12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

Solar magnetic polarity effect on neutron monitor count rates from latitude surveys versus Antarctic stations

16 Jul 2021, 18:00
1h 30m
TBA

TBA

Poster SH | Solar & Heliospheric Discussion

Speaker

Kledsai Poopakun (Chiang Mai University)

Description

The Galactic cosmic ray spectrum manifests subtle variations over the 22-year solar magnetic cycle in addition to more pronounced variations over the 11-year sunspot cycle. We conducted numerous latitude surveys by operating a neutron monitor onboard an icebreaker that traveled across a wide range of geomagnetic cutoff rigidities. Here we revisit our previous work to study spectral changes using 13 annual latitude surveys from 1994 to 2007 by comparing with neutron monitor data from Mawson instead of McMurdo, which closed in 2017, in order to allow a comparison with more recent latitude surveys. We confirm linear trends between count rates at different geomagnetic cutoff rigidities and changes in slope before and after the polarity reversal in 2000 as an effect of solar magnetic polarity. We performed two more latitude surveys (in 2019 and 2019-20) with a monitor similar to the 3NM64 in the previous surveys but without lead rings around the central tube, a so-called “semi-leaded neutron monitor.” We also found similar results for the relationship between the count rate of the semi-leaded neutron monitor and that of the Jang Bogo and Mawson neutron monitor stations in Antarctica.

Keywords

neutron monitor; solar modulation; solar magnetic polarity; crossover; latitude survey

Subcategory Experimental Results

Primary author

Kledsai Poopakun (Chiang Mai University)

Co-authors

Waraporn Nuntiyakul (Chiang Mai University) David Ruffolo (Mahidol University) Paul Evenson (University of Delaware) Peng Jiang (Polar Research Institute of China) Pongpichit Chuanraksasat (National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT)) Prof. Marc Duldig (University of Tasmania) Prof. John Humble (University of Tasmania) Suyeon Oh (Chonnam National University)

Presentation materials