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Solar Cycle Driven by More than Sunspots; Sun Also Bombards Earth with High-Speed Streams of Wind
From an NCAR press release September 17, 2009
BOULDER—Challenging conventional wisdom, new research finds that the number of sunspots provides an incomplete measure of changes in the Sun’s impact on Earth over the course of the 11-year solar cycle. The study, led by scientists at the High Altitude Observatory of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and the University of Michigan, finds that Earth was bombarded last year with high levels of solar energy at a time when the Sun was in an unusually quiet phase and sunspots had virtually disappeared.
“The Sun continues to surprise us,” says NCAR scientist Sarah Gibson, the lead author. “The solar wind can hit Earth like a fire hose even when there are virtually no sunspots.”
The study, also written by scientists at NOAA and NASA, is being published today in the Journal of Geophysical Research – Space Physics. It was funded by NASA and by the National Science Foundation, NCAR’s sponsor.
Scientists for centuries have used sunspots, which are areas of concentrated magnetic fields that appear as dark patches on the solar surface, to determine the approximately 11-year solar cycle. At solar maximum, the number of sunspots peaks. During this time, intense solar flares occur daily and geomagnetic storms frequently buffet Earth, knocking out satellites and disrupting communications networks.
(Illustration by Janet Kozyra with images from NASA, courtesy Journal of Geophysical Research – Space Physics.) click for larger image”]
Gibson and her colleagues focused instead on another process by which the Sun discharges energy. The team analyzed high-speed streams within the solar wind that carry turbulent magnetic fields out into the solar system.
When those streams blow by Earth, they intensify the energy of the planet’s outer radiation belt. This can create serious hazards for weather, navigation, and communications satellites that travel at high altitudes within the outer radiation belts, while also threatening astronauts in the International Space Station. Auroral storms light up the night sky repeatedly at high latitudes as the streams move past, driving mega-ampere electrical currents about 75 miles above Earth’s surface. All that energy heats and expands the upper atmosphere. This expansion pushes denser air higher, slowing down satellites and causing them to drop to lower altitudes.
Scientists previously thought that the streams largely disappeared as the solar cycle approached minimum. But when the study team compared measurements within the current solar minimum interval, taken in 2008, with measurements of the last solar minimum in 1996, they found that Earth in 2008 was continuing to resonate with the effects of the streams. Although the current solar minimum has fewer sunspots than any minimum in 75 years, the Sun’s effect on Earth’s outer radiation belt, as measured by electron fluxes, was more than three times greater last year than in 1996.
Gibson said that observations this year show that the winds have finally slowed, almost two years after sunspots reached the levels of last cycle’s minimum.
The authors note that more research is needed to understand the impacts of these high-speed streams on the planet. The study raises questions about how the streams might have affected Earth in the past when the Sun went through extended periods of low sunspot activity, such as a period known as the Maunder minimum that lasted from about 1645 to 1715.
“The fact that Earth can continue to ring with solar energy has implications for satellites and sensitive technological systems,” Gibson says. “This will keep scientists busy bringing all the pieces together.”
Buffeting Earth with streams of energy
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Sarah Gibson [ENLARGE](©UCAR, photo by Carlye Calvin.) News media terms of use* |
For the new study, the scientists analyzed information gathered from an array of space- and ground-based instruments during two international scientific projects: the Whole Sun Month in the late summer of 1996 and the Whole Heliosphere Interval in the early spring of 2008. The solar cycle was at a minimal stage during both the study periods, with few sunspots in 1996 and even fewer in 2008.
The team found that strong, long, and recurring high-speed streams of charged particles buffeted Earth in 2008. In contrast, Earth encountered weaker and more sporadic streams in 1996. As a result, the planet was more affected by the Sun in 2008 than in 1996, as measured by such variables as the strength of electron fluxes in the outer radiation belt, the velocity of the solar wind in the vicinity of Earth, and the periodic behavior of auroras (the Northern and Southern Lights) as they responded to repeated high-speed streams.
The prevalence of high-speed streams during this solar minimum appears to be related to the current structure of the Sun. As sunspots became less common over the last few years, large coronal holes lingered in the surface of the Sun near its equator. The high-speed streams that blow out of those holes engulfed Earth during 55 percent of the study period in 2008, compared to 31 percent of the study period in 1996. A single stream of charged particles can last for as long as 7 to 10 days. At their peak, the accumulated impact of the streams during one year can inject as much energy into Earth’s environment as massive eruptions from the Sun’s surface can during a year at the peak of a solar cycle, says co-author Janet Kozyra of the University of Michigan.
The streams strike Earth periodically, spraying out in full force like water from a fire hose as the Sun revolves. When the magnetic fields in the solar winds point in a direction opposite to the magnetic lines in Earth’s magnetosphere, they have their strongest effect. The strength and speed of the magnetic fields in the high-speed streams can also affect Earth’s response.
The authors speculate that the high number of low-latitude coronal holes during this solar minimum may be related to a weakness in the Sun’s overall magnetic field. The Sun in 2008 had smaller polar coronal holes than in 1996, but high-speed streams that escape from the Sun’s poles do not travel in the direction of Earth.
“The Sun-Earth interaction is complex, and we haven’t yet discovered all the consequences for the Earth’s environment of the unusual solar winds this cycle,” Kozyra says. “The intensity of magnetic activity at Earth in this extremely quiet solar minimum surprised us all. The new observations from last year are changing our understanding of how solar quiet intervals affect the Earth and how and why this might change from cycle to cycle.”
About the article
Title: “If the Sun is so quiet, why is the Earth ringing? A comparison of two solar minimum intervals”
Authors: Sarah Gibson, Janet Kozyra, Giuliana de Toma, Barbara Emory, Terry Onsager, and Barbara Thompson
Publication: Journal of Geophysical Research – Space Physics
Related sites on the World Wide Web
Whole Heliosphere Interval (2008)
h/t to Leif Svalgaard
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Leif adds some perspective to this press release:
IMHO this is just another PR stunt, ‘never seen before’, ‘overturns what we thought before’, etc.
It has been known for a long time [decades] that there are strong recurrent solar wind streams leading up to solar minimum [EVERY solar minimum]. Attached are plots of the solar wind speed prior to minimum for many minima in the past. The blue curve show the speed derived from geomagnetic measurement and the pink curve shows that directly measured by spacecraft, some of the differences between the curves is due to missing data from the spacecraft [at times they only measured a small percentage of the time]. The smooth curves are 13 rotation running means.Also attached is the Recurrence Index, a measure for the recurrence tendency of the flow. High values = a solar rotation is very much like the previous one [the cross correlation between the two]

Especially the minimum in 1944 is very much like the current one in the sense that there was high-speed solar wind close to the minimum, even closer, fact. It is amazing that each new generation of scientists will have to rediscover and relearn what was already known. But such is human nature, every generation has to do this.


Tom in Texas (11:26:59) :
“Is that the day his peer-reviewed paper will be published?”
And peer reviewed by Hansen, Mann, Santer, Jones, Steig, et.al.?
When you submit a paper you can usually specify whom you would NOT want as reviewers.
Leif Svalgaard (11:21:21) :
Zeke the Sneak (11:13:45) :
Yes, it should stop.
science can once again have the benefit of blind experimentation.
Groping in the dark rarely leads to progress.
—
Alright, then double-blind experimentation.
Zeke the Sneak (11:58:35) :
Alright, then double-blind experimentation.
Groping in the dark by blind people?
the_Butcher (11:42:28),
Leif is an esteemed scientist who is unfailingly polite. And he makes predictions, which is always risky. What’s your solar prediction?
Smokey (13:07:10) :
the_Butcher (11:42:28),
And he makes predictions, which is always risky.
And I think the prediction is pretty good for now, as we predicted that SC24 would be the lowest in a 100 years, which seems to be coming to pass.
the_Butcher (11:42:28) : RUDE!!
kim (05:13:22) : re. Scott 4:22:25 “See Ryan Maue’s chart of Accumulated Cyclone Energy, now at a thirty year low. The jury hasn’t even been picked yet.”
No jury has been picked…because there is NO trial.
The Judge has thrown the case out for sheer lack of supporting evidence. 🙂
On second thought, it would not be unreasonable to put Al Gore and his ilk on trial for yelling “fire” in a crowded theater, namely, scaring children across the globe that their coastal cities might be swept over by a 20-foot wall of water [and not a tsunami mind you].
But a child does not know the difference.
For shame.
The US Chamber of Commerce has recently proffered putting AGW and its henchmen on trial.
I wanna be on that jury!!!!!
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
Chris
“Pamela Gray (09:33:58) :Once again Stephen, I have to comment on your clarity of thought and what seems to me to be a wonderfully logical mind. You are to the oceans what Leif is to the Sun. 4 marks.”
I could not agree more. And he is an easy read at that. I sincerely hope he will compile all of these elegant posts for a book!
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
the_Butcher (11:42:28) :
You are lucky your major ad hominem did not get snipped. The moderator may have been asleep.
Or maybe the moderator allowed it to be published so that such blither can be seen for what it is.
You are wrong on Leif.
No big deal anyways…as I can ASSURE you he doesn’t care what you think anyway, and, evidently by the juvenile tone of your post, with good reason.
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
REPLY: I let it through. I wanted to show how cowards who won’t give their own name, will stoop to such lows to disparage people who do have the courage to put their name behind their work and words. I knew Leif wouldn’t be bothered by it. That being said, we should all stop this sneaking around with nom de plumes and use our real names, no matter what side of the debate you are on if what you have to say has any value, stand behind it. – Anthony
That’s why I always end my posts with my real name, even though my screen name reflects a certain passion of mine in regards to stopping overfishing in the oceans.
Happy to give my last name, too….there aren’t many of our clan in the country LOL.
Chris Malendoski
Norfolk, VA, USA
Chris Malendoski
Another ski.
Tom Wisneski
From one ski to another!
I don’t agree with everything Leif says, but he is still entitled to say it.
We all have our various beliefs.
I form my opinions based on what I can see and measure.
If either science or politics cannot answer my questions in a straightforward manner, I will attempt to discover them myself using whatever means I possess.
You’d do the same if you were in my shoes.
Robert Bateman
Weaverville, CA, USA
rbateman (17:22:46) :
I form my opinions based on what I can see and measure.
If you fall ill, you might seek qualified medical advice, rather than relying on what you can see and measure.
Yes but if you fall ill you also rely upon your own instincts and knowledge, and methodically attempt to deduce as to what’s ailing you.
Many times doctors and specialists can be off on their assessments…so that is not failsafe.
However, if I need an operation, I am not going to be operating on myself, that’s for sure.
Relying upon a surgeon to do the right thing while you are under the knife is one thing.
Arriving at scientific conclusions based upon the best knowledge and research there is, combined with common sense and intuition, as to what is the underlying causes of, lets say, the long-term shifts in the AMO, is another.
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
savethesharks (18:17:51) :
Arriving at scientific conclusions based upon the best knowledge and research there is, combined with common sense and intuition, as to what is the underlying causes
That is what scientists do. And it is a BIG [and full-time] job to learn ‘the best knowledge and research’.
Leif Svalgaard (18:02:36) :
We’re talking the health of the Sun and Climate here, not Healthcare.
savethesharks (18:17:51) :
The doctor understands that more often than not, the patient knows what hurts.
As I have said at least 100 times: Your work is much appreciated and scientists like yourself are invaluable for the human race and for the whole planet.
I support you and your life’s work and I think I have made that clear.
In light of the great mass confusion today thanks to both sides of the political aisle that are pulling the scientific method apart into little shreds, that should not stop “laypeople” [especially those with great skills, like Rob] from arriving at their own conclusions, or using their own means [e.g. the “Layman’s Sunspot Count”].
The most important part of the quote:
“If either science or politics cannot answer my questions in a straightforward manner, I will attempt to discover them myself using whatever means I possess.”
There is nothing wrong with that approach….and nothing whatsoever in that approach is meant to discount the life’s work of a super-specialist like yourself.
Knowledge is power.
And perhaps one day we all will be able to use all of this knowledge to solve vexing problems of our planet and our future.
Thanks for your dedication and if I were a philanthropist, I would be pitching private money right and left to back your research.
But I think Rob has a unique scientific aptitude and I would be throwing money his direction too.
All the best,
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
savethesharks (19:36:05) :
that should not stop “laypeople” [especially those with great skills, like Rob] from arriving at their own conclusions, or using their own means [e.g. the “Layman’s Sunspot Count”].
And that is valuable and encouraged. Amateurs have always [especially in Astronomy and related fields] done important [and appreciated] work [Schwabe comes to mind]. You get the most benefit when their work is tempered and put in context by the centuries of knowledge accrued and underpinned by modern physics. Modern science is a coherent structure, and the coherence is hard-won. [Please, no lecture on open mind, out-of-the-box, blinkers, etc]
Speaking of philanthropy….I have this idea and I may be way off base but humor me here:
Thinking about starting a private foundation that is devoted to non-political funding of pure scientific research, for science’s sake.
Want to focus specifically on the oceans, the sun, the earth, and all of their interrelations thereto. Obviously, astronomy and other disciplines are necessary.
All of this crazy, fascinating maze of information as to what makes the earth’s climate tick, what makes the sun’s “climate” tick, and so on.
FOS Foundation of the Oceans and the Sun
And this would fund a new institute, where the best in the world would be invited to become adjunct professors [while remaining at their respective posts, such as Stanford].
IOS Institute of the Oceans and the Sun
Eventually….form….
AOS Academy of the Oceans and the Sun
This would be a K – 12 school that attempts to get more and more children “turned on” to science with a science/math-intensive program.
Other disciplines, such as philosophy, the arts, and of course competetive sports and martial arts, would be part of the ciriculum too.
The point is to REVERSE the trend of the last 40 years where science and math have taken a back seat in our schools.
The school and the academy would be “elite” in the sense that the standards are high, but is AFFORDABLE for anyone with the aptitude to keep up.
Crazy idea….and I feel sure it is not an original idea….just a dream of where we could be and how much we could advance as a species if we only had the right tools….
…and thus the ability to solve problems never before imagined.
Since I have two of my very favorite people on this blog at a dialogue right now….
What do you think??
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
Tom in Texas (13:49:37) :
the_Butcher (11:42:28) : RUDE!!
——————–
Its nothing compared to his bad sarcasm all over the Blogs, unless you enjoy it? 😉
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Smokey (13:07:10) :
Leif is an esteemed scientist who is unfailingly polite. And he makes predictions…
——–
I fail to see his politeness and you know that very well, why such a slurping now?
He also insured us about the sunspot number going up early this summer but such thing never happened. Basically what that means is that he has no clue about the Sun yet he’s a Solar Physicist, why should we listen to his new predictions?
Everybody can make predictions, even my grandma.
savethesharks (19:53:18) :
FOS Foundation of the Oceans and the Sun
IOS Institute of the Oceans and the Sun
AOS Academy of the Oceans and the Sun
Commendable idea, but Science functions best in a decentralized manner, without too much control or organization. Point is that scientists disagree all the time. Such disagreement is the life-blood of science. And when they finally agree on something, that becomes ‘knowledge’ and part of our human heritage.
Too much ‘institution’ would stifle that disagreement and slow progress. What does the ‘I’ in GISS stand for…
You again??
Anybody can hide behind their computer and hurl insults. The TRUE definition of cowardice.
Trolls always like to creep up from under the bridge…but you know, “butcher”, the sad thing is…for a troll….nobody gives a fat flying **** what the troll thinks or says.
Yo Leif or Rob or Anthony….what do you think of the institute idea?
Chris Malendoski
Norfolk, VA, USA
Got your reponse, Leif. Thanks!
If I ever form it I am inviting you to be an adjunct!
Chris Malendoski
Norfolk, VA, USA