Solar Variability:
Striking a Balance with Climate Change
5.07.08
The sun has powered
almost everything on Earth since life began, including its climate. The
sun also delivers an annual and seasonal impact, changing the character
of each hemisphere as Earth's orientation shifts through the year. Since
the Industrial Revolution, however, new forces have begun to exert
significant influence on Earth's climate.
"For the last 20 to
30 years, we believe greenhouse gases have been the dominant influence
on recent climate change," said Robert Cahalan, climatologist at
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
For the past three
decades NASA scientists have investigated the unique relationship
between the sun and Earth. Using space-based tools, like the Solar
Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE), they have studied how much
solar energy illuminates Earth, and explored what happens to that energy
once it penetrates the atmosphere. The amount of energy that reaches
Earth's outer atmosphere is called the total solar irradiance. Total
solar irradiance is variable over many different timescales, ranging
from seconds to centuries due to changes in solar activity.
The sun goes through
roughly an 11-year cycle of activity, from stormy to quiet and back
again. Solar activity often occurs near sunspots, dark regions on the
sun caused by concentrated magnetic fields. The solar irradiance
measurement is much higher during solar maximum, when sunspot cycle and
solar activity is high, versus solar minimum, when the sun is quiet and
there are usually no sunspots.
The sun radiates huge
amounts of electromagnetic energy in all directions. Earth is only one
small recipient of the sun's energy; the sun's rays extend far out into
the solar system, illuminating all the other planets. Credit: NASA
"The
fluctuations in the solar cycle impacts Earth's global temperature by
about 0.1 degree Celsius, slightly hotter during solar maximum and
cooler during solar minimum," said Thomas Woods, solar scientist at
the University of Colorado in Boulder. "The sun is currently at its
minimum, and the next solar maximum is expected in 2012."
Using SORCE, scientists
have learned that about 1,361 watts per square meter of solar energy
reaches Earth's outermost atmosphere during the sun's quietest period.
But when the sun is active, 1.3 watts per square meter (0.1 percent)
more energy reaches Earth. "This TSI measurement is very important
to climate models that are trying to assess Earth-based forces on
climate change," said Cahalan.
Over the past century,
Earth's average temperature has increased by approximately 0.6 degrees
Celsius (1.1 degrees Fahrenheit). Solar heating accounts for about 0.15
C, or 25 percent, of this change, according to computer modeling results
published by NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies researcher David
Rind in 2004. Earth's climate depends on the delicate balance between
incoming solar radiation, outgoing thermal radiation and the composition
of Earth's atmosphere. Even small changes in these parameters can affect
climate. Around 30 percent of the solar energy that strikes Earth is
reflected back into space. Clouds, atmospheric aerosols, snow, ice,
sand, ocean surface and even rooftops play a role in deflecting the
incoming rays. The remaining 70 percent of solar energy is absorbed by
land, ocean, and atmosphere.
"Greenhouse gases
block about 40 percent of outgoing thermal radiation that emanates from
Earth," Woods said. The resulting imbalance between incoming solar
radiation and outgoing thermal radiation will likely cause Earth to heat
up over the next century, accelerating the melting polar ice caps,
causing sea levels to rise and increasing the probability of more
violent global weather patterns.
Non-Human Influences on
Climate Change
Before the Industrial
Age, the sun and volcanic eruptions were the major influences on Earth's
climate change. Earth warmed and cooled in cycles. Major cool periods
were ice ages, with the most recent ending about 11,000 years ago.
"Right now, we are
in between major ice ages, in a period that has been called the
Holocene,” said Cahalan. “Over recent decades, however, we have
moved into a human-dominated climate that some have termed the
Anthropocene. The major change in Earth's climate is now really
dominated by human activity, which has never happened before."
The sun is relatively
calm compared to other stars. "We don't know what the sun is going
to do a hundred years from now," said Doug Rabin, a solar physicist
at Goddard. "It could be considerably more active and therefore
have more influence on Earth's climate."
Or, it could be calmer,
creating a cooler climate on Earth similar to what happened in the late
17th century. Almost no sunspots were observed on the sun's surface
during the period from 1650 to 1715. This extended absence of solar
activity may have been partly responsible for the Little Ice Age in
Europe and may reflect cyclic or irregular changes in the sun's output
over hundreds of years. During this period, winters in Europe were
longer and colder by about 1 C than they are today.
Since then, there seems
to have been on average a slow increase in solar activity. Unless we
find a way to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases we put into the
atmosphere, such as carbon dioxide from fossil fuel burning, the solar
influence is not expected to dominate climate change. But the solar
variations are expected to continue to modulate both warming and cooling
trends at the level of 0.1 to 0.2 degrees Celsius (0.18 to 0.26
Fahrenheit) over many years.
Future Measurements of
Solar Variability
For three decades, a
suite of NASA and European Space Agency satellites have provided
scientists with critical measurements of total solar irradiance. The
Total Irradiance Monitor, also known as the TIM instrument, was launched
in 2003 as part of the NASA’s SORCE mission, and provides irradiance
measurements with state-of-the-art accuracy. TIM has been rebuilt as
part of the Glory mission, scheduled to launch in 2009. Glory's TIM
instrument will continue an uninterrupted 30-year record of solar
irradiance measurements and will help researchers better understand the
sun's direct and indirect effects on climate. Glory will also collect
data on aerosols, one of the least understood pieces of the climate
puzzle.
NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center
Data
compiled from The British Antarctic Study, NASA, Environment Canada,
UNEP, EPA and
other sources as stated and credited Researched by Charles
Welch-Updated dailyThis
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