
Note: I’m going to leave this as a sticky “top post” for a day or so. new stories appear below.
Nigel Calder asks us to republish this post for maximum exposure. He writes:
Today the Royal Astronomical Society in London publishes (online) Henrik Svensmark’s latest paper entitled “Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth”. After years of effort Svensmark shows how the variable frequency of stellar explosions not far from our planet has ruled over the changing fortunes of living things throughout the past half billion years. Appearing in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, it’s a giant of a paper, with 22 figures, 30 equations and about 15,000 words. See the RAS press release at http://www.ras.org.uk/news-and-press/219-news-2012/2117-did-exploding-stars-help-life-on-earth-to-thrive
By taking me back to when I reported the victory of the pioneers of plate tectonics in their battle against the most eminent geophysicists of the day, it makes me feel 40 years younger. Shredding the textbooks, Tuzo Wilson, Dan McKenzie and Jason Morgan merrily explained earthquakes, volcanoes, mountain-building, and even the varying depth of the ocean, simply by the drift of fragments of the lithosphere in various directions around the globe.
In Svensmark’s new paper an equally concise theory, that cosmic rays from exploded stars cool the world by increasing the cloud cover, leads to amazing explanations, not least for why evolution sometimes was rampant and sometimes faltered. In both senses of the word, this is a stellar revision of the story of life.
Here are the main results:
- The long-term diversity of life in the sea depends on the sea-level set by plate tectonics and the local supernova rate set by the astrophysics, and on virtually nothing else.
- The long-term primary productivity of life in the sea – the net growth of photosynthetic microbes – depends on the supernova rate, and on virtually nothing else.
- Exceptionally close supernovae account for short-lived falls in sea-level during the past 500 million years, long-known to geophysicists but never convincingly explained..
- As the geological and astronomical records converge, the match between climate and supernova rates gets better and better, with high rates bringing icy times.
Presented with due caution as well as with consideration for the feelings of experts in several fields of research, a story unfolds in which everything meshes like well-made clockwork. Anyone who wishes to pooh-pooh any piece of it by saying “correlation is not necessarily causality” should offer some other mega-theory that says why several mutually supportive coincidences arise between events in our galactic neighbourhood and living conditions on the Earth.
An amusing point is that Svensmark stands the currently popular carbon dioxide story on its head. Some geoscientists want to blame the drastic alternations of hot and icy conditions during the past 500 million years on increases and decreases in carbon dioxide, which they explain in intricate ways. For Svensmark, the changes driven by the stars govern the amount of carbon dioxide in the air. Climate and life control CO2, not the other way around.
By implication, supernovae also determine the amount of oxygen available for animals like you and me to breathe. So the inherently simple cosmic-ray/cloud hypothesis now has far-reaching consequences, which I’ve tried to sum up in this diagram.

By way of explanation
The text of “Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth” is available via ftp://ftp2.space.dtu.dk/pub/Svensmark/MNRAS_Svensmark2012.pdf The paper is highly technical, as befits a professional journal, so to non-expert eyes even the illustrations may be a little puzzling. So I’ve enlisted the aid of Liz Calder to explain the way one of the most striking graphs, Svensmark’s Figure 20, was put together. That graph shows how, over the past 440 million years, the changing rates of supernova explosions relatively close to the Earth have strongly influenced the biodiversity of marine invertebrate animals, from trilobites of ancient times to lobsters of today. Svensmark’s published caption ends: “Evidently marine biodiversity is largely explained by a combination of sea-level and astrophysical activity.” To follow his argument you need to see how Figure 20 draws on information in Figure 19. That tells of the total diversity of the sea creatures in the fossil record, fluctuating between times of rapid evolution and times of recession.
The count is by genera, which are groups of similar animals. Here it’s shown freehand by Liz in Sketch A. Sketch B is from another part of Figure 19, telling how the long-term global sea-level changed during the same period. The broad correspondence isn’t surprising because a high sea-level floods continental margins and gives the marine invertebrates more extensive and varied habitats. But it obviously isn’t the whole story. For a start, there’s a conspicuous spike in diversity about 270 million years ago that contradicts the declining sea-level. Svensmark knew that there was a strong peak in the supernova rate around that time. So he looked to see what would happen to the wiggles over the whole 440 million years if he “normalized” the biodiversity to remove the influence of sea-level. That simple operation is shown in Sketch C, where the 270-million-year spike becomes broader and taller. Sketch D shows Svensmark’s reckoning of the changing rates of nearby supernovae during the same period. Let me stress that these are all freehand sketches to explain the operations, not to convey the data. In the published paper, the graphs as in C and D are drawn precisely and superimposed for comparison.

There are many fascinating particulars that I might use to illustrate the significance of Svensmark’s findings. To choose the Gorgon’s story that follows is not entirely arbitrary, because this brings in another of those top results, about supernovae and bio-productivity.
The great dying at the end of the Permian
Out of breath, poor gorgon? Gasping for some supernovae? Named after scary creatures of Greek myth, the Gorgonopsia of the Late Permian Period included this fossil species Sauroctonus progressus, 3 metres long. Like many of its therapsid cousins, near relatives of our own ancestors, it died out during the Permo-Triassic Event. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gorgonopsia
Luckiest among our ancestors was a mammal-like reptile, or therapsid, that scraped through the Permo-Triassic Event, the worst catastrophe in the history of animal life. The climax was 251 million years ago at the end of the Permian Period. Nearly all animal species in the sea went extinct, along with most on land. The event ended the era of “old life”, the Palaeozoic, and ushered in the Mesozoic Era, when our ancestors would become small mammals trying to keep clear of the dinosaurs. So what put to death our previously flourishing Gorgon-faced cousins of the Late Permian? According to Henrik Svensmark, the Galaxy let the reptiles down.
Forget old suggestions (by myself included) that the impact of a comet or asteroid was to blame, like the one that did for the dinosaurs at the end of the Mesozoic. The greatest dying was less sudden than that. Similarly the impressive evidence for an eruption 250 million years ago – a flood basalt event that smothered Siberia with noxious volcanic rocks covering an area half the size of Australia – tells of only a belated regional coup de grâce. It’s more to the point that oxygen was in short supply – geologists speak of a “superanoxic ocean”. And there was far more carbon dioxide in the air than there is now.
“Well there you go,” some people will say. “We told you CO2 is bad for you.” That, of course, overlooks the fact that the notorious gas keeps us alive. The recenty increased CO2 shares with the plant breeders the credit for feeding the growing human population. Plants and photosynthetic microbes covet CO2 to grow. So in the late Permian its high concentration was a symptom of a big shortfall in life’s productivity, due to few supernovae, ice-free conditions, and a lack of weather to circulate the nutrients. And as photosynthesis is also badly needed to turn H2O into O2, the doomed animals were left gasping for oxygen, with little more than half of what we’re lucky to breathe today.
When Svensmark comments briefly on the Permo-Triassic Event in his new paper, “Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth,” he does so in the context of the finding that high rates of nearby supernovae promote life’s productivity by chilling the planet, and so improving the circulation of nutrients needed by the photosynthetic organisms.
Here’s a sketch (above) from Figure 22 in the paper, simplified to make it easier to read. Heavy carbon, 13C, is an indicator of how much photosynthesis was going on. Plumb in the middle is a downward pointing green dagger that marks the Permo-Triassic Event. And in the local supernova rate (black curve) Svensmark notes that the Late Permian saw the largest fall in the local supernova rate seen in the past 500 million years. This was when the Solar System had left the hyperactive Norma Arm of the Milky Way Galaxy behind it and entered the quiet space beyond. “Fatal consequences would ensue for marine life,” Svensmark writes, “if a rapid warming led to nutrient exhaustion … occurring too quickly for species to adapt.”
One size doesn’t fit all, and a fuller story of Late Permian biodiversity becomes subtler and even more persuasive. About 6 million years before the culminating mass extinction of 251 million years ago, a lesser one occurred at the end of the Guadalupian stage. This earlier extinction was linked with a brief resurgence in the supernova rate and a global cooling that interrupted the mid-Permian warming. In contrast with the end of the Permian, bio-productivity was high. The chief victims of this die-off were warm-water creatures including gigantic bivalves and rugose corals.
Why it’s tagged as “astrobiology”
So what, you may wonder, is the most life-enhancing supernova rate? Without wanting to sound like Voltaire’s Dr Pangloss, it’s probably not very far from the average rate for the past few hundred million years, nor very different from what we have now. Biodiversity and bio-productivity are both generous at present.
Svensmark has commented (not in the paper itself) on a closely related question – where’s the best place to live in the Galaxy?
“Too many supernovae can threaten life with extinction. Although they came before the time range of the present paper, very severe episodes called Snowball Earth have been blamed on bursts of rapid star formation. I’ve tagged the paper as ‘Astrobiology’ because we may be very lucky in our location in the Galaxy. Other regions may be inhospitable for advanced forms of life because of too many supernovae or too few.”
Astronomers searching for life elsewhere speak of a Goldilocks Zone in planetary systems. A planet fit for life should be neither too near to nor too far from the parent star. We’re there in the Solar System, sure enough. We may also be in a similar Goldilocks Zone of the Milky Way, and other galaxies with too many or too few supernovae may be unfit for life. Add to that the huge planetary collision that created the Earth’s disproportionately large Moon and provided the orbital stability and active geology on which life relies, and you may suspect that, astronomically at least, Dr Pangloss was right — “Everything is for the best in the best of all possible worlds.”
Don’t fret about the diehards
If this blog has sometimes seemed too cocky about the Svensmark hypothesis, it’s because I’ve known what was in the pipeline, from theories, observations and experiments, long before publication. Since 1996 the hypothesis has brought new successes year by year and has resisted umpteen attempts to falsify it.
New additions at the level of microphysics include a previously unknown reaction of sulphuric acid, as in a recent preprint. On a vastly different scale, Svensmark’s present supernova paper gives us better knowledge of the shape of the Milky Way Galaxy.
A mark of a good hypothesis is that it looks better and better as time passes. With the triumph of plate tectonics, diehard opponents were left redfaced and blustering. In 1960 you’d not get a job in an American geology department if you believed in continental drift, but by 1970 you’d not get the job if you didn’t. That’s what a paradigm shift means in practice and it will happen sometime soon with cosmic rays in climate physics.
Plate tectonics was never much of a political issue, except in the Communist bloc. There, the immobility of continents was doctrinally imposed by the Soviet Academy of Sciences. An analagous diehard doctrine in climate physics went global two decades ago, when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was conceived to insist that natural causes of climate change are minor compared with human impacts.
Don’t fret about the diehards. The glory of empirical science is this: no matter how many years, decades, or sometimes centuries it may take, in the end the story will come out right.
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For those who would doubt our cosmic connections, Svenmark’s work and Calder’s article reminds me to remind you of this well known quote:
The nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstuff. – Carl Sagan
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Fun article, kinda went in my eyes then fell out my….well … lets just say it didn’t retain my attention. All very Star Trek with pseudo science speculation. Fun and entertaining sort of.
So…. how about the sub sea volcanoes… think they influence the sea chemistry?
Leif Svalgaard says:
April 24, 2012 at 7:28 am
I would take exception to equating the solar cycle change with that of a magnetic reversal. The latter having a much larger effect.
That suggests that changes in the earth’s magnetic field affects climate in non-trivial ways. Something not allowed for in the climate models.
I’ve been saying for a while that the Forcings Model of climate is likely wrong and what drives climate change is changes in water (all phases) feedbacks, which means things that affect the phase changes of water, which means GCRs and anthropogenic aerosols and particulates.
I think that variations in cosmic rays reaching the surface are merely a proxy for solar variability with no significant direct effect on global cloudiness.
Just adding more condensation nuclei doesn’t in itself provoke the changes in the global air circulation patterns that we see when the level of solar activity changes.
To achieve that we must also alter the vertical temperature profile up through the atmosphere with a change in the slope of the tropospheric heights between equator and poles.
It is not clear how Dr. Svensmark thinks that could be achieved.
In contrast we are now seeing more and more evidence that solar changes have a top down effect on the global air circulation so why take that extra leap to supernovae ?
As regards the proposed correlation with the rate of supernovae I’m pretty sure that that must be spurious. The difficulties of getting the timing right for such long past events leaves it wide open to ‘construct’ apparent correlations where there may be none.
Imagine, a system that’s governed by the input of matter and energy. (/sarc)
“A mark of a good hypothesis is that it looks better and better as time passes. ” Not only that, a good hypothesis ties together seemingly disparate phenomena in a way that clarifies relationships and better explains behaviors. I can’t wait to read the paper at leisure. It sounds like a major contribution to understanding the natural world.
Leif Svalgaard says:
April 24, 2012 at 7:16 am
[article says] no matter how many years, decades, or sometimes centuries it may take, in the end the story will come out right.
[then Leif says] So, we are told that the end is nigh…
My interpretation is: The truth always emerges, no matter how long it takes.
There was no “end is nigh” snark at all.
Wow.
For years I have been saying “You can’t tax the sun”.
Now I will have to change that to:
“You can’t tax the crab nebula”.
I am happy that they can show now where the cooling/warming comes from,
but did anyone here figure out that “global” cooling already started in 1994
(if you use statistics and the measurements reported by the weather stations correctly)
http://www.letterdash.com/henryp/global-cooling-is-here
I would love to hear some comment from Leif about my results.
I am amazed that Svalgaard has decided to comment on this work
Leif Svalgaard says:
April 24, 2012 at 7:28 am
Both cause low-altitude ionization rates to vary by (≈10%) in the course of a magnetic reversal or during a solar cycle. Over decades to millennia the GCR influx to the Solar System scarcely changes.”
Thus the climate scarcely changes as well.
Makes sense. The average temperature at my location changes more in 12 hours than it has over the past 1 million years.
Plate tectonics is not continental drift. Some of the observations are the same, but the mechanisms behind the theories differ. So, I doubt if you would get a job in geology department in the 1970s if you believed in continental drift.
Hello Anthony.
Please feel free to comment on the following, even if yourself refuse to publish this on your wonderful site. I can understand the flak you wish to avoid with this being promoted on your blog.
But hey, it’s in the public domain. I’m thinking you might find the story interesting.
Planetary Defense: An Extraterrestrial Imperative
http://larouchepac.com/node/21222
All the best.
This is what makes teaching science–as opposed to say, English–so much fun…it’s always changing. Yeah. 🙂
The real beauty of this theory is that CAGW cranks can’t blame it all on human activity..
Cosmic ray science (despite all up to date instrumentation and monitoring) appear to be uncertain what was going about a month ago, let alone thousands or even millions years before.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/Ap-Cl.htm
So it is astronomical events not earth-based changes that control climate. The huge fluctuations between ice ages and interglacial periods caused me to conclude several years ago that there needed to be a cosmic not a meteorological explanation for oscillations of this magnitude. I have talked with scientists about this but they have never provided any support for this line of thinking. Now an Astronomer presents a theory that explains it all. I don’t have the knowledge or skill to judge his work, but I have read it all once and plan to dive in again when my head stops spinning. Right or wrong, or more likely partly right and partly wrong, he is none the less taking the research in the direction where it seems to me it has to go. Thank you Dr. Svensmark.
This is a great article. If nothing else, man is pointed to continue looking at the world (and space) around us. Science is very seldom settled. Rather we reach a plateau of better understanding only to see more wonderful questions to ask.
But alas, this science will not hold up in the current world political climate because the bureaucrats have not figured a way to use it to control every facet of our lives as they are trying to with “science” of global warming cause by man and our carbon needs.
In the light of this paper, there’s going to be a lot of the standard textbooks entering the paper recycling loop, and not just in climate science.
Pointman
Ok so I read the paper…. all of it… even the “tricky” math. Referring to the FTP paper conclusions…
“the speculations about episodic effects of e.g. a closerthan-
usual SN (Fields & Ellis 1999) or variations in the interstellar
medium (Frisch 2000) have demonstrated no persistent influence
on life and climate.”
OK
There was a lot of babble in this paper.
Interesting paper.
Very minor…..
Do you have a text search function? If so, you can use it to find: “The recenty increased CO2 shares with the plant breeders the credit for feeding the growing human population.” and correct to “recently”.
IanM
The text here seems to be that of Nigel Calder:
“Presented with due caution as well as with consideration for the feelings of experts in several fields of research, a story unfolds in which everything meshes like well-made clockwork. Anyone who wishes to pooh-pooh any piece of it by saying “correlation is not necessarily causality” should offer some other mega-theory . . . ”
I love the first part of this, although I always use the analogy of a Persian rug or other woven story rather than a clock. However, someone with a good “eye” might see a small flaw (damage) and point this out, without being a weaver of any sort. Svensmark’s work will be examined by others, and perhaps then, improved by them or by Svensmark’s team. Reference in the text to plate tectonics is telling. As I recall, the theory finally came together in the early 1960s and was published/popularized (in Scientific American and other journal articles). New things are regularly added, sometimes with exaggerated titles: “Scientists Shake Up Theory of Plate Tectonics” (Scientific American, April 26, 2001)
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=scientists-shake-up-theor
This astrobiology explanation, Svensmark’s theory, is fascinating and Nigel Calder is well equipped to help explain and popularize it. I’m just saying that improvements are likely without asking for some other “mega-theory.”
Is there a published comparison of solar isotopes and extrastellar isotopes, could the same changes in interstellar conditions effect the solar state as well.
On reflection this is very likely to be one of the landmark papers in recent times.
So, why did Svensmark choose to publish in an Astronomy journal and not e.g. climate “science”?
Of course, we know the reason: it was because climate “science” is full of self-serving politically motivated self-serving interests who saw real science as a threat to their survival.
It’s kind of gratifying to realise, that all these 5th rate journals which so obnoxiously kept out real scientist like Svensmark, have only shot themselves in the foot as the nobel prize winning calabre of scientists have gone elsewhere making them like real dolts.
I suspect many of these editors, will soon find that the real action – the real grant attracting research and serious interest … has left their subjecdt and is setting up shop where real scientists are respected, not treated as an unwelcome thorn in the side grant-grabbing eco-politics
This is a fantastic example of being able to think way, way, way “outside-the-box”. We’ll see what the years and centuries have to say, but I certainly admire his sheer audacity in formulating and publishing this.
Bengt A says:
April 24, 2012 at 7:42 am
Why don’t you read the paper before commenting? It would improve the quality of your comments if you try to analyse the core arguments within Svensmarks paper instead of repeating your usual old mantra “cosmic rays has no effect on climate”.
Where do you think I get the quote from? I’ll repeat it:
“The energetic GCR that ionize the lower atmosphere are only weakly influenced by variations in the geomagnetic field or by solar magnetic activity. Both cause low-altitude ionization rates to vary by (≈10%) in the course of a magnetic reversal or during a solar cycle. Over decades to millennia the GCR influx to the Solar System scarcely changes.”
Perhaps you read it first before putting foot in mouth.
Jean Parisot says:
April 24, 2012 at 8:02 am
Dr. Svalgaard, does the duration of a magnetic reversal provide enough time to effect climate systems?
A magnetic reversal takes thousands of years…