A Community Dataset for Comparing Automated Coronal Hole Detection Schemes
Reiss, MA; Muglach, K; Mason, E; et al.Davies, EE; Chakraborty, S; Delouille, V; Downs, C; Garton, TM; Grajeda, JA; Hamada, A; Heinemann, SG; Illarionov, E; Jarolim, R; Krista, L; Lowder, C; Verwichte, E; Arge, CN; Boucheron, LE; Foullon, C; Kirk, MS; Kosovichev, A; Leisner, A; Möstl, C; Turtle, J; Veronig, A
Date: 13 February 2024
Article
Journal
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Publisher
American Astronomical Society / IOP Publishing
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Automated detection schemes are nowadays the standard approach for locating coronal holes in extreme-UV images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). However, factors such as the noisy nature of solar imagery, instrumental effects, and others make it challenging to identify coronal holes using these automated schemes. While ...
Automated detection schemes are nowadays the standard approach for locating coronal holes in extreme-UV images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). However, factors such as the noisy nature of solar imagery, instrumental effects, and others make it challenging to identify coronal holes using these automated schemes. While discrepancies between detection schemes have been noted in the literature, a comprehensive assessment of these discrepancies is still lacking. The contribution of the Coronal Hole Boundary Working Team in the COSPAR ISWAT initiative to close this gap is threefold. First, we present the first community data set for comparing automated coronal hole detection schemes. This data set consists of 29 SDO images, all of which were selected by experienced observers to challenge automated schemes. Second, we use this community data set as input to 14 widely applied automated schemes to study coronal holes and collect their detection results. Third, we study three SDO images from the data set that exemplify the most important lessons learned from this effort. Our findings show that the choice of the automated detection scheme can have a significant effect on the physical properties of coronal holes, and we discuss the implications of these findings for open questions in solar and heliospheric physics. We envision that this community data set will serve the scientific community as a benchmark data set for future developments in the field.
Mathematics and Statistics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Open access. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
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