276 research outputs found
ACRIM-gap and total solar irradiance revisited: Is there a secular trend between 1986 and 1996?
A gap in the total solar irradiance (TSI) measurements between ACRIM-1 and
ACRIM-2 led to the ongoing debate on the presence or not of a secular trend
between the minima preceding cycles 22 (in 1986) and 23 (1996). It was recently
proposed to use the SATIRE model of solar irradiance variations to bridge this
gap. When doing this, it is important to use the appropriate SATIRE-based
reconstruction, which we do here, employing a reconstruction based on
magnetograms. The accuracy of this model on months to years timescales is
significantly higher than that of a model developed for long-term
reconstructions used by the ACRIM team for such an analysis. The constructed
`mixed' ACRIM - SATIRE composite shows no increase in the TSI from 1986 to
1996, in contrast to the ACRIM TSI composite.Comment: 4 figure
Solar cycle variation in solar irradiance
The correlation between solar irradiance and the 11-year solar activity cycle
is evident in the body of measurements made from space, which extend over the
past four decades. Models relating variation in solar irradiance to
photospheric magnetism have made significant progress in explaining most of the
apparent trends in these observations. There are, however, persistent
discrepancies between different measurements and models in terms of the
absolute radiometry, secular variation and the spectral dependence of the solar
cycle variability. We present an overview of solar irradiance measurements and
models, and discuss the key challenges in reconciling the divergence between
the two
EMPIRE: A robust empirical reconstruction of solar irradiance variability
We present a new empirical model of total and spectral solar irradiance (TSI
and SSI) variability entitled EMPirical Irradiance REconstruction (EMPIRE). As
with existing empirical models, TSI and SSI variability is given by the linear
combination of solar activity indices. In empirical models, UV SSI variability
is usually determined by fitting the rotational variability in activity indices
to that in measurements. Such models have to date relied on ordinary least
squares regression, which ignores the uncertainty in the activity indices. In
an advance from earlier efforts, the uncertainty in the activity indices is
accounted for in EMPIRE by the application of an error-in-variables regression
scheme, making the resultant UV SSI variability more robust. The result is
consistent with observations and unprecedentedly, with that from other
modelling approaches, resolving the long-standing controversy between existing
empirical models and other types of models. We demonstrate that earlier
empirical models, by neglecting the uncertainty in activity indices,
underestimate UV SSI variability. The reconstruction of TSI and visible and IR
SSI from EMPIRE is also shown to be consistent with observations. The EMPIRE
reconstruction is of utility to climate studies as a more robust alternative to
earlier empirical reconstructions.Comment: J. Geophys. Res. (2017
Solar Irradiance Variability and Climate
The brightness of the Sun varies on all time scales on which it has been
observed, and there is increasing evidence that it has an influence on climate.
The amplitudes of such variations depend on the wavelength and possibly on the
time scale. Although many aspects of this variability are well established, the
exact magnitude of secular variations (going beyond a solar cycle) and the
spectral dependence of variations are under discussion. The main drivers of
solar variability are thought to be magnetic features at the solar surface. The
climate reponse can be, on a global scale, largely accounted for by simple
energetic considerations, but understanding the regional climate effects is
more difficult. Promising mechanisms for such a driving have been identified,
including through the influence of UV irradiance on the stratosphere and
dynamical coupling to the surface. Here we provide an overview of the current
state of our knowledge, as well as of the main open questions
Solar total irradiance in cycle 23
The apparently unusual behaviour of the TSI during the most recent minimum of
solar activity has been interpreted as evidence against solar surface magnetism
as the main driver of the secular change in the TSI. We test claims that the
evolution of the solar surface magnetic field does not reproduce the observed
TSI in cycle 23. We use sensitive, 60-minute averaged MDI magnetograms and
quasi-simultaneous continuum images as an input to our SATIRE-S model and
calculate the TSI variation over cycle 23, sampled roughly twice-monthly. The
computed TSI is then compared to the PMOD composite of TSI measurements and to
the data from two individual instruments, SORCE/TIM and UARS/ACRIM II, that
monitored the TSI during the declining phase of cycle 23 and over the previous
minimum in 1996, respectively. Excellent agreement is found between the trends
shown by the model and almost all sets of measurements. The only exception is
the early, i.e. 1996 to 1998, PMOD data. Whereas the agreement between the
model and the PMOD composite over the period 1999-2009 is almost perfect, the
modelled TSI shows a steeper increase between 1996 and 1999 than implied by the
PMOD composite. On the other hand, the steeper trend in the model agrees
remarkably well with the ACRIM II data. A closer look at the VIRGO data, that
make the basis of the PMOD composite after 1996, reveals that only one of the
two VIRGO instruments, the PMO6V, shows the shallower trend present in the
composite, whereas the DIARAD measurements indicate a steeper trend. We
conclude that (1) the sensitivity changes of the PMO6V radiometers within VIRGO
during the first two years have very likely not been correctly evaluated, and
that (2) the TSI variations over cycle 23 and the change in the TSI levels
between the minima in 1996 and 2008 are consistent with the solar surface
magnetism mechanism
Reconstruction of solar UV irradiance since 1974
Variations of the solar UV irradiance are an important driver of chemical and
physical processes in the Earth's upper atmosphere and may also influence
global climate. Here we reconstruct solar UV irradiance in the range 115-400 nm
over the period 1974-2007 by making use of the recently developed empirical
extension of the SATIRE models employing SUSIM data. The evolution of the solar
photospheric magnetic flux, which is a central input to the model, is described
by the magnetograms and continuum images recorded at the Kitt Peak National
Solar Observatory between 1974 and 2003 and by the MDI instrument on SoHO since
1996. The reconstruction extends the available observational record by 1.5
solar cycles. The reconstructed Ly-alpha irradiance agrees well with the
composite time series by Woods et al (2000). The amplitude of the irradiance
variations grows with decreasing wavelength and in the wavelength regions of
special interest for studies of the Earth's climate (Ly-alpha and oxygen
absorption continuum and bands between 130 and 350 nm) is one to two orders of
magnitude stronger than in the visible or if integrated over all wavelengths
(total solar irradiance)
Modelling total solar irradiance since 1878 from simulated magnetograms
We present a new model of total solar irradiance (TSI) based on magnetograms
simulated with a surface flux transport model (SFTM) and the SATIRE (Spectral
And Total Irradiance REconstructions) model. Our model provides daily maps of
the distribution of the photospheric field and the TSI starting from 1878. We
first calculate the magnetic flux on the solar surface emerging in active and
ephemeral regions. The evolution of the magnetic flux in active regions is
computed using a surface flux transport model fed with the observed record of
sunspot group areas and positions. The magnetic flux in ephemeral regions is
treated separately using the concept of overlapping cycles. To model the
ephemeral region cycles, we assume that their length and amplitude are related
to that of the sunspot cycles. We then use a version of the SATIRE model to
compute the TSI. The area coverage and the distribution of different magnetic
features as a function of time, which are required by SATIRE, are extracted
from the simulated magnetograms and the modelled ephemeral region magnetic
flux. Previously computed intensity spectra of the various types of magnetic
features are employed. Our model reproduces the PMOD composite of TSI
measurements starting from 1978 at daily and rotational timescales more
accurately than the previous version of the SATIRE model computing TSI over
this period of time. The simulated magnetograms provide a more realistic
representation of the evolution of the magnetic field on the photosphere and
also allow us to make use of information on the spatial distribution of the
magnetic fields before the times when observed magnetograms were available. We
find that the secular increase in TSI since 1878 is fairly stable to
modifications of the treatment of the ephemeral region magnetic flux
Solar total and spectral irradiance reconstruction over the last 9000 years
Changes in solar irradiance and in its spectral distribution are among the
main natural drivers of the climate on Earth. However, irradiance measurements
are only available for less than four decades, while assessment of solar
influence on Earth requires much longer records. The aim of this work is to
provide the most up-to-date physics-based reconstruction of the solar total and
spectral irradiance (TSI/SSI) over the last nine millennia. The concentrations
of the cosmogenic isotopes 14C and 10Be in natural archives have been converted
to decadally averaged sunspot numbers through a chain of physics-based models.
TSI and SSI are reconstructed with an updated SATIRE model. Reconstructions are
carried out for each isotope record separately, as well as for their composite.
We present the first ever SSI reconstruction over the last 9000 years from the
individual 14C and 10Be records as well as from their newest composite. The
reconstruction employs physics-based models to describe the involved processes
at each step of the procedure. Irradiance reconstructions based on two
different cosmogenic isotope records, those of 14C and 10Be, agree well with
each other in their long-term trends despite their different geochemical paths
in the atmosphere of Earth. Over the last 9000 years, the reconstructed secular
variability in TSI is of the order of 0.11%, or 1.5 W/m2. After the Maunder
minimum, the reconstruction from the cosmogenic isotopes is consistent with
that from the direct sunspot number observation. Furthermore, over the
nineteenth century, the agreement of irradiance reconstructions using isotope
records with the reconstruction from the sunspot number by Chatzistergos et al.
(2017) is better than that with the reconstruction from the WDC-SILSO series
(Clette et al. 2014), with a lower chi-square-value
Sunspot areas and tilt angles for solar cycles 7-10
Extending the knowledge about the properties of solar cycles into the past is
essential for understanding the solar dynamo. This paper aims at estimating
areas of sunspots observed by Schwabe in 1825-1867 and at calculating the tilt
angles of sunspot groups. The sunspot sizes in Schwabe's drawings are not to
scale and need to be converted into physical sunspot areas. We employed a
statistical approach assuming that the area distribution of sunspots was the
same in the 19th century as it was in the 20th century. Umbral areas for about
130,000 sunspots observed by Schwabe were obtained, as well as the tilt angles
of sunspot groups assuming them to be bipolar. There is, of course, no polarity
information in the observations. The annually averaged sunspot areas correlate
reasonably with sunspot number. We derived an average tilt angle by attempting
to exclude unipolar groups with a minimum separation of the two alleged
polarities and an outlier rejection method which follows the evolution of each
group and detects the moment it turns unipolar at its decay. As a result, the
tilt angles, although displaying considerable scatter, place the leading
polarity on average 5.85+-0.25 closer to the equator, in good agreement with
tilt angles obtained from 20th-century data sets. Sources of uncertainties in
the tilt angle determination are discussed and need to be addressed whenever
different data sets are combined. The sunspot area and tilt angle data are
provided online.Comment: accepted for publication in Astron. & Astrophy
From Solar to Stellar Brightness Variations: The Effect of Metallicity
Context. Comparison studies of Sun-like stars with the Sun suggest an
anomalously low photometric variability of the Sun compared to Sun-like stars
with similar magnetic activity. Comprehensive understanding of stellar
variability is needed, to find a physical reasoning for this observation. Aims.
We investigate the effect of metallicity and effective temperature on the
photometric brightness change of Sun-like stars seen at different inclinations.
The considered range of fundamental stellar parameters is sufficiently small so
the stars, investigated here, still count as Sun-like or even as solar twins.
Methods. To model the brightness change of stars with solar magnetic activity,
we extend a well established model of solar brightness variations, SATIRE
(which stands for Spectral And Total Irradiance Reconstruction), which is based
on solar spectra, to stars with different fundamental parameters. For that we
calculate stellar spectra for different metallicities and effective temperature
using the radiative transfer code ATLAS9. Results. We show that even a small
change (e.g. within the observational error range) of metallicity or effective
temperature significantly affects the photometric brightness change compared to
the Sun. We find that for Sun-like stars, the amplitude of the brightness
variations obtained for Str\"omgren (b + y)/2 reaches a local minimum for
fundamental stellar parameters close to the solar metallicity and effective
temperature. Moreover, our results show that the effect of inclination
decreases for metallicity values greater than the solar metallicity. Overall,
we find that an exact determination of fundamental stellar parameters is
crucially important for understanding stellar brightness changes.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted in A&
- …