Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Solar Cycles

There has been a lot of commentary on the current sunspot count with many commentators jumping the gun and predicting a long lived low like the rather famous Maunder Minimum. This timely article puts us back on track and tells us to hold on a minute. Fears of a protracted low are very premature.

Another aspect of the sun spot record that has always bothered me is that although our records since the early 1700’s has been well maintained and certainly meeting today’s standards, the early period of telescope usage between 1609 and 1700 may have been a lot more dicey. At least that was the apparent consensus forty years ago. In other words during the early going and even late into the mid nineteenth century with the advent of Wolf’s methodology, sunspot counting was prone to subjective decisions.

This may not sound like a lot, but you only need to decide among your group of observers that the observed image is one foot across for fifty years and then switch to better equipment and an easier two foot image to change the image usefulness by a factor of four. There were only a handful of observers who all knew each other and it is easy to see how improving equipment would have quietly allowed the sun spot count to creep up.

In other words, the low count for the Maunder Minimum may hugely reflect the limitations of the equipment and numbers of observers. I still think that there was a minimum but I simply do not totally trust the data.

Even today, no one is sitting there counting sun spots. Rather data sampling and formulas are shaking out the current number as they should. It is just a huge mistake to extrapolate that level of precision back over the centuries. Yet it feels like it could be done.

This means that the attempt to link the known event of the Little Ice Age with the shaky Maunder Minimum is unconvincing and similar to the linking of CO2 concentration and Global Warming,

What's Wrong with the Sun? (Nothing)


July 11, 2008: Stop the presses! The sun is behaving normally.

So says NASA solar physicist David Hathaway. "There have been some reports lately that Solar Minimum is lasting longer than it should. That's not true. The ongoing lull in sunspot number is well within historic norms for the solar cycle."

This report, that there's nothing to report, is newsworthy because of a growing buzz in lay and academic circles that something is wrong with the sun. Sun Goes Longer Than Normal Without Producing Sunspots declared one recent press release. A careful look at the data, however, suggests otherwise.

But first, a status report: "The sun is now near the low point of its 11-year activity cycle," says Hathaway. "We call this 'Solar Minimum.' It is the period of quiet that separates one Solar Max from another."

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/images/solarcycleupdate/ssn_predict_l.gif

Above: The solar cycle, 1995-2015. The "noisy" curve traces measured sunspot numbers; the smoothed curves are predictions. Credit: D. Hathaway/NASA/MSFC. [more]

During Solar Max, huge sunspots and intense solar flares are a daily occurance. Auroras appear in Florida. Radiation storms knock out satellites. Radio blackouts frustrate hams. The last such episode took place in the years around 2000-2001.

During Solar Minimum, the opposite occurs. Solar flares are almost non-existant while whole weeks go by without a single, tiny sunspot to break the monotony of the blank sun. This is what we are experiencing now. Although minima are a normal aspect of the solar cycle, some observers are questioning the length of the ongoing minimum, now slogging through its 3rd year.

"It does seem like it's taking a long time," allows Hathaway, "but I think we're just forgetting how long a solar minimum can last." In the early 20th century there were periods of quiet lasting almost twice as long as the current spell. (See the end notes for an example.) Most researchers weren't even born then.

Hathaway has studied international sunspot counts stretching all the way back to 1749 and he offers these statistics: "The average period of a solar cycle is 131 months with a standard deviation of 14 months. Decaying solar cycle 23 (the one we are experiencing now) has so far lasted 142 months--well within the first standard deviation and thus not at all abnormal. The last available 13-month smoothed sunspot number was 5.70. This is bigger than 12 of the last 23 solar minimum values."

In summary, "the current minimum is not abnormally low or long."

The longest minimum on record, the Maunder Minimum of 1645-1715, lasted an incredible 70 years. Sunspots were rarely observed and the solar cycle seemed to have broken down completely. The period of quiet coincided with the Little Ice Age, a series of extraordinarily bitter winters in Earth's northern hemisphere. Many researchers are convinced that low solar activity, acting in concert with increased volcanism and possible changes in ocean current patterns, played a role in that 17th century cooling.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/images/solarcycleupdate/ssn_yearlyNew2.jpg

For reasons no one understands, the sunspot cycle revived itself in the early 18th century and has carried on since with the familiar 11-year period. Because solar physicists do not understand what triggered the Maunder Minimum or exactly how it influenced Earth's climate, they are always on the look-out for signs that it might be happening again.

The quiet of 2008 is not the second coming of the Maunder Minimum, believes Hathaway. "We have already observed a few sunspots from the next solar cycle," he says. (See Solar Cycle 24 Begins.) "This suggests the solar cycle is progressing normally."

What's next? Hathaway anticipates more spotless days1, maybe even hundreds, followed by a return to Solar Max conditions in the years around 2012.

Stay tuned to Science@NASA for updates.

Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

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