--> Abstract: How Variable Is the Sun, and What Are the Links Between This Variability and Climate?, by Judith Lean; #90078 (2008)
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How Variable Is the Sun, and What Are the Links Between This Variability and Climate?

Judith Lean
Space Science Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC

During the past three decades a suite of space-based instruments has monitored the Sun’s brightness as well as the Earth’s surface and atmospheric temperatures. These datasets enable the separation of climate’s responses to Previous HitsolarNext Hit activity from other sources of climate variability (anthropogenic gases, El Niño Southern Oscillation, volcanic aerosols). The empirical evidence indicates that the Previous HitsolarNext Hit irradiance 11-year cycle increase of 0.1% produces a global surface temperature increase of about 0.1 K, with larger increases at higher altitudes. Historical Previous HitsolarNext Hit brightness changes are estimated by modeling the contemporary irradiance changes in terms of their Previous HitsolarNext Hit magnetic sources (dark sunspots and bright faculae) in conjunction with simulated long-term evolution of Previous HitsolarNext Hit magnetism. In this way, the Previous HitsolarNext Hit irradiance increase since the seventeenth century Maunder Minimum is estimated to be slightly larger than the increase in recent activity cycles, and smaller than early estimates that were based on variations in Sun-like stars and cosmogenic isotopes. Ongoing studies are beginning to decipher the empirical Sun- climate connections as a combination of responses to direct Previous HitsolarNext Hit heating of the surface and lower atmosphere, and indirect heating via Previous HitsolarTop UV irradiance impacts on the ozone layer and middle atmospheric, with subsequent communication to the surface and climate. The associated physical pathways appear to involve the modulation of existing dynamical and circulation atmosphere-ocean couplings, including the ENSO and the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation. Comparisons of the empirical results with model simulations suggest that models are deficient in accounting for these pathways.

 

AAPG Search and Discover Article #90078©2008 AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas