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Showing posts with the label solar variability

Can Bray and Eddy Cycles Explain Global Warming?

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There's a  schematic  that is frequently promoted by John Shewchuk on X to claim thatt long-term solar cycles explain much more of temperature variability of the last 2000 years than changes in greenhouse gases like CO2. The implication is also frequently made that the current warming over the last century or so is due to these cycles and not to changes in GHG concentrations. One common version of this graph is here. The Hallstatt-Bray cycle, which has a periodicity of ~2400 years, and the Eddy cycle, which has a periodicity of 976 years, are both related to sunspots, and so they indeed do have an impact on total solar irradiance (TSI), and therefore they can in principle have an effect on global temperatures on millennial timescales. But the significant question is, by how much?  Astute observers will note that Shewchuk didn't include any scale for the y-axis; the impact of these cycles could be negligible or large as far as this schematic is concerned. I do find ironic,...

Is There an Ongoing Debate about the Impact of Solar Variability on Climate?

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This is part 1 of  review of the claims in Connolly et al 2021. You can see part 2 here . A paper was published in 2021 arguing that scientists have been premature to rule out the possibility that the Sun is the dominant explanation for the current warming trend. One key element in this argument is that there is continued disagreement over the degree of solar variability in reconstructions of Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) since 1610.  Some reconstructions show "low solar variability," and if those are correct, then current warming may be best explained by anthropogenic forcings. However, if "high solar variability" reconstructions are correct, then solar variability may explain most of current warming. So Connolly et al argue that "the answer to our question 'How much has the Sun influenced Northern Hemisphere temperature trends?' depends substantially on which estimate of TSI we choose."[1] But is this correct? Connolly et al Figure 2 Figure 2 in h...