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Persistence and Burn-in in Solar Coronal Magnetic Field Simulations

Hall, Eric J.; Meyer, Karen A.; Yeates, Anthony R.

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Authors

Eric J. Hall

Karen A. Meyer



Abstract

Simulations of solar phenomena play a vital role in space-weather prediction. A critical computational question for automating research workflows in the context of data-driven solar coronal magnetic field simulations is quantifying a simulation's burn-in time, after which a solar quantity has evolved away from an arbitrary initial condition to a physically more realistic state. A challenge to quantifying simulation burn-in is that the underlying solar processes and data, like many physical phenomena, are non-Markovian and exhibit long memory or persistence and, therefore, their analysis evades standard statistical approaches. In this work, we provide evidence of long memory in the nonperiodic variations of solar quantities (including over timescales significantly shorter than previously identified) and demonstrate that magnetofrictional simulations capture the memory structure present in magnetogram data. We also provide an algorithm for the quantitative assessment of simulation burn-in time that can be applied to nonstationary time series with long memory. Our approach is based on time-delayed mutual information, an information-theoretic quantity, and includes a small-sample bias correction.

Citation

Hall, E. J., Meyer, K. A., & Yeates, A. R. (2025). Persistence and Burn-in in Solar Coronal Magnetic Field Simulations. The Astrophysical Journal, 979(1), Article 88. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad99db

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 1, 2024
Online Publication Date Jan 20, 2025
Publication Date Jan 20, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 5, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 5, 2025
Journal The Astrophysical Journal
Electronic ISSN 1538-4357
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 979
Issue 1
Article Number 88
DOI https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad99db
Keywords Magnetohydrodynamical simulations, Solar physics, Bootstrap, Solar magnetic fields, Time series analysis
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3351800

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