The Solar Radio Microwave Flux and the Sunspot Number Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. [http://leif.org/research] Hugh S Hudson University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Livingston & Penn Data and Findings so Far (and some random reflections) Leif Svalgaard Stanford, July 2011.
Advertisements

ESWW 11 November 2014 Summary Daily observations of the solar radio flux in various wavelengths (1-30 cm) have been carried out since the 1950’s We have.
Calibration of Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard Stanford University Eddy Symposium 22 Oct
Microwave fluxes in the recent solar minimum H. Hudson, L. Svalgaard, K. Shibasaki, K. Tapping The time series of solar microwave flux traditionally is.
The Sun – Describe characteristics of the Sun (S6C3PO2 high school)
Chapter 8 The Sun – Our Star.
Sixty+ Years of Solar Microwave Flux Leif Svalgaard Stanford University SHINE 2010, Santa Fe, NM.
1 Reconciling Group and International Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard, HEPL, Stanford University Edward W. Cliver, Space Vehicles Directorate, AFRL XII.
Study of Galactic Cosmic Rays at high cut- off rigidity during solar cycle 23 Partha Chowdhury 1 and B.N. Dwivedi 2 1 Department of Physics, University.
29 April 2011Viereck: Space Weather Workshop 2011 The Recent Solar Minimum: How Low Was It? What Were The Consequences? Rodney Viereck NOAA Space Weather.
General Properties Absolute visual magnitude M V = 4.83 Central temperature = 15 million 0 K X = 0.73, Y = 0.25, Z = 0.02 Initial abundances: Age: ~ 4.52.
The EUV spectral irradiance of the Sun from minimum to maximum Giulio Del Zanna Department of Space and Climate Physics University College London Vincenzo.
2008/10/21 J. Fontenla, M Haberreiter LASP – Univ. of Colorado NADIR MURI Focus Area.
Solar cycle variation in the peak asymmetry: solar or artefact? S. J. Jiménez-Reyes IAC 13-sept-2004.
Temperature Minimum Region between the Minimum-Activity Epochs and W. Livingston and E. Avrett AGU Fall Meeting, 2003.
Physical Astronomy Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11
Conversations with the Earth Tom Burbine
Question 1 1) core 2) corona 3) photosphere 4) chromosphere 5) convection zone The visible light we see from our Sun comes from which part?
1 Long-term Solar Synoptic Measurements with Implications for the Solar Cycle Leif Svalgaard Stanford University 23 April 2013.
1 Heliospheric Magnetic Field Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, CA
Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College1. Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College2 Doppler/ Sunspots/ Interior.
December in Antarctica: The Sun never sets. The images are 1 hour apart.
The Sun. Solar Prominence Sun Fact Sheet The Sun is a normal G2 star, one of more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy. Diameter: 1,390,000 km (Earth.
Calibration of Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard Stanford University SIDC Seminar 14 Sept
1 Something with ‘W’ Leif Svalgaard March 1, 2012.
1 Reconciling Group and International Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard, HEPL, Stanford University Edward W. Cliver, Space Vehicles Directorate, AFRL NSO.
EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens 
The day after solar cycle 23 IHY 2009 September 23, 2009 Yu Yi 1 and Su Yeon Oh 2 1 Dept. of Astronomy & Space Science, Chungnam National University, Korea.
SHINE SEP Campaign Events: Long-term development of solar corona in build-up to the SEP events of 21 April 2002 and 24 August 2002 A. J. Coyner, D. Alexander,
OUR SUN THE CLOSEST STAR. Composition of the Sun The Sun is composed of at least 80 of the elements found on Earth. Sun is mostly composed of 91.2% Hydrogen,
Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College1. Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College2 Chapter 9 The Sun.
CLIMATE CHANGE THE GREAT DEBATE Session 7. SOLAR POWER The Sun is the primary driving force of climate and sits in the centre of the solar system that.
1 The Spots That Won’t Form Leif Svalgaard Stanford University 3 rd SSN Workshop, Tucson, AZ, Jan
The Sun.
The Polar Fields Seen in 17 GHz Microwave Flux and with Magnetographs Leif Svalgaard Stanford University 6 January, 2012.
Comparison of Magnesium II Core-to-Wing Ratio Measurements J. Machol 1,2*, M. Snow 3, R. Viereck 4, M. Weber 5, E. Richard 3, L. Puga 4 1 NOAA/National.
NoRH Observations of Prominence Eruption Masumi Shimojo Nobeyama Solar Radio Observatory NAOJ/NINS 2004/10/28 Nobeyama Symposium SeiSenRyo.
THE SUN. The Sun The sun has a diameter of 900,000 miles (>100 Earths could fit across it) >1 million Earths could fit inside it. The sun is composed.
The Rise of Solar Cycle 24: Magnetic Fields from the Dynamo through the Photosphere and Corona and Connecting to the Heliosphere Part 1: Interior and Photosphere.
1 Large Solar Events in Historical Context Leif Svalgaard HEPL, Stanford University AGU Fall 2013, SH23D-02.
1 Geomagnetic Calibration of Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard HEPL, Stanford University SSN-Workshop, Sunspot, NM, Sept
1 The Mean Field of the Sun Leif Svalgaard Stanford University Sept. 2, 2011.
Reconstruction of Solar EUV Flux
1 Rudolf Wolf Was Right Leif Svalgaard Stanford University Dec 9 th 2009 Seminar at UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.
1 How Well Do We Know the Sunspot Number? [And what we are doing to answer that question] Leif Svalgaard HEPL, Stanford University Poster at ‘Solar in.
1 The Waldmeier Effect and the Calibration of Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, California, USA David H.
Mike Lockwood (Southampton University & Space Science and Technology Department, STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory ) Open solar flux and irradiance during.
1 Objective Calibration of Sunspot Numbers Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. AGU Fall 2009,
Reading Unit 31, 32, 51. The Sun The Sun is a huge ball of gas at the center of the solar system –1 million Earths would fit inside it! –Releases the.
1 Reconstruction of Solar EUV Flux Leif Svalgaard Stanford University EGU, Vienna, April 2015.
1 Has the Sun’s Output Really Changed Significantly Since the Little Ice Age? Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, CA, USA
1 Reconciling Group and Wolf Sunspot Numbers Using Backbones Leif Svalgaard Stanford University 5th Space Climate Symposium, Oulu, 2013 The ratio between.
What the Long-Term Sunspot Record Tells Us About Space Climate David H. Hathaway NASA/MSFC National Space Science and Technology Center Huntsville, AL,
1 Rudolf Wolf and the Sunspot Number Leif Svalgaard Stanford University Sept st SSN Workshop, Sunspot, NM.
CSI /PHYS Solar Atmosphere Fall 2004 Lecture 04 Sep. 22, 2004 Solar Magnetic Field, Solar Cycle, and Solar Dynamo.
Our Star, the Sun. The Sun is the Largest Object in the Solar System The Sun contains more than 99.85% of the total mass of the solar system If you.
Chapter 28 The Sun Section 2 Solar Activity Notes 28-2.
Using the paleo-cosmic ray record to compare the solar activity during the sunspot minimum of with those during the Spoerer, Maunder, and Dalton.
The Sun Essential Question: What are the properties of the Sun?
Sun: General Properties
The Sun, the closest star
Surface Temperature and Blackbodies Surface temperature: the temperature of the visible disk of the Sun (photosphere) blackbody: a perfect radiator.
Current HMI Polar Fields
The Sun: close-up of a spectral class G main sequence star
24.3 The Sun Explain the structure of the Sun.
Reconstruction of Solar EUV Flux
ESS 261 Topics in magnetospheric physics Space weather forecast models ____ the prediction of solar wind speed April 23, 2008.
The Sun as We See It Lecture 9
For a given CA II K-line index there are too few sunspots after 2000
The Sun.
Presentation transcript:

The Solar Radio Microwave Flux and the Sunspot Number Leif Svalgaard Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. [ Hugh S Hudson University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA. AGU Fall 2009, SH13C-03 Acknowledge input from Kiyoto Shibasaki (Nobeyama) and Ken Tapping (Penticton)

Japanese Observations at Toyokawa ( ) and Nobeyama (1994-now) The Observations at 1, 2, and 3.75 GHz straddle the 2.8 GHz frequency of the 10.7 cm flux. The 3.75 GHz series begins in 1951 and the other frequencies in We scale all observations to the longest series (3.75 GHz)

Composite Japanese Microwave Flux The three (two of them scaled) series agree very well and it makes sense to construct a composite series as the simple average

Scaling to the Canadian F10.7 Flux The next step is to scale to the 10.7 cm flux

Stability of the Series? If both series have a stable calibration, their ratio should be constant in time. There is an indication that the move from Ottawa to Penticton introduced a small difference in level. We compensate for this by dividing the Ottawa values by (and then rescale)

The Final Composite ‘F10.7’ Flux The average of the Japanese and the Canadian series is our final composite, which we shall use in the following. We have considerable confidence in the stability and calibration of this series. The constant level at each minimum is notable (green box) and argues against secular changes

The well-known Relationship between the Sunspot Number and F10.7 The polynomial formula has no particular physical significance

The well-known Relationship between the Sunspot Number and F10.7 Changes significantly in solar cycle 23 (Tapping 2009)

Comparing the Synthetic Sunspot Number with Observations The observed International Sunspot Number, R i, is systematically and progressively ‘too low’ compared to what we would expect from F10.7 starting in ~1991 [the reason the interval was used]

Comparing Ratios ? The ratio between observed and fitted Sunspot Numbers should be one [avoiding cases where R is too small – and still we have large noise near solar minima – marked by small m’s on the graph]. The change in SSN observers from Zurich to Brussels might introduce a small offset (less than 5%), but cannot account for the decrease during solar cycle 23

The Fe I line at nm has a very large and easily measured Zeeman splitting. The Hydroxyl radical OH is very temperature sensitive and the lines weaken severely at higher temperatures. CN Courtesy Bill Livingston

The Fe I line at nm has a very large and easily measured Zeeman splitting. The Hydroxyl radical OH is very temperature sensitive and the lines weaken severely at higher temperatures. CN Courtesy Bill Livingston

The Magnetic Field has Steadily Decreased During SC23. The Temperature has Steadily Increased. At B = 1500 G, the Spot is Effectively Invisible. Decreasing Visibility due to this Effect may lead to an Undercount of Sunspots and partly Explain the Changed Relationship with the Microwave Flux nm 1403 measurements since 1998

Was the Maunder Minimum Just an Example of a Strong L&P Effect? Cosmic Ray proxies show that during both the Maunder Minimum and the Spörer Minimum, the modulation of cosmic rays proceeded almost as ‘usual’. So the Heliosphere was not too different then from now, and perhaps the spots were there but just much harder to see because of low contrast because of B ≈ 1500 G. Wild Speculation

Conclusions The Canadian and Japanese microwave radiometry is stable, robust, and of high quality The SSN began departing from its usual correlation in Cycle 23 The Livingston-Penn sunspot measurements are consistent with the SSN change The nature of solar activity appears to be changing as we watch

F10.7 and Geomagnetic Diurnal Variation Agree in Detail

The Relationship between the Alfvenic Mach number in the solar wind (at 1AU) and the sunspot number has also changed in SC23

Abstract Since 1947 the flux of microwaves from the Sun at wavelengths between 3 and 30 cm [frequencies between 10 and 1 GHz] has been routinely measured. This emission comes from both chromosphere and the corona and has two main sources: thermal bremsstrahlung (free-free emission) and thermal gyroradiation. These mechanisms give rise to enhanced radiation when the density and magnetic field increase, so the microwave radiation is a good measure of general solar activity. Strong magnetic fields occur in the network and can persist for weeks or longer; hence there is a strong rotational signal in the emission superposed on a solar cycle variation of the background coronal signal. The radio flux measurements can be calibrated absolutely and are not very sensitive to observing conditions, and in principle have no personal equation. They may thus be the most objective measure of solar activity, and our many decades-long flux record could throw light on the important issue of the long-term variation of solar activity. The longest series of observations F10.7, begun by Covington in Ottawa, Canada in April 1947 and is maintained to this day. Other observatories also have long and continuing series of measurements of the microwave flux. One can now ask how this measure of solar activity compares to other measures, in particular the sunspot number. We correlate the sunspot number against the F10.7 flux for the interval , and obtain a good polynomial fit (R^2 = 0.976) up until ~ after which time the observed sunspot number falls progressively below the fitted number. Three obvious hypotheses present themselves: 1) The sunspot counting procedure or observers have changed, with resulting artificial changes of the sunspot number as they have in the past. 2) Physical changes in the corona or chromosphere have occurred. 3) Livingston & Penn’s observations that the sunspots are getting warmer during the last decade, leading to a decreased contrast with the surrounding photosphere and hence lessened visibility, possibly resulting in an undercount of sunspots The near constancy of the flux at minima since 1954 argues against a change of the physical conditions at the source locations, leaving the exciting possibility that Livingston & Penn may be correct.