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The silent Sun’s uncertain course
Financial Times ^ | October 1, 2008 | Staff

Posted on 10/01/2008 6:19:04 PM PDT by Iron Munro

The Sun has gone quiet, very quiet. The solar wind – which is comprised of electrically charged particles streaming out from the star – is weaker than at any time since scientists began accurate observations in the 1950s, and the number of sunspots in 2008 may be the lowest since the 19th century.

This year’s solar silence has surprised space physicists, who were expecting the Sun to have moved away from the minimum point of the 11-year solar cycle by now. “To see such a significant and consistent long-term reduction in the solar wind output is really remarkable,” says David McComas, a senior scientist on the Ulysses solar satellite mission, a joint project of the European and US space agencies.

Back on Earth, the Sun’s inactivity ought to represent good news for the companies that operate satellites, run power grids or make terrestrial radio systems, which are all vulnerable to damage and disruption from solar storms. In one interpretation of its long-term implications, however, the effects could be far from benign.

Experts are reluctant to predict the consequences for Earth and its inhabitants because there are so many complex interactions between the Sun’s output, the planet’s atmosphere and magnetic field, and cosmic radiation from outer space. Some climatologists say that, over a period of decades, a quieter Sun means a cooler Earth, although the relationship between solar activity and climate is particularly controversial.

To add to the uncertainty, no one knows how long the Sun is likely to stay quiet. One extreme would be a continued period of inactivity, with very few sunspots or solar storms, that could last for decades. The last such suspension of the 11-year solar cycle occurred between 1645 and 1715, a period known by historians of astronomy as the Maunder Minimum, which coincided with the coldest period of the past millennium, known as the “little ice age”.

“If we had a repeat of the Maunder Minimum it would be very exciting [for science] but that is not likely to happen,” says Nancy Crooker, research professor at Boston University. Like the majority of astronomers, she expects solar activity to pick up soon, leading to the next maximum around 2012.

There is no agreement, however, on how disturbed the Sun will be during the next maximum. According to some predictions, it will be relatively calm, with fewer solar storms than during the last few maxima (in 2001-02, 1990-91 and 1980-81). Others say that, despite the low starting point, the Sun could still build up to an exceptionally intense maximum over the next four years.

“Predicting the next maximum now is rather like forecasting next summer’s weather in the middle of winter,” says Jim Wild, a space scientist at Lancaster University.

The 11-year cycle is driven by the changing magnetism of the “solar dynamo”. The faster rotation of the Sun’s equatorial regions than the poles amplifies the magnetic field until it bursts through to the surface, causing sunspots and shooting billions of tonnes of solar material into space – a “coronal mass ejection” (see picture above – the black circles are sunspots). But there is no good model to explain the timing or intensity of these events.

“If I was the operator of a satellite system or an electricity grid, I would be happy for the Sun to remain quiet,” Dr Wild says. But he and other solar experts warn against complacency.

While there are far fewer coronal mass ejections during a solar minimum, they can nevertheless take place without warning at any time. Prof Crooker says a sudden solar storm can be even more damaging if it occurs during a quiet period, when the solar wind is weak, than during a solar maximum.

What astronomers believe was the most intense eruption from the Sun for several centuries took place in August 1859 during an otherwise fairly tranquil solar cycle. The aurora borealis or Northern Lights – the vivid photoelectric display triggered when solar particles hit Earth’s upper atmosphere – moved down from its normal polar haunts to put on a spectacular show as far as the tropics. Other effects included putting the world’s nascent telegraph network out of action for several hours.

If such a solar superstorm occurred now, it would cause tens of billions of dollars of damage to communications and navigational satellites and cause continent-wide electrical blackouts that might last for weeks, say Sten Odenwald and James Green, Nasa scientists who have analysed the 1859 event.

One certain effect of a quiet Sun is that more high-energy cosmic rays from elsewhere in the universe can beat their way through the weakened solar wind and reach Earth. Although these cosmic rays do not arrive in a sudden eruption, like a solar storm, their steady cumulative impact may shorten the lifetime of satellites.

This quiet period would not be a good time to launch a manned space mission beyond Earth orbit, to the Moon or Mars, adds Prof Crooker. Astronauts would face the harmful impact of increased cosmic radiation, which would outweigh the reduced likelihood of solar storms. Another effect of reduced solar activity is a cooling and thinning of the upper atmosphere. This too has an upside and a downside: the reduced drag will enable both satellites and space junk to stay aloft for longer.

The relationship between solar variability and climate remains a mystery, says Jamie Casford, a climate researcher at Durham University. While the Sun’s magnetic field and the solar wind change remarkably over the years – the Ulysses satellite measurements show that they are 20 to 30 per cent weaker now than at the last solar minimum in 1996-97 – the accompanying changes in the Sun’s total energy output are tiny.

When the Sun is very quiet, the amount of energy that reaches Earth is only 0.1 per cent less than when it is very active – a change too small to produce significant global cooling on its own. “I would say that solar variability does feed into the climate system but we really do not know what the mechanism is,” Dr Casford says.

There are several theories. A controversial one comes from Henrik Svensmark, a physicist at the Danish National Space Centre in Copenhagen; he believes increased cosmic radiation, hitting the atmosphere when the Sun is quiet, stimulates cloud formation – which cools the planet. Paul Mayewski, director of the University of Maine Climate Change Institute, says the primary impact of solar variability is on atmospheric circulation, which then affects temperature.

Although some people who are sceptical about the human influence on global warming like to emphasise the link between solar variability and climate, Prof Mayewski turns their argument on its head: “The fact that we are not in conditions like the little ice age today shows that the atmosphere is being perturbed by human activities,” he says.

If the Sun stays quiet for the next few years, it may temper the effects of man-made global warming for a while but most experts believe that rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will eventually push temperatures higher again.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: catastrophism; climate; globalwarming; maunderminimum; sunspots
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See the last few paragraphs.

Experts aren't certain about anything at all other than the fact that these conditions lead to colder weather but they are absolutely sure that Global warming will still prevail!

1 posted on 10/01/2008 6:19:04 PM PDT by Iron Munro
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To: Iron Munro

DOOOOMMMMMMMEEEEEEEDDDDDDD !


2 posted on 10/01/2008 6:22:59 PM PDT by redstateconfidential ("Go to the mattresses")
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To: Iron Munro

Bush’s fault.


3 posted on 10/01/2008 6:25:06 PM PDT by Kiss Me Hardy
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To: Iron Munro
“Predicting the next maximum now is rather like forecasting next summer’s weather in the middle of winter,” says Jim Wild, a space scientist at Lancaster University.

But Algore can tell you the weather for the next 100 years.

4 posted on 10/01/2008 6:27:34 PM PDT by gitmo (Some days you're the dog. Some days you're the hydrant.)
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To: Iron Munro
If the Sun stays quiet for the next few years, it may temper the effects of man-made global warming for a while but most experts believe that rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will eventually push temperatures higher again.

This incorrect assertion destroys any credibility this article may have had. Increased levels of carbon dioxide come after, not before global warming! Everybody knows that except Al Gore and his paid minions!

5 posted on 10/01/2008 6:28:26 PM PDT by olezip
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To: Iron Munro
I have fond memories of working a station in California from North Texas on 52.525 FM. On a 5 watt handi-talky connected to a cubical quad.

And 2-meter repeater interference from over 400 miles away.

I would like to see (at least) one more maximum before I shuffle off this mortal coil.

I can handle the cold or the heat, just give me propagation, and a higher MUF.

/johnny

6 posted on 10/01/2008 6:29:32 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Bless us all, each, and every one.)
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To: Iron Munro
Obama will fix it in the first 100 days of his administration.
7 posted on 10/01/2008 6:31:27 PM PDT by Taxbilly
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To: Iron Munro

Prof Mayewski says: “The fact that we are not in conditions like the little ice age today shows that the atmosphere is being perturbed by human activities.”

Jim Wild, a space scientist at Lancaster University, says:“Predicting the next maximum now is rather like forecasting next summer’s weather in the middle of winter.”

Can you spot the leftist who wants to tax us trillions of dollars for no good reason other than wealth redistribution?


8 posted on 10/01/2008 6:31:28 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: JRandomFreeper

Yep DX is following the DOW


9 posted on 10/01/2008 6:35:08 PM PDT by Taxbilly
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To: Iron Munro
The solar wind – SNIP - is weaker than at any time since scientists began accurate observations in the 1950s,

Bernard's Law of Inverse Relationships - The strength of the solar wind is inversely proportional to the amount of hot air coming out of Washington, DC. This is especially true for science substitutes for scientific fact regarding climate change. Expect the solar wind to remain very weak for the next 35 days or so. Maybe longer.

10 posted on 10/01/2008 6:35:48 PM PDT by Bernard (If you always tell the truth, you never have to remember exactly what you said.)
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To: JRandomFreeper
Summer here in LA is about normal. Perhaps a tad more humid than usual.

The Sun as a star. Imagine that!

11 posted on 10/01/2008 6:39:57 PM PDT by onedoug ( Barracuda!)
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To: Iron Munro

Time to put shades on all those solar power collectors before we suck all the power out of Old Sol.


12 posted on 10/01/2008 6:41:01 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Um, maybe we are just entering the ice age? According to what I”ve read, it require 0.5% drop per annum over 10 years. Guess what; we’ve started that sort of drop over the past 18 mos.


13 posted on 10/01/2008 6:49:31 PM PDT by sobieski
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To: Taxbilly

“This day marks when the seas stopped rising”

Yes, Hussein, because we entered an Ice Age and the whole darn planet began to freeze.


14 posted on 10/01/2008 6:52:41 PM PDT by sobieski
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To: Iron Munro

Where there are no problems, there are no grants.

Notice that the only “problems” recieving grants are those that can be leveraged into more socialist controls.


15 posted on 10/01/2008 7:14:46 PM PDT by G Larry ("Disgust" is a valid expression!-Vote Family Values!)
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To: All

It is a little creepy, like the beginning of a B level sci-fi movie...Whats next, supernova, or wake up in the morning and we have a dead sun....Either way I am sure a demoncrat with a new tax will solve it all straight away !


16 posted on 10/01/2008 7:16:47 PM PDT by uncle fenders
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To: JRandomFreeper
I've heard the Honolulu 146 04/64 traffic in San Diego where the Otay Mountain repeater shares the same split. I've had opportunities to work San Diego to Santa Barbara on 146.52 with a 1 watt Standard HT fitted with a rubber duck antenna. It was neat to hear traffic from the space station when it was passing over San Franciso.

After moving to Idaho, I upgraded my license to Extra Class. That said, I'm hardly on the air anymore. By 1985 I had moved to principal operation on 2m packet. My wife and I work ARES, RACES and Animal Rescue Reserve assignments when needed.

17 posted on 10/01/2008 7:23:34 PM PDT by Myrddin
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To: Myrddin
I packed my radios up when I deployed after 9/11/01, and I'm just getting back to setting up a station. CW is a joy, but I REQUIRE a DSP filter to be able to copy. (and it's good I'm single, because the volume stays high). Hearing loss sucks when you are single, not so bad when married.

The nice thing about Amateur Radio is the niches we can find. Sad part is the low solar minimum.

That said, this weekend, I did hear Italy, Canada, lots of little former soviet countries, both US coasts, and copied the ARRL bulletin from Connecticut 10 over S9 with a G5RV up about 34 feet.

/johnny

18 posted on 10/01/2008 7:41:08 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Bless us all, each, and every one.)
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To: onedoug
"Summer here in LA is about normal. Perhaps a tad more humid than usual."

The last couple of winters at over 9,000 feet in the central Rockies have been delayed by about a month. But it was much wetter in the intermontane basins (like dry prairies between ranges) over the past two winters.


19 posted on 10/01/2008 7:42:22 PM PDT by familyop (cbt. engr. (cbt), NG, '89-'96, Duncan Hunter or no-vote)
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To: Iron Munro
To add to the uncertainty, no one knows how long the Sun is likely to stay quiet.

For all we know Sunspots may have ceased permanently. In a couple of years we could be burning all the fossil fuels we can just to stop Global Icing.

20 posted on 10/01/2008 7:49:14 PM PDT by P-Marlowe (LPFOKETT GAHCOEEP-w/o*)
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