Cosmically, Heliospherically, and Terrestrially, FYI

Popular Science, March 1931 - click

Last night I decided to have a look at the Space Weather Prediction Center solar charts to see how the geoplanetary magnetic index (Ap) was doing, and decided since I was too tired, I’d put it off until this morning. In my morning sweep of comment moderation, I saw a graph link from WUWT regular “Vukcevic” which was interesting, especially since we’ve had a recent report on the CERN CLOUD experiment designed to prove/disprove the solar-magneto-modulates-cosmic rays-modulates-terrestrial clouds-changes albedo-makes earth warmer/cooler theory, so what follows is sort of cosmic-heliosphere-terrestrial collection of stuff.

First, the Ap index – surprisingly, after a shot upwards this spring, it is still bouncing along the bottom:

Not encouraging.

And the other solar indices are anemic as well. We should be well into the next cycle, but it seems like the solar magneto is still parked in the garage making this sound, picked up by solar listening posts around the world.

Note the difference between the red line (forecast) and the black line (observations).

The slope of the 10.7cm flux also doesn’t look encouraging.

Here’s the neutron flux plot I spoke of at the beginning, plotting Thule Greenland against the sunspot number:

The more neutrons, the more cosmic rays. Here’s how it works, from the University of Delaware page Listening for Cosmic Rays:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Cosmic rays do not get far into the atmosphere before they collide with nitrogen or oxygen molecules in the air. The collision destroys the cosmic ray particle and the air molecule, and then several new particles emerge. Cosmic rays from space are termed “primary,” and any particles created in the atmosphere from collisions are termed “secondary.” A bit of energy is transferred to each new secondary particle. Secondary cosmic rays spread out and continue to hit other particles and air molecules, creating a cascade of particles showering towards the ground. Figure 2 shows how the particles shower to the ground. The number of secondary cosmic rays in the atmosphere increases to a maximum, and then diminishes as the energy fades closer to the ground. Because of atmospheric absorption, low energy particles are plentiful and high energy particles are rare. Scientists studying the neutron monitor data are more interested in the energy of primary cosmic rays, before they are affected by the atmosphere. A typical energy level for a galactic cosmic ray detected by the neutron monitor is 17 billion electron volts. Solar cosmic rays are more concentrated towards lower energies. The ones reaching ground level started out with an average energy of about 3 billion electron volts before meeting the atmosphere.

Primary cosmic rays enter the atmosphere and strike air molecules. This collision produces an array of new secondary cosmic ray particles. Each new secondary cosmic ray carries with it a part of the energy and then collides with other air molecules. The cosmic ray shower fades as the energy becomes widely dispersed.
The neutron monitor is in three units. Within each unit are six counters covered by lead casing and polyethylene slabs.

When a cosmic ray hits the atmosphere it produces secondary particles, for example neutrons. The neutrons pass through the atmosphere, through the building, and penetrate the polyethylene and lead casing. The high energy of the cosmic ray particle is reduced by the polyethylene and lead to about l/40 of an electron volt – about the same energy as a regular air molecule. At this energy level, a boron atom in the counter absorbs the neutron, and splits into a fast helium and a fast lithium ion. These energetic ions strip electrons from neutral atoms in the tube, producing a charge in the tube of gas. The charge is detected by the amplifier as one count. Not all neutron monitors are constructed with the lead casing, as the polyethylene is enough to slow the neutron down. The lead increases the neutron count by producing more neutrons as it is bombarded by cosmic rays. Neutron monitors constructed with lead casing count about one neutron for each primary cosmic ray entering the atmosphere through an area equal to the area of the monitor.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Here’s the last six months from Thule’s neutron monitor, from UD:

That downward spike in August looks to be a Forbush decrease event, likely related to this story we carried on WUWT: Earth Braces for Solar Storm Tonite

As expected, as we get a modest ramp up in solar activity this past year, the trend of neutrons is slightly downward as the solar magnetic field gets a bit stronger, deflecting a few more cosmic rays.

Here’s some early suggestions of correlation from Bago and Butler. The graph composite below is Joe D’Aleo’s from ICECAP:

Chistensen in 2007 suggested a relationship between cosmic rays and radiosonde (upper air) temperatures:

A recent paper published in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics suggests that the relationship has been established.

Figure 1 below shows a correlation, read it with the top and bottom graph combined vertically.

Fig. 1. (A) Short term GCR change (significance indicated by markers) and (B) anomalous cloud cover changes (significance indicated by solid contours) occurring over the composite period. GCR data sourced from multiple neutron monitors, variations normalised against changes experienced over a Schwabe cycle. Cloud changes are a tropospheric (30–1000 mb) average from the ISCCP D1 IR cloud values. 

As the authors write in the abstract:

These results provide perhaps the most compelling evidence presented thus far of a GCR-climate relationship.

Dr. Roy Spencer has mentioned that it doesn’t take much in the way of cloud cover changes to add up to the “global warming signal” that has been observed. He writes in The Great Global Warming Blunder:

The most obvious way for warming to be caused naturally is for small, natural fluctuations in the circulation patterns of the atmosphere and ocean to result in a 1% or 2% decrease in global cloud cover. Clouds are the Earth’s sunshade, and if cloud cover changes for any reason, you have global warming — or global cooling.

Well, it seems that Laken, Kniveton, and Frogley have found just such a small effect. Here’s the abstract and select passages from the paper, along with a link to the full paper:

Atmos. Chem. Phys., 10, 10941-10948, 2010

doi:10.5194/acp-10-10941-2010

Cosmic rays linked to rapid mid-latitude cloud changes

B. A. Laken , D. R. Kniveton, and M. R. Frogley

Abstract. The effect of the Galactic Cosmic Ray (GCR) flux on Earth’s climate is highly uncertain. Using a novel sampling approach based around observing periods of significant cloud changes, a statistically robust relationship is identified between short-term GCR flux changes and the most rapid mid-latitude (60°–30° N/S) cloud decreases operating over daily timescales; this signal is verified in surface level air temperature (SLAT) reanalysis data. A General Circulation Model (GCM) experiment is used to test the causal relationship of the observed cloud changes to the detected SLAT anomalies. Results indicate that the anomalous cloud changes were responsible for producing the observed SLAT changes, implying that if there is a causal relationship between significant decreases in the rate of GCR flux (~0.79 GU, where GU denotes a change of 1% of the 11-year solar cycle amplitude in four days) and decreases in cloud cover (~1.9 CU, where CU denotes a change of 1% cloud cover in four days), an increase in SLAT (~0.05 KU, where KU denotes a temperature change of 1 K in four days) can be expected. The influence of GCRs is clearly distinguishable from changes in solar irradiance and the interplanetary magnetic field. However, the results of the GCM experiment are found to be somewhat limited by the ability of the model to successfully reproduce observed cloud cover. These results provide perhaps the most compelling evidence presented thus far of a GCR-climate relationship. From this analysis we conclude that a GCR-climate relationship is governed by both short-term GCR changes and internal atmospheric precursor conditions.

I found this portion interesting related to the figure above:

The composite sample shows a positive correlation between statistically significant cloud changes and variations in the short-term GCR flux (Fig. 1): increases in the GCR flux

occur around day −5 of the composite, and correspond to significant localised mid-latitude increases in cloud change. After this time, the GCR flux undergoes a statistically significant decrease (1.2 GU) centred on the key date of the composite; these changes correspond to widespread statistically significant decreases in cloud change (3.5 CU, 1.9 CU globallyaveraged) over mid-latitude regions.

and this…

The strong and statistically robust connection identified here between the most rapid cloud decreases over mid-latitude regions and short-term changes in the GCR flux is clearly distinguishable from the effects of solar irradiance and IMF variations. The observed anomalous changes show a strong latitudinal symmetry around the equator; alone, this pattern

gives a good indication of an external forcing agent, as

there is no known mode of internal climate variability at the

timescale of analysis, which could account for this distinctive

response. It is also important to note that these anomalous

changes are detected over regions where the quality of

satellite-based cloud retrievals is relatively robust; results of

past studies concerned with high-latitude anomalous cloud

changes have been subject to scrutiny due to a low confidence

in polar cloud retrievals (Laken and Kniveton, 2010;

Todd and Kniveton, 2001) but the same limitations do not

apply here.

Although mid-latitude cloud detections are more robust

than those over high latitudes, Sun and Bradley (2002) identified

a distinctive pattern of high significance between GCRs

and the ISCCP dataset over the Atlantic Ocean that corresponded

to the METEOSAT footprint. This bias does not

appear to influence the results presented in this work: Fig. 6 shows the rates of anomalous IR-detected cloud change occurring over Atlantic, Pacific and land regions of the midlatitudes during the composite period, and a comparable pattern of cloud change is observed over all regions, indicating no significant bias is present.

Conclusions

This work has demonstrated the presence of a small but statistically significant influence of GCRs on Earth’s atmosphere over mid-latitude regions. This effect is present in

both ISCCP satellite data and NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data for at least the last 20 years suggesting that small fluctuations in solar activity may be linked to changes in the Earth’s atmosphere via a relationship between the GCR flux and cloud cover; such a connection may amplify small changes in solar activity. In addition, a GCR – cloud relationship may also act in conjunction with other likely solar – terrestrial relationships concerning variations in solar UV (Haigh, 1996) and total solar irradiance (Meehl et al., 2009). The climatic forcings resulting from such solar – terrestrial links may have had a significant impact on climate prior to the onset of anthropogenic warming, accounting for the presence of solar cycle relationships detectable in palaeoclimatic records (e.g.,Bond et al., 2001; Neff et al., 2001; Mauas et al., 2008).

Further detailed investigation is required to better understand GCR – atmosphere relationships. Specifically, the use of both ground-based and satellite-based cloud/atmospheric monitoring over high-resolution timescales for extended periods of time is required. In addition, information regarding potentially important microphysical properties such as aerosols, cloud droplet size, and atmospheric electricity must also be considered. Through such monitoring efforts, in addition to both computational modelling (such as that of Zhou and Tinsley, 2010) and experimental efforts (such as that of Duplissy et al., 2010) we may hope to better understand the effects described here.

It seems they have found the signal. This is a compelling finding because it now opens a pathway and roadmap on where and how to look. Expect more to come.

The full paper is here: Final Revised Paper (PDF, 2.2 MB)

We all await the result of the CLOUD experiment from Jasper Kirkby. Hopefully it will define this cosmic ray issue with more clarity.

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phlogiston
December 18, 2010 2:25 pm

Here is an interesting item on the SWARM project to analyse ocean currents by magnetic sensors on satellites:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11980315

December 18, 2010 2:33 pm

Werner Brozek says:
December 18, 2010 at 1:39 pm
………..
I think there is good reason for the oceans’ oscillations (SO, PDO and AMO), periods vary according to the contributory forces.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NPG.htm

Jimash
December 18, 2010 3:08 pm

John F. Hultquist says:
December 18, 2010 at 10:29 am
Jimash, I think you came to a fork in the road and took it.
Absotively.
You can observe a lot just by watching.
The future is not what it used to be.

AJB
December 18, 2010 3:10 pm

Amino Acids in Meteorites says December 18, 2010 at 10:07 am
Best heard using Media Player 11 with the “Battery”, “Green is not my Enemy” visualisation 🙂

MattA
December 18, 2010 3:19 pm

These observed effects are interesting but a mechanism needs to be identified to tie them to global climate as I suspect they would tend only to affect humid regions.
In order for clouds to form the pressence of hygroscopic particles are only one factor. The dewpoint would be affected by humidity & temperature and some other minot facors.
In dry regions where many hygroscopic particles are already pressent as dust but water vapour is scarce the GCR would probably have very limited effect. In humid equatorial regions these effects would be notable.
I would imagine the mechanism referred to above would be via an atmopheric circulation model and would be interested in reading on any such.

jorgekafkazar
December 18, 2010 3:39 pm

CRS, Dr.P.H. says: “…if the sun doesn’t cooperate, we may end up pumping raw methane into the atmosphere to maintain planetary temperature! NOT a pleasant prospect!!”
Possibly not effective, either.

December 18, 2010 4:23 pm

Low level clouds increase when it gets colder. Medium level clouds move in the opposite direction to low level clouds. GCR`s anti-correlate from 2004.
http://www.sciencestew.com/articles/climate/CloudCover.jpg

mike g
December 18, 2010 4:42 pm

Can you filter out the electric universe view crap? Or, do we have to be that open-minded?

AusieDan
December 18, 2010 4:44 pm

I am really interested in theory which to me is much more enticing than practical matters.
And it seems that this present finding is just one more step in the road to understanding what makes the climate tick.
One step only, but perhaps a major one.
However, being also a practical person as well as a dreamer, there is a more pressing practcal issue that we need to address.
It keeps on being mentioned, but discussion soon drifts away.
The practical issue is – are we just seeing a rather abrupt ending to the warming part of the cycle and entering the cooling phase with a rather big bang in NH and rain, rain, rain here in Australia?
OR are we perhaps seeing the end of the series of cycles that have occurred during the last several hundred years – the start, in other words of a new little ice age or even worse?
We need to address this in the next year or two.
If the former, we can just tough it out until our descendents again welcome in warmer weather.
If the latter, we need to start planning substantial coping mechanisms.
Destroying the very effecient built facilities which produce electricity at lowest cost, and produce extra welcome CO2, may not be the smartist thing to do.
Time to get practical – time to get serious.

G. E. Pease
December 18, 2010 5:19 pm

Ulric Lyons says:
December 18, 2010 at 4:23 pm
“Low level clouds increase when it gets colder. Medium level clouds move in the opposite direction to low level clouds. GCR`s anti-correlate from 2004.
http://www.sciencestew.com/articles/climate/CloudCover.jpg
___________________________________________________
Yet, Svensmark and Friis-Christensen have shown evidence of very good post-2004 anticorrelation of GCR’s to tropospheric temperature. The intermediate cooling mechanism of low clouds appears to be somewhat more complicated. Read
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/SvensmarkPaper.pdf

tallbloke
December 18, 2010 5:26 pm

Ulric Lyons says:
December 18, 2010 at 4:23 pm
Low level clouds increase when it gets colder. Medium level clouds move in the opposite direction to low level clouds. GCR`s anti-correlate from 2004.
http://www.sciencestew.com/articles/climate/CloudCover.jpg

What is the source for the cloud dataset please Ulric?
Palle et all see an increase in overall albedo from 1998 to a steady elevated level from 2003. If low cloud continued to diminish, high cloud must have increased. But high cloud traps heat allegedly, yet the OLR increased and stayed high from 2004.
WUWT?

rbateman
December 18, 2010 7:40 pm

Sunspot umbral area is likewise as uninspiring as the 10.7 Flux:
http://www.robertb.darkhorizons.org/TempGr/uSC24vs13_14.GIF
Whatever the Sun may do next, so far it has failed to get out of 1st gear.
Stuck in Spotless Lodi again.

Dave Springer
December 18, 2010 8:48 pm

Chris Reeve says:
December 18, 2010 at 11:26 am
Sorry buddy but there was a press release by NASA recently that Voyager one had reached the point where the solar wind comes to a complete halt. You can can that electric universe theory unless facts don’t have any place in electric universes.

morgo
December 18, 2010 8:58 pm

in australia we had long range weather forcaster INDIGO JONES AND LATER LENNOX WALKER please log into google and you will find out how they become the best long range forcasters in australia history he started in 1923 and he used a number of events including SUN SPOT cycle he new all about the sun and weather in 1923 the global warmers should read his story

December 18, 2010 9:07 pm

It looks like NOAA has not updated their sunspot count graph with the latest NASA forecast (the red “predicted values” line). Does anyone know if the current numbers are tracking that forecast?
NASA, 6 October 2010: “Current prediction for the next sunspot cycle maximum gives a smoothed sunspot number maximum of about 64 in June of 2013.”
http://solarscience.msfc.nasa.gov/predict.shtml

Dave Springer
December 18, 2010 9:34 pm

Jeff (of Colorado) says:
December 18, 2010 at 1:35 pm
“If a near-by star went nova, then when it’s cosmic rays hit our atmosphere, that would cause an increase in heat reflecting clouds. The closer and bigger the nova the (perhaps) bigger the effect. Could this be the cause of the “snowball earths” in the past? Would geologic nitrogen/oxygen isotope studies reveal some ratio to be a proxy for cosmic ray increases? This would be a challenge as catastrophic events like novas are not cyclic. We can, however, date novas based on astronomy. This could identify ‘one time events’ that make finding the cyclic patterns difficult.”
I thought of that other day. There hasn’t been a supernova visible to the naked eye since 1604 and that one was right on the heels of one in 1573. The sun was in a deep solar minimum already then close back-to-back supernovas popped off. Talk about a perfect storm. The Little Ice Age is the possible result.
The GCRs from the supernovas wouldn’t arrive until years after the visible light was seen. The energy in the GCR is proportionate to its speed. The high energy ones of interest are travelling 99.0 – 99.9% speed of light which from a distance of say 10,000 light years (about the average distance away of the two mentioned above) means the highest energy GCRs begin arriving 10 years after the visible light is seen and keep on coming for the next 100 years with declining energies – the higher the energy the faster the particle is moving so they sort themselves out by energy level during the journey.
Then you have to go back to 1006 and 1052 for the next ones that were widely visible. The 15th century pair lines up with the Little Ice Age well enough and it was also a deep solar minima at the same time so it was something of a perfect storm.

STEPHEN PARKERuk
December 18, 2010 10:07 pm

Mike gee says……
Yes mike, we do have to be open minded.

rbateman
December 18, 2010 10:19 pm

Does anyone know if the current numbers are tracking that forecast?
The current numbers (if you can call them that) are not tracking anything but themselves.
Flying 50 feet off the ground is what it all amounts to…. so far.
Confounding, isn’t it?

pkatt
December 18, 2010 11:38 pm

Im gonna play what if…
What if the solar cycle actually started on schedule.. and what if this is as close to peak as its going to get.. what then?

Duster
December 19, 2010 12:15 am

Dave Springer says:
December 18, 2010 at 9:34 pm
Jeff (of Colorado) says:
December 18, 2010 at 1:35 pm
….
There is also a terrific C-14 anomaly with the Younger Dryas cold snap, which is occasionally described as “an abrupt return to glacial conditions.” Since C-14 is the result of cosmic ray bombardment of the atmosphere, the most reasonable culprit is a nova or supernova that was near enough seriously affect C-14 formation. The coincidence of excess C-14 and a climatic chilling is at least interesting.

Brian H
December 19, 2010 2:24 am

But, but … all the C14 in the atmosphere comes from Anthro-bustion! CRU et al. say so, so it’s gotta be so! Conclusion: GCRs don’t exist.
There! All fixed!

rbateman
December 19, 2010 2:48 am

pkatt says:
December 18, 2010 at 11:38 pm
Im gonna play what if…
What if the solar cycle actually started on schedule.. and what if this is as close to peak as its going to get.. what then?

Then 2 years from now it’s alas poor Yorick24, I knew him well.
What do you see that tells you this is all she wrote?

M White
December 19, 2010 3:13 am

Interesting story on Spaceweather about pollution in the stratosphere.
http://spaceweather.com/archive.php?view=1&day=19&month=12&year=2010
ALL-CLEAR IN THE STRATOSPHERE
“Earth’s stratosphere is as clear as it’s been in more than 50 years. University of Colorado climate scientist Richard Keen knows this because he’s been watching lunar eclipses.”
Isn’t atmospheric pollution one of the excuses used to explain global cooling?

Simon
December 19, 2010 3:57 am

Would have been nice to see the Short term GCR change vs anomalous cloud cover changes graphs extended beyond a paltry 10 days to see if the relationship keeps up…

December 19, 2010 5:11 am

STEPHEN PARKERuk says:
December 18, 2010 at 10:07 pm
Mike gee says……
Yes mike, we do have to be open minded.

Also be attentive to evidence, and ask evidence based questions. Otherwise any old rubbish can drop in and forget to leave 🙂

Editor
Reply to  Lucy Skywalker
December 19, 2010 5:40 am

The rebranding Global Warming Climate Change Climate Disruption was of course in preparation for the increase in these blocking events. One could suggest that the warmists saw the changes coming and were preparing for it. Going back 10 years the mantra was that the change to dominance of a positive AO (and NAO) was at least influenced by anthropogenic causes: http://www.pnas.org/content/98/23/12876.full.pdf
Once again they ignore natural cycles. http://diggingintheclay.wordpress.com/2010/12/18/nao-is-the-winter-of-our-discontent/