum occurs about two years later than the sunspot maximum. A contemporaneous analysis for solar cycle 23 has been carried out for observatories located in the same longitudinal sector, with the aim of identifying the latitudinal displacements of the current focus that affect the observed Sq variations. The uncertainties associated with the method employed for determining the focus positions are due to the scarcity of observatory data in the South American-Antarctic Peninsula region, but it can still be asserted with a certain reliability that focus latitudes are higher during summer and equinoxes than in winter. On the other hand, it is difficult to establish a correlation between focus latitude and Solar Sunspot Numbers.
Document Type
Object of conference
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
55 - Earth Sciences. Geological sciences
Keywords
Geomagnetism
Sq solar quiet variation
Antàrtida
Pages
1 p.
Publisher
IAGA 11th Scientific Assembly. Sopron (Hungria)
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/