Break out your woolies and 160 meter band verticals. Low sunspots and global
cooling may be at hand. If the predicted mini ice-age materializes, we may all
have to go back to burning lots of coal and petroleum to keep the CO2 level up
to trap in heat. Crank up those 160 meter band linear amplifiers.
Looming weak solar max may herald frosty times
by Staff Writers
Moscow (SPX) Aug 09, 2013
The sun is currently at the maximum of Solar Cycle 24, but as this graph shows,
there are far fewer sunspots during this peak than there have been in past
cycles (Image credit: Hathaway/NASA/MSFC)
The current solar activity cycle, possibly the weakest in 100 years, is
approaching its maximum. This may signal a future low period for the sun,
probably not unlike the one that caused the so-called Little Ice Age from the
mid-16th to mid-19th centuries.
Solar activity can be easily monitored by the number of sun spots. Regular
recordings of the phenomenon have been available since the middle of the 18th
century, with the star's activity reaching peaks about every 11 years. The
current Solar Cycle 24, is about to pass its prime in a matter of months,
according to observations.
One indicator of the upcoming change is the reduction of solar magnetic
activity. Every cycle peak the sun's magnetic field flips polarity due to
reorganization of its inner dynamo.
"The sun's north pole has already changed sign, while the south pole is racing
to catch up," says Phil Scherrer, solar physicist at Stanford's Wilcox Solar
Observatory, which has been monitoring the sun's polar magnetic fields since
1976.
"Soon, however, both poles will be reversed, and the second half of Solar Max
will be underway," he added as cited by NASA Science.
Solar Cycle 24 is unusual on several accounts. It came late about a year, with
extremely low activity recorded throughout 2009, which made astronomers shift a
predicted 2012 peak to 2013. Also a few years ago the northern hemisphere of
the sun became significantly more active than the southern, with the latter
trying to catch up.
Further muddying the water is the fact that the previous four cycles had double
peaks rather than single ones. The sun was quite active in 2011, but then went
into a lull, with fewer-than-expected sunspots and solar flares in 2012 and
2013.
The current cycle is likely to have an in-between peak too, some NASA
scientists say, with a second spike expected in late 2013 to early 2014. The
increased activity would be due to the lagging southern hemisphere as the main
driver.
Possible explanations for the sun's latest odd behavior were discussed last
month at a meeting of the Astronomical Society's Solar Physics Division.
Scientists agree that Cycle 24 is already among the weakest reported.
"Not only is this the smallest cycle we've seen in the space age, it's the
smallest cycle in 100 years," NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center research
scientist David Hathaway said.
Some more radical explanations sound quite alarming. Matthew Penn of the
National Solar Observatory says the strength of magnetic field in sunspots in
waning, and the sunspot cycle may disappear altogether.
"If this trend continues, there will be almost no spots in Cycle 25, and we
might be going into another Maunder Minimum," he said.
Maunder Minimum is a period between about 1645 and 1715, in which sunspots
became extremely rare. In fact some 18th century astronomers believed sunspots
to be a myth. The period coincides with the so-called Little Ice Age, a time
when the climate became cold enough for the River Thames in London to freeze in
winter. On the gloomier side, the colder summers and harsh winters sealed the
fate of the Viking colonies in Greenland, as its population starved and died
out.
While there is no certainty that the Little Ice Age was caused primarily by the
decreased solar activity, a link does exist. If the next solar cycles are even
quieter that the current one, and a cooling takes place, it may counteract the
global warming trend over the next few decades.
Plagiarized by Joe Buch N2JB
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