B. Zieger et K. Mursula, ANNUAL VARIATION IN NEAR-EARTH SOLAR-WIND SPEED - EVIDENCE FOR PERSISTENT NORTH-SOUTH ASYMMETRY RELATED TO SOLAR MAGNETIC POLARITY, Geophysical research letters, 25(6), 1998, pp. 841-844
We study the annual variation in solar wind speed at Earth's orbit and
in geomagnetic activity since mid-1960's. The two parameters depict a
very similar annual variation during the whole period. Annual variati
on has maximum amplitude around sunspot minima. The phase of annual va
riation reverses soon after solar maxima, following the Sun's polarity
reversal and indicating a new type of 22-year periodicity. Stronger s
olar wind is found at or close to the Earth's highest northern (southe
rn, resp.) heliographic latitudes during solar minima with a negative
(positive) magnetic polarity. This implies an asymmetric SW speed dist
ribution across heliographic equator such that the minimum speed regio
n during solar minimum times is displaced away from heliographic equat
or towards the northern magnetic hemisphere. This may result e.g. from
a systematically larger extension of polar coronal holes from the Sun
's magnetic south pole toward solar equator. We exclude the earlier ex
planations proposed for annual variation, such as accumulation of smal
l comets within 1 AU, or internal solar variation.