25 March 2009

The Case of The Missing Sun Spots

Posted by Dan Satterfield

Do sun spots control Earth’s climate?

YES!

So does El Nino, La Nina, and the myriad of other oceanic oscillations. So do the slow regular changes in our orbit around the sun, and so do the ever increasing amount of greenhouse gases, in our atmosphere.

The affect of the sun spot cycle on our climate has been investigated quite well. Thanks to bogus claims that the warming of the 20th century was due to sun spots, and cosmic rays, this has actually been investigated to a greater degree, than would normally be the case.

Now, don’t go telling everybody, but the sun is late. Nothing to panic about yet, but our normally active sun has gone very quiet.

picture-4Above image courtesy NASA

The sun goes through an 11 year sunspot cycle (It actually takes the sun 22 years to complete one cycle, but this cycle includes two sun spot maxima.) Amateur radio operators are quite familiar with this cycle, as it affects radio transmissions. NASA keeps an eye on it as well, because when the sun spot cycle is peaking, there can be large solar flares that can affect Astronauts and satellites.

In between one of the moon landing missions, there was a gigantic flare that could have been fatal for moon walking astronauts. NASA had a contingency for this. One Astronaut would lie on top of the other on the moon. The water in his body would block the radiation, and the guy on the bottom would escape a fatal dose. The Astronaut on top would not be so lucky.

There are a lot of cross polar flights now, and the airlines have to monitor the sun closely. A large flare will knock out high frequency radio, and the FAA demands constant contact with commercial aircraft. Passengers would also get a dose of radiation crossing the pole during a flare. It would not be serious, but the air crews on the flights, could end up with multiple doses if this was not watched.

So it is watched!

NOAA now has a Space Weather Center at the Earth Systems Research Lab. in Boulder,Colorado. I visited it last June.

The solar cycle reached it’s bottom late last year, and the sunspots should be starting to increase again now.

Except they aren’t!

At first thought, one might expect the sun to be cooler, with a bunch of dark spots on it’s surface, but the opposite is true. The sun puts out a bit more energy when there are a lot of spots, especially in the ultraviolet. This solar cycle  does affect planetary temps. The planet cools slightly when sun spots are low, and warms a little when the sun is active. Feed-backs, caused by Ozone in the stratosphere, magnify it slightly as well.

Slightly. The change in solar radiation at our distance from the sun is from 1365 Watts/M(sq) to 1367 W/M(sq). This equates to about 0.1 deg. C of change. Not much. In contrast, the Earth’s temperature varies back and forth, about .3-.5C , because of all the factors I mentioned above. The current La Nina, acts to cool the planet somewhat. (In spite of that, the February temperature of Earth was the 10th warmest on record).
fig1_s1
While the sun has been in it’s quiet phase for an unusally long time, it is nowhere near a record. It was quieter longer in the frst part of the 1900’s. It also seems that indeed the sun has been fairly active over the last 50 years compared to the past several hundred. So we may indeed be going back to a quieter sun. This will undoubtedly bring out those claiming that the warming of the past 50 years, was all the sun’s doing. Read the paragraph above!

Better yet look at the image below. The bottom 3 graphs are the sun. The Blue curve at top is temperature. The green curve is the Carbon dioxide levels from Mauna Loa.
solarforcings

In the late 1600’s and into the 1700’s, there was an almost complete lack of sunspots for several decades! It is called the Maunder Minimum. The planet did indeed cool, although part of that was likely due to volcanic activity. Volcanoes have been very well documented to cause much greater fluctuations on Earth’s temp. than the solar cycle.

If we were to go into a new extended period of low sunspot activity, would this wipe out the affects of the increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere?? For that answer, we have  Dr. James Hansen (NASA’s top Climate Scientist). He ran the numbers.
At the rate of CO2 increase (Around 2 parts per million per year) the cooling from a sun in long term quiet phase, would be wiped out in just 7 years.

Soon there will be gaggle of internet Climate experts claiming that the sun has gone quiet ,and we will cool back down now. It was all the sun’s doing! Told ya so!

This kind of thing reminds me of a true story about W.C. Fields. As he lay dying in a California hospital, a friend walked into his room. She was surprised to see the firmly agnostic comedian reading the Bible. “What are you doing??” she asked.

W.C. Fields replied- “Looking, —   for loopholes“.

Later,
Dan

Thanks to NASA Earth Observatory/James Hansen NASA GISS for the info/data.