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The Lubin Study & Grand Solar Minimum


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Reduced Energy from the Sun Might Occur by Mid-Century. Now Scientists Know by How Much.

UC San Diego scientists review satellite observations of nearby Sun-like stars to estimate the strength of the next “grand minimum” period of diminished UV radiation

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Magnetic loops gyrate above the sun, March 23-24, 2017. Photo: NASA/GSFC/Solar Dynamics Observatory

The Sun might emit less radiation by mid-century, giving planet Earth a chance to warm a bit more slowly but not halt the trend of human-induced climate change.

The cooldown would be the result of what scientists call a grand minimum, a periodic event during which the Sun’s magnetism diminishes, sunspots form infrequently, and less ultraviolet radiation makes it to the surface of the planet. Scientists believe that the event is triggered at irregular intervals by random fluctuations related to the Sun’s magnetic field.

Scientists have used reconstructions based on geological and historical data to attribute a cold period in Europe in the mid-17th Century to such an event, named the “Maunder Minimum.” Temperatures were low enough to freeze the Thames River on a regular basis and freeze the Baltic Sea to such an extent that a Swedish army was able to invade Denmark in 1658 on foot by marching across the sea ice.

A team of scientists led by research physicist Dan Lubin at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego has created for the first time an estimate of how much dimmer the Sun should be when the next minimum takes place.

There is a well-known 11-year cycle in which the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation peaks and declines as a result of sunspot activity. During a grand minimum, Lubin estimates that ultraviolet radiation diminishes an additional seven percent beyond the lowest point of that cycle. His team’s study, “Ultraviolet Flux Decrease Under a Grand Minimum from IUE Short-wavelength Observation of Solar Analogs,” appears in the publication Astrophysical Journal Letters and was funded by the state of California.

“Now we have a benchmark from which we can perform better climate model simulations,” Lubin said. “We can therefore have a better idea of how changes in solar UV radiation affect climate change.”

Lubin and colleagues David Tytler and Carl Melis of UC San Diego’s Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences arrived at their estimate of a grand minimum’s intensity by reviewing nearly 20 years of data gathered by the International Ultraviolet Explorer satellite mission. They compared radiation from stars that are analogous to the Sun and identified those that were experiencing minima.

The reduced energy from the Sun sets into motion a sequence of events on Earth beginning with a thinning of the stratospheric ozone layer. That thinning in turn changes the temperature structure of the stratosphere, which then changes the dynamics of the lower atmosphere, especially wind and weather patterns. The cooling is not uniform. While areas of Europe chilled during the Maunder Minimum, other areas such as Alaska and southern Greenland warmed correspondingly.

Lubin and other scientists predict a significant probability of a near-future grand minimum because the downward sunspot pattern in recent solar cycles resembles the run-ups to past grand minimum events.

Despite how much the Maunder Minimum might have affected Earth the last time, Lubin said that an upcoming event would not stop the current trend of planetary warming but might slow it somewhat. The cooling effect of a grand minimum is only a fraction of the warming effect caused by the increasing concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. After hundreds of thousands of years of CO2 levels never exceeding 300 parts per million in air, the concentration of the greenhouse gas is now over 400 parts per million, continuing a rise that began with the Industrial Revolution. Other researchers have used computer models to estimate what an event similar to a Maunder Minimum, if it were to occur in coming decades, might mean for our current climate, which is now rapidly warming.

One such study looked at the climate consequences of a future Maunder Minimum-type grand solar minimum, assuming a total solar irradiance reduced by 0.25 percent over a 50-year period from 2020 to 2070. The study found that after the initial decrease of solar radiation in 2020, globally averaged surface air temperature cooled by up to several tenths of a degree Celsius. By the end of the simulated grand solar minimum, however, the warming in the model with the simulated Maunder Minimum had nearly caught up to the reference simulation. Thus, a main conclusion of the study is that "a future grand solar minimum could slow down but not stop global warming."

https://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/pressrelease/reduced_energy_from_the_sun_might_occur_by_mid_century

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  • 3 weeks later...

GCRs are an interesting topic and definitely deserve more research, but so far the GCR hypothesis doesn't really stand up. First, many studies actually found that GCRs aren't as effective at seeding clouds as was originally proposed. Second, the theory predicts that the Earth should cool during periods of declining solar activity. The problem is obvious. Solar activity has been in a secular decline for 60 years and in that time the Earth actually warmed.  So the galactic cosmic ray hypothesis is already on a shaky theorectical footing, but more importantly the observations don't match the predictions.

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24 minutes ago, bdgwx said:

GCRs are an interesting topic and definitely deserve more research, but so far the GCR hypothesis doesn't really stand up. First, many studies actually found that GCRs aren't as effective at seeding clouds as was originally proposed. Second, the theory predicts that the Earth should cool during periods of declining solar activity. The problem is obvious. Solar activity has been in a secular decline for 60 years and in that time the Earth actually warmed.  So the galactic cosmic ray hypothesis is already on a shaky theorectical footing, but more importantly the observations don't match the predictions.

It's not that the theory is invalid rather the current chemistry of the atmosphere does not allow the effect to generate in a way that can be measured. You need to remember this is largely a Holocene and Pleistocene phenomenon. However the effects on the atmospheric circulation and heat distribution are very real leading to more warming in certain regions with less warming globally averaged going forward.

In the end it could prove more dire as Western Greenland experiences greater meltwater runoff in the scenario with a grand minimum overlayed with AGW due to increased regional warming.

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1 hour ago, bdgwx said:

GCRs are an interesting topic and definitely deserve more research, but so far the GCR hypothesis doesn't really stand up. First, many studies actually found that GCRs aren't as effective at seeding clouds as was originally proposed. Second, the theory predicts that the Earth should cool during periods of declining solar activity. The problem is obvious. Solar activity has been in a secular decline for 60 years and in that time the Earth actually warmed.  So the galactic cosmic ray hypothesis is already on a shaky theorectical footing, but more importantly the observations don't match the predictions.

Solar decline has been occurring for the last 60 years but the increase of cosmic rays has only started spiking over the last 10 years (particularly over the last 3). It will be interesting to see where this leads climate wise. From past reading, most think it would not be enough to stop warming; but could temporarily slow the increase.   

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