By Dr. Roy Spencer, PhD (reprinted from his blog with permission)
UPDATE (12:35 p.m. CDT 19 May 2011): revised corrections of CERES data for El Nino/La Nina effects.
While I have been skeptical of Svensmark’s cosmic ray theory up until now, it looks like the evidence is becoming too strong for me to ignore. The following results will surely be controversial, and the reader should remember that what follows is not peer reviewed, and is only a preliminary estimate.
I’ve made calculations based upon satellite observations of how the global radiative energy balance has varied over the last 10 years (between Solar Max and Solar Min) as a result of variations in cosmic ray activity. The results suggest that the total (direct + indirect) solar forcing is at least 3.5 times stronger than that due to changing solar irradiance alone.
If this is anywhere close to being correct, it supports the claim that the sun has a much larger potential role (and therefore humans a smaller role) in climate change than what the “scientific consensus” states.
BACKGROUND
The single most frequently asked question I get after I give my talks is, “Why didn’t you mention the sun?” I usually answer that I’m skeptical of the “cosmic ray gun” theory of cloud changes controlling climate. But I point out that Svensmark’s theory of natural cloud variations causing climate change is actually pretty close to what I preach — only the mechanism causing the cloud change is different.
Then, I found last year’s paper by Laken et al. which was especially interesting since it showed satellite-observed cloud changes following changes in cosmic ray activity. Even though the ISCCP satellite data they used are not exactly state of the art, the study was limited to the mid-latitudes, and the time scales involved were days rather than years, the results gave compelling quantitative evidence of a cosmic ray effect on cloud cover.
With the rapid-fire stream of publications and reports now coming out on the subject, I decided to go back and spend some time analyzing ground-based galactic cosmic ray (GCR) data to see whether there is a connection between GCR variations and variations in the global radiative energy balance between absorbed sunlight and emitted infrared energy, taken from the NASA CERES radiative budget instruments on the Terra satellite, available since March 2000.
After all, that is ultimately what we are interested in: How do various forcings affect the radiative energy budget of the Earth? The results, I must admit, are enough for me to now place at least one foot solidly in the cosmic ray theory camp.
THE DATA
The nice thing about using CERES Earth radiative budget data is that we can get a quantitative estimate in Watts per sq. meter for the radiative forcing due to cosmic ray changes. This is the language the climate modelers speak, since these radiative forcings (externally imposed global energy imbalances) can be used to help calculate global temperature changes in the ocean & atmosphere based upon simple energy conservation. They can then also be compared to the estimates of forcing from increasing carbon dioxide, currently the most fashionable cause of climate change.
From the global radiative budget measurements we also get to see if there is a change in high clouds (inferred from the outgoing infrared measurements) as well as low clouds (inferred from reflected shortwave [visible sunlight] measurements) associated with cosmic ray activity.
I will use only the ground-based cosmic ray data from Moscow, since it is the first station I found which includes a complete monthly archive for the same period we have global radiative energy budget data from CERES (March 2000 through June 2010). I’m sure there are other stations, too…all of this is preliminary anyway. Me sifting through the myriad solar-terrestrial datasets is just as confusing to me as most of you sifting through the various climate datasets that I’m reasonably comfortable with.
THE RESULTS
The following plot (black curve) shows the monthly GCR data from Moscow for this period, as well as a detrended version with 1-2-1 averaging (red curve) to match the smoothing I will use in the CERES measurements to reduce noise.
Detrending the data isolates the month-to-month and year-to-year variability as the signal to match, since trends (or a lack of trends) in the global radiative budget data can be caused by a combination of many things. (Linear trends are worthless for statistically inferring cause-and-effect; but getting a match between wiggles in two datasets is much less likely to be due to random chance.)
The monthly cosmic ray data at Moscow will be compared to global monthly anomalies the NASA Terra satellite CERES (SSF 2.5 dataset) radiative flux data,
which shows the variations in global average reflected sunlight (SW), emitted infrared (LW), and Net (which is the estimated imbalances in total absorbed energy by the climate system, after adjustment for variations in total solar irradiance, TSI). Note I have plotted the variations in the negative of Net, which is approximately equal to variations in (LW+SW)
Then, since the primary source of variability in the CERES data is associated with El Nino and La Nina (ENSO) activity, I subtracted out an estimate of the average ENSO influence using running regressions between running 5-month averages of the Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI) and the CERES fluxes. I used the MEI index along with those regression coefficients in each month to correct the CERES fluxes 4 months later, since that time lag had the strongest correlation.
Finally, I performed regressions at various leads and lags between the GCR time series and the LW, SW, and -Net radiative flux time series, the results of which are shown next.
The yearly average relationships noted in the previous plot come from this relationship in the reflected solar (SW) data,
while the -Net flux (Net is absorbed solar minus emitted infrared, corrected for the change in solar irradiance during the period) results look like this:
It is that last plot that gives us the final estimate of how a change in cosmic ray flux at Moscow is related to changes in Earth’s radiative energy balance.
SUMMARY
What the above three plots show is that for a 1,000 count increase in GCR activity as measured at Moscow (which is somewhat less than the increase between Solar Max and Solar Min), there appears to be:
(1) an increase in reflected sunlight (SW) of 0.64 Watts per sq. meter, probably mostly due to an increase in low cloud cover;
(2) virtually no change in emitted infrared (LW) of +0.02 Watts per sq. meter;
(3) a Net (reflected sunlight plus emitted infrared) effect of 0.55 Watts per sq. meter loss in radiant energy by the global climate system.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR CLIMATE CHANGE?
Assuming these signatures are anywhere close to being real, what do they mean quantitatively in terms of the potential effect of cosmic ray activity on climate?
Well, just like any other forcing, a resulting temperature change depends not only upon the size of the forcing, but also the sensitivity of the climate system to forcing. But we CAN compare the cosmic ray forcing to OTHER “known” forcings, which could have a huge influence on our understanding of the role of humans in climate change.
For example, if warming observed in the last century is (say) 50% natural and 50% anthropogenic, then this implies the climate system is only one-half as sensitive to our greenhouse gas emissions (or aerosol pollution) than if the warming was 100% anthropogenic in origin (which is pretty close to what we are told the supposed “scientific consensus” is).
First, let’s compare the cosmic ray forcing to the change in total solar irradiance (TSI) during 2000-2010. The orange curve in following plot is the change in direct solar (TSI) forcing between 2000 and 2010, which with the help of Danny Braswell’s analytical skills I backed out from the CERES Net, LW, and SW data. It is the only kind of solar forcing the IPCC (apparently) believes exists, and it is quite weak:
Also shown is the estimated cosmic ray forcing resulting from the month-to-month changes in the original Moscow cosmic ray time series, computed by multiplying those monthly changes by 0.55 Watts per sq. meter per 1,000 cosmic ray counts change.
Finally, I fitted the trend lines to get an estimate of the relative magnitudes of these two sources of forcing: the cosmic ray (indirect) forcing is about 2.8 times that of the solar irradiance (direct) forcing. This means the total (direct + indirect) solar forcing on climate associated with the solar cycle could be 3.8 times that most mainstream climate scientists believe.
One obvious question this begs is whether the lack of recent warming, since about 2004 for the 0-700 meter layer of the ocean, is due to the cosmic ray effect on cloud cover canceling out the warming from increasing carbon dioxide.
If the situation really was that simple (which I doubt it is), this would mean that with Solar Max rapidly approaching, warming should resume in the coming months. Of course, other natural cycles could be in play (my favorite is the Pacific Decadal oscillation), so predicting what will happen next is (in my view) more of an exercise in faith than in science.
In the bigger picture, this is just one more piece of evidence that the IPCC scientists should be investigating, one which suggests a much larger role for Mother Nature in climate change than the IPCC has been willing to admit. And, again I emphasize, the greater the role of Nature in causing past climate change, the smaller the role humans must have had, which could then have a profound impact on future projections of human-caused global warming.
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Well, maybe after these experiments (like SKY and the Danish one here) someone will pipe up and talk about what kind of energies and particles we are talking about here that are necessary to set up cloud nucleation so the appropriate data can be accessed of collected. I’ve never seen where Shaviv talks about or references how he comes up with this 10 GeV threshold though it may be on his website. Interesting, the current study is apparently using neutron monitors which as you say detect 2.4 GeV and above. There is only about a 20 % change in cosmic ray flux detected at Moscow over the time period analyzed, yet this seems to produce the correlations shown in the original post. Strange to me though, why one would need to detrend the cosmic ray flux data unless there was something wrong with the calibration of the instrument over time. I can see why you would detrend the radiation flux data to remove the ENSO signals and so forth. It’s not clear to me why you would need to detrend the Moscow cosmic ray flux data, but maybe I’m wrong on that. For > 10 GeV data Shaviv uses uses as cited from Ahluwalia (1997) here http://www.sciencebits.com/CO2orSolar though I have no idea if this is the best source. Would be interested to see how this or similar data comes out in a analysis like above in the original post.
Leif Svalgaard!
Bust open a bottle of Champagne
Here’s the deal Dr. Roy Spencer, PhD has given you credit on all of your hard work!
You are not on the fringe, any longer, you are main stream!!!
BTW ..What an incredible hostile consensus driven field you hang out in, but hay just keep whacking them with the facts…
★ ★ Excellent Job ★★
Julian Droms says:
May 22, 2011 at 8:36 pm
….I don’t know the physics really, I’m just asking….
Looks like you are asking some very smart questions to me Julian.
Over to Leif for some answers. Or maybe Prof Shaviv is the man to ask. Mind you, he’s never found the time to reply to the emails I’ve sent him. At least Leif is generous with his time, and forgiving of argumentative interlocutors.
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 22, 2011 at 3:26 pm
an 11-yr moving average should end 5.5 years from the limits of the data.
Not necessarily, moving average is a numerical abstraction.
AMO is a cumulative hystresis loop driven event (the system’s output at an instant in time is not only related to its input at that instant in time). In such case referencing to the centre value is misleading (because of its forward bias), while the end referencing is more relevant. If you disagree, have a think about it.
“BTW Stephen, a small confusion has arisen because the cycle ending in 1755 is numbered zero not one.”
Thanks tallbloke, that resolves the issue between me and Leif.
I would have thought that Leif would have noticed but he is a busy man.
tallbloke says:
May 22, 2011 at 2:18 pm
…
Yes, you immediately tried to shift attention away from your falsehood, and I obligingly said some colder winters were recorded after 1804. But this doesn’t change the fact that you won’t/can’t admit to falsely stating that the Dalton Minimum commenced in 1790. Perhaps at this second prompting, you will agree you are wrong about that?
I took the dates from memory of this Wiki article, i.e. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalton_Minimum
However, this was to allow you as much leeway as possible in which to explain your “decades lag” which now seems to have been reduced to a decade. Your evidence for this lag appears to be that there were “some colder winters were recorded after 1804”. Really? Colder winters where? colder than what? According to the CET record there were many colc d winters before 1804. If you look closely at this CET graph you might notice that there is a drop in temperatures in ~1780 – nearly 20 years before the Dalton minimum began. Temperatures in the early 1780s are not appreciably different to the lowest temperatures during the Dalton Minimum.
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadcet/
Right. I’ll admit I was wrong about the DM years – now you admit that you have no evidence for a decadal, mulit-decadal or any other timescale lag between solar activity and temperature.
savethesharks says:
May 22, 2011 at 8:09 pm
Is this the best that you can do?
What more is needed?
Julian Droms says:
May 22, 2011 at 8:36 pm
Still, it looks to me like this poster looks at particles only from Li through Zn.
As I said, the Figure was only to illustrate that there is very little modulation at 10 GeV and above. This is true no matter what the particle is. Here is the energy-dependent modulation for a range of atoms from Hydrogen and up: http://www.leif.org/research/Cosmic-Ray-Modulation-energy.png The curves split into low [upper curve], medium, and high solar activity [lower curve]. At high energy [e.g. 10 GeV] there is very little modulation.
Still, I don’t necessarily equate measuring 10 GeV in a satellite orbiting earth, with measuring 10 GeV at the Earth’s surface, which is what an ion chamber does.
The 10 GeV is the energy of the cosmic ray particle. We don’t measure the cosmic ray at the surface: the particle is long dead and what we see is the debris created by its demise [by slamming into the atmosphere].
Then, there is the issue of the Earth’s magnetosphere deflecting high energy particles, which may occur at latitudes lower than the satellite in question.
The magnetic field of the Earth prevent the low energy particles from reaching us. At Moscow that is particles below an energy of 2.42 GeV. We see those above.
Doesn’t the solar wind affect the strength of currents in the Earth’s magnetosphere?
Yes, but is not those currents that deflect the cosmic rays. Here is a good introduction [the Figure I showed was lifted from that link]: http://www.sotere.uni-osnabrueck.de/pubs/paper/summerschool-gaks.pdf
vukcevic says:
May 23, 2011 at 12:37 am
Not necessarily, moving average is a numerical abstraction.
Any reviewer would ask for the moving average to be centered. That Excel doesn’t do it is a bug in Excel [‘feature’ they would call it]. If you want to show a cumulative effect, it should be labeled as such and reasons should be given for the choice of time window.
Stephen Wilde says:
May 23, 2011 at 2:03 am
I would have thought that Leif would have noticed but he is a busy man.
I did notice, and kept telling you, but you are a stubborn man who won’t listen 🙂
[reply] Heh, you didn’t go out of your way to make it explicit. 🙂 RT-mod
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 23, 2011 at 2:42 am
savethesharks says:
May 22, 2011 at 8:09 pm
Is this the best that you can do?
What more is needed?
Using nothing more than faulty logic, a broken GCM, an obsolete cloud condensation nucleii formation paper and armed only with a cudgel made from Graybeards favourite foxtail pine, the brave Svalgaard confronts the massed forces of the dark lord Svensmark and his wild eyed minions.
Lolz
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 23, 2011 at 2:52 am
[reply] Heh, you didn’t go out of your way to make it explicit. 🙂 RT-mod
Once should be enough. I told him thrice, but it was taken as:
“Stephen Wilde says: May 21, 2011 at 12:22 pm merely a cynical diversionary strategy. ”
tallbloke says:
May 23, 2011 at 3:07 am
the brave Svalgaard confronts the massed forces of the dark lord Svensmark and his wild eyed minions.
And it seems I have them in full retreat descending to the low level displayed in your post…
John Finn says:
May 23, 2011 at 2:23 am
Right. I’ll admit I was wrong about the DM years – now you admit that you have no evidence for a decadal, mulit-decadal or any other timescale lag between solar activity and temperature.
Good man, well done!
Now, I’ve looked at CET many times in different ways, and came to the conclusion that a maritime climate is not the best place to try to resolve solar effects on climate as a whole. This is because when the sun goes into a minimum, you will get a big El Nino soon afterwards, and the warm oceanic air will affect your thermometers strongly. The cold decembers around the early 1790’s reflect back to back la ninas which often occur around solar max, in response to the big el ninos which tend to occur a year or so after solar min.
It’s confusing and apparently counterintuitive until you understand the dynamics of what must be happening in terms of solar energy being mixed down into the ocean. That’s a process which goes on as long as the sun is averaging higher activity than that indicated by around 40SSN. When the sun goes quiet, the process goes into reverse and energy is released from the ocean into the atmosphere. Good job too or we’d all freeze.
The point is that when there has been a run of several short, high amplitude, short minima solar cycles, like the late C20th, the ssn can average over 70 for a long period of time. Lots of energy accumulates in the ocean, as evidenced by the steric component of sea level rise, and rising SST’s. When the sun goes quiet, the atmosphere cools, which enables the ocean to get rid of more heat quicker to space, due to the higher differential. This happens in burps called el nino, but unlike the el ninos Bob Tisdale has been watching for years, where the heated surface water slosh around and re-accumulates in the pacific warm pool, these el ninos will deplete ocean heat content, and over the course of a decade or more, the SST will fall in descending oscillations and the surface air temp will follow suit some months later.
There’s your lag.
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 23, 2011 at 3:20 am
And it seems I have them in full retreat descending to the low level displayed in your post…
Aww Leif, c’mon, it was just a bit of fun. You should be able to take back what you dish out in good humour. Lighten up, Svensmark may yet fulfill your wish to see your field at the centre of climate science.
tallbloke says:
May 23, 2011 at 3:58 am
Aww Leif, c’mon, it was just a bit of fun.
Didn’t look much different from your usual stuff…
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 23, 2011 at 4:04 am
Didn’t look much different from your usual stuff…
Seems like we’re both well adjusted in our normal attitudes then. 😉
Leif Svalgaard says: May 23, 2011 at 2:42 am
………….
If that is only objection you have retreated a long way from:
Declined because it did not satisfy even elementary demands on quality.
You are making a wrong assumption again, I calculate all data, when integrated, averaged or differentiate. I often look at nature of the process and decide what is appropriate. I only use Excel facility only for simple linear trend lines.
Ehat I do, I do it for my own enjoyment and contentment ( and of course for the benefit of all of the humanity 🙂 ) and couldn’t care less what a reviewer would say, but for the benefit and respect towards other readers I have added (cumulative) to the graph.
vukcevic says:
May 23, 2011 at 5:23 am
I have added (cumulative) to the graph.
Let’s hope Leif doesn’t feel the need to hit F5 350 times to verify this change Vuk. 😉
vukcevic says:
May 23, 2011 at 5:23 am
couldn’t care less what a reviewer would say
You would have to if you try to publish.
The quality issue goes deeper, of course. [snip] …you have to quantify that [calculate how big the effect would be] and overcome the obstacle that any such effect is vanishingly small. This I explained to you, but you would [could?] not consider that. Without this, there is no meat on the paper, hence not publishable.
Now, you can get a free review of NAP right here at WUWT. Try that.
[reply]Apologies for the snip, but publishers will not publish work previously exposed on the net. Please take the discussion of specifics to email. – Thanks, RT-mod
I may be being over-cautious, so feel free to correct me, but I’m erring on the side of caution, because I don’t want to see Vuk’s chances of publication being jeopardised.
Thanks
Leif Svalgaard says:
May 23, 2011 at 7:15 am
Now, you can get a free review of NAP right here at WUWT. Try that.
[reply]Apologies for the snip, but publishers will not publish work previously exposed on the net.
Yes they will. The discussion of ideas and preliminary works are perfectly admissible. Scientists do that all the time, at conferences, seminars, arXiv.org. Discussing these things here will not be a problem. See for example: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/10/06/new-svalgaard-paper-reconstructing-the-heliospheric-magnetic-field-since-1835-with-insight-into-the-peer-review-process/
A real obstacle to publication is Vuk’s attitude of “I couldn’t care less what a reviewer would say”.
REPLY: I agree, “Vuk has a sure to fail attitude, which is why he’ll probably never publish a paper. If I took the same tact, I would have never published a paper. A first step towards honest and open science is putting your name on your work – Anthony
Leif may well be right, butI think Vuk also has a genuine concern that others may take his concepts and publish before he gets the opportunity. I really think it would be proper courtesy to await his view on revealing how his proposed mechanism works, and respect his wishes.
Vukcevic is Vukcevic’s real name, so I don’t understand Anthony’s comment regarding that. In the part of the world he hails from, it is common to address people by their surname.
So lower level cloud cover increased in 1985-7 and 1991-4:
http://1.2.3.9/bmi/www.climate4you.com/images/CloudCoverAllLevel%20AndWaterColumnSince1983.gif
As there is such a good match between the colder months in these periods with lower solar wind speeds, I would go with temperature deviations driving cloud cover, rather than cloud cover driving temperatures.
http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/tmp/images/ret_29345.gif
http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/tmp/images/ret_28889.gif
http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/tmp/images/ret_29057.gif
http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/tmp/images/ret_28335.gif
http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/tmp/images/ret_28602.gif
Hi Ulric,
I suspect Svensmark would reached the opposite conclusion, for broadly similar reasons.
To return to science:
tallbloke says:
May 21, 2011 at 1:05 pm
Here’s Jasper Kirby’s correlation between ice rafted debris …
Of much better quality are the graphs from Jasper’s arXiv preprint:
http://aps.arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0804/0804.1938v1.pdf
Let us concentrate for a moment on Figure 3 of that paper:
“This pattern has been extended over the last two millennia by a reconstruction of Alpine temperatures with a speleothem from Spannagel Cave in Austria (Fig. 3) [40]. Temperature maxima in this region of central Europe during the Medieval Warm Period were about 1.7 C higher than the minima in the Little Ice Age, and similar to present-day values. The high correlation of the temperature variations to the 14 C record (Fig. 3) suggests that solar/cosmic ray forcing was a major driver of climate over this period.”
A common mistake is to assume that the solar modulation of cosmic rays determine their flux at Earth. This is not the case. The Earth’s magnetic field has an order of magnitude larger degree of control. So the cosmic ray flux in the atmosphere is primarily determined by the Earth’s magnetic field and not by solar activity. For Svensmark’s hypothesis it doesn’t matter what controls the flux. It is enough that the actual flux varies.
The Earth’s magnetic field changes very slowly compared to the solar cycle, so we can filter out the effect of the Earth’s magnetic field by removing [‘filtering out’] all variations on a time scale of, say, 200 years and longer, or we can directly try to remove the [known] effect of the changing magnetic fields. This is routinely done by people who produce the graphs of GCR modulation, e.g. the blue curve in Jasper’s Figure 3 or the 10Be series. But that does not show the variation of the GCR flux at the Earth, which is assumed to be the agent in Svensmark’s mechanism.
Here I compare Jasper’s Figure 3 with the actual flux of GCRs as represented by the 14C deviations: http://www.leif.org/research/INTCAL-Jasper.png
On top is Figure 3. The bottom panel shows the internationally agreed upon GCR flux determined from 14C [ http://www.radiocarbon.org/Journal/v40n3/editorial.html ] as the red curve. The blue curve is the flux after filtering out the overwhelming effect of the Earth’s magnetic field. You can see that the two blue curves are identical, so Jasper compares not with the real flux but with the residual flux after the major influence of the Earth’s magnetic field has been removed. This is, of course, nonsense if the mechanism relies on the actual flux of GCRs. Slide 18 of http://www.leif.org/research/Does%20The%20Sun%20Vary%20Enough.pdf shows how the real flux [red curve] has varied the past 11,000 years.
To compare with the filtered flux [a proxy for solar activity] rather than the real flux makes the GCR hypothesis false. If there are correlations with the filtered flux, then that means that other aspects of the Sun [e.g. TSI, UV, or a host of other things all correlated with GCRs] are responsible. I pointed out that this deathblow to the GCRs was my ‘third’ strike. One could, of course, invoke various forms of Special Pleading: e.g. that the GCRs that are modulated by the Sun are somehow special and different from the ones modulated by the Earth, but that does not carry much weight in my book.
Leif:
What other methods of reconstructing changes in the Earth’s magnetic field exist apart from measuring the C14 in semi fossilised trees?
tallbloke says:
May 23, 2011 at 10:35 am
What other methods of reconstructing changes in the Earth’s magnetic field exist apart from measuring the C14 in semi fossilised trees?
The ‘semi fossilised’ bit is inappropriate slant.
Anyway, the C14 record is not used for that at all [otherwise we would sort of a circular argument – which is perhaps what you are trying to hint at]
There are several ways of measuring the paleointensity, e.g.
http://www.csam.montclair.edu/earth/eesweb/brachfeld/Brachfeld_JGR.pdf
or http://www.rockmagnetism.ru/articles/550.pdf