0 apparent decrease from the 56° - 58° zone to the 58° -60 zone is due
to the lack of data in that region. The lower diagrams seem to indicate
that the number of auroras seen in the northermost region (58° -60°)
varies relatively little throughout the year, but at lower latitudes
during equinoctial periods the belt in which overhead auroras are seen
becomes, on the average, broad. Such a study must be supplemented in the
future, particularly in the regions to the north of gm lat. 58°, by
all-sky camera data. d) Sunspot cycle. It has long been suggested that
the main belt of auroras contracts during periods of low sunspot number;
and conversely, at times of large sunspot number, the radius of the main
belt is enlarged, moving towards lower gm latitudes. Observing auroras
at a station to the south of the (northern) auroral zone, the appearance
frequency of auroras increases with increase of the sunspot number (d.
MEINEL, NEGAARD and CHAMBERLAIN 1954 [50J; see also Sect. 32a and Fig.
51). However, no detailed study of the sunspot cycle variation of the
auroral distribution has yet been made in any systematic way. It is
expected that iso- auroral diagrams will be constructed from data
obtained during the I QSY, which will enable us to compare them with the
IGY isoauroral diagrams, such as that produced by FELDSTEIN and
SOLOMATINA (1960 [18J). SO far, the information available on this
subject is fragmentary.