Title: TOTAL SOLAR IRRADIANCE AND CLIMATE
1 TOTAL SOLAR IRRADIANCE AND CLIMATE
- Blanca Mendoza
- Instituto de Geofísica UNAM
- México
- ASSE04 Sao Jose dos Campos INPE
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3FIRST IDEAS
- Antonii Mariae Schyrlei de Rheita of Antwerp
(1645) - More sunspots- colder wheater
- William Herschel (1801)
- More sunspots- more light and heat-more wheat
(lower price) - The Suns output should be measured
- (Herschel, 1807, in Philosophical Transactions)
4 THE ROLE OF THE SUN IN CLIMATE CHANGE
- The observed global warming of the Earth since
the beginning of the 20th century has been
attributed preponderantly, if not uniquely, to
the increasing concentration of greenhouse gases
5SUN-PLANETARY BODIES INTERACTION
- PRODUCTS OF SOLAR ACTIVITY THAT IMPACT ON
PLANETARY BODIES - Electromagnetic radiation
- Energetic particles
- Solar wind and transient ejecta with a frozen in
magnetic field. - REACTION OF PLANETARY BODIES TO SOLAR
ACTIVITY DEPENDS ON - Intrinsic magnetic fields
- Ionospheres
- Neutral atmospheres
- RESPONSE OF THE EARTH TO SOLAR VARIABILITY
- Geomagnetic activity
- Variations of the high atmosphere
- Changes of weather, climate and biota
-
6SUN-EARTH RELATIONS
7SUN-EARTH RELATIONS
8MECHANISM OF CHANGE OF SOLAR ELECTROMAGNETIC
RADIATION ARRIVING AT THE EARTH
- - Planetary orbital parameter variations
(eccentricity of the orbit, inclination of the
rotation axis, precession) - - Changes of the albedo (due to for instance
to variations of cloudiness or atmospheric
composition and changes in the distribution of
land and ocean masses) - - Intrinsic variations of the solar
irradiance -
- Some of these mechanisms produce
variations that are evident on time scales of
thousands or even millions of years, but in
particular the observed changes of the solar
irradiance are occurring from minutes to decades,
the time scales that matter to human beings.
9THE TOTAL SOLAR IRRADIANCE
-
- The total solar irradiance (TSI) is the value of
the integrated solar energy flux over the entire
spectrum arriving at the top of the terrestrial
atmosphere at the mean Sun-Earth distance (the
astronomical unit AU). The TSI at the Earths
orbit can be calculated knowing the Suns radius,
the photospheric temperature and the value of the
AU, the result is approximately 1367 W/m2.
Satellite observations indicate a value of 1367?4
W/m2
10- Before the spacecraft era, changes of the TSI
were difficult to detect by ground-based
observatories due to the lack of knowledge of the
selective absorption of the Earths atmosphere
and the insufficient radiometric precision the
solar constant - Spacecraft measurements of the TSI started with
NIMBUS-7 launched in November 1978 and have
been carried out by their successors.
11Daily average values of the TSI from different
radiometers Hickey-Frieden cavity radiometer
(HF) on NIMBUS 7, Active Cavity Radiometer
(ACRIM I) on the Solar Maximum Mission (SMM),
Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) on the
Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS), ACRIM
II on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite
(UARS), Solar Variability (SOVA2) experiment on
the European Retrievable Carrier (EURECA) and
Variability of Irradiance and Gravity Oscillation
Experiment (VIRGO) on the Solar and heliospheric
Observatory (SOHO).
12Observed TSI variations and sources
- Changes of minutes to hours granulation, meso
and supergranulation. Fluctuations on the 5
minute range solar oscillations - Short term changes of few days to weeks
dominated by sunspots. The sunspot-related dips
produce changes of 0.3 in TSI - Over the solar cycle, variations of ? 0.1 in
consonance with sunspot activity, mainly due to
faculae and bright magnetic elements. Faculae can
enhance the total flux by 0.08. - Space-based observations exist only for about 20
years, variations on time scales longer than the
11-year cycle uncertain
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16Composite TSI from Fröhlich (2000) using
different time series at different times as
indicated on the figure
- Willson (1997) and Willson and Mordvinov (2003)
used the Nimbus 7/ERB results to relate the
non-overlapping ACRIM I and ACRIM II data
sets. -
- Fröhlich and Lean (1998) and Fröhlich (2000)
used ERBS to relate ACRIM I and ACRIM II.
17Spectral solar irradiance at the top of the
atmosphere and its estimated variability along
the 11-year solar cycle
- A maximum near 500 nm
- 50 of the TSI at visible and near-infrared
wavelengths between 400-800 nm, 99 between 300
to 10 000 nm. - VARIATIONS
- For the UV wavelength 20 near 140 nm, 8 near
200 nm and 3 near 250 nm, but most of them
occur below 500 nm. -
- At visible and infrared wavelengths is
unreliable. At wavelengths larger than 400 nm
only theoretical estimates. Observations indicate
a variability of 0.1 along the solar cycle.
18EMPIRICAL MODELS OF TSI VARIATIONS
- TSI variations processes e.g. photospheric
temperature changes, changes in solar diameter,
etc changes in the amount and distribution of
magnetic flux on the solar surface - Most recent reconstructions of the TSI assume
that all variations are due to surface magnetic
changes. - Time evolution of superficial magnetic features -
variation of the magnetic solar activity -
variations in brightness direct and indirect
indices of solar activity - The solar activity indices - irradiance
indices the facular brightening and sunspot
darkening.
19Several indices of solar activity
20A short-term empirical model of TSI variability
based on sunspot and faculae compared with the
measured TSI (Lean et al., 1995)
- The short-term models time scales of the solar
cycle. Inputs facular brightening and sunspot
darkening. These models have reproduced ? 80 of
the TSI irradiance variability of the space
observation time span.
21A long-term empirical TSI model using as
long-term component the smoothed sunspot group
number (Lean et al., 1995)
- Long-term TSI changes are speculative.
- Use besides solar cycle inputs, an index of
long-term variability such as the smoothed
sunspot group number or the cycle length.
22THE INFLUENCE OF TSI VARIABILITY ON EARTHS
CLIMATE
- The 1367 W/m2 of TSI are distributed over the
planet down to 1/4 of this ? 342 W/m2 . The
Earths albedo is 0.3, then the income
radiation is 239 W/m2. Upon entering the
atmosphere solar irradiance at wavelenghts
shorter than 300 nm are absorbed in the
stratosphere and above. - For the last two solar cycles, the portion that
arrives at the troposphere presents a solar
cycle change of ?0.1, - 0.24 W/m2. - This seems too small to have an appreciable
effect on surface climate.
23- Secular TSI variation models indicate changes
from 0.24 to 0.30 (0.5 to 0.75 W/m2), with
extreme values during the deepest phase of the
Maunder minimum of 1.23 decrease (2.9 W/m2). - Then the solar forcing has been most of the time
small compared with estimates of the
anthropogenic forcing by greenhouse gases of
2.4 W/m2
24Decadal averages of a reconstructed TSI and
North Hemisphere temperature anomalies to the
present
25MODELS OF THE INFLUENCE OF TSI VARIABILITY ON
EARTHS CLIMATE
- Cusbach and Voss (2000)introduced TSI in a
general circulation model (GCM) - - During the last 100 years, the simulations
have linear increasing trends of 0.17 to 0.19K,
while the observed one is 0.6, which means that
TSI is contributing moderately to the observed
warming.
26- Shindell et al. (2001) also introduced TSI
in a GCM - Examined the climate response between
17th and 18th centuries. Included a response of
the complete stratospheric ozone to TSI. - Global changes of 0.3 to 0.4 C were
obtained coinciding with temperature
reconstructions. - Regional temperature changes as large as
1 to 2C in the NH winter are obtained. - The 20th century simulations show that TSI
together with ozone variations and climate
feedbacks (for instance aerosols) change the
temperature by ? 0.19C, almost a third of the
warming trend.
27- Before 1970 although reproducing well the
observed temperature, TSI variations cannot
account for all the temperature changes, and that
after 1970 its influence has conspicuously
descended. - Then other sources of solar variability and/or
sources different from solar variability must be
present.
28OTHER FORCINGS USED ON CLIMATE MODELS
- Solar UV irradiance absorbed by the stratospheric
ozone rising the temperature (Haigh,1999
Shindell, et al., 1999) warming of the lower
stratosphere -stronger winds- penetration of
these winds into the troposphere - Hadley
circulation. - The model shows the observed 11-year variation in
the stratosphere but the amplitude of the
simulated changes is still too small compared to
the observations. - Comparisons of a reconstructed UV solar
irradiance with global temperature along
1915-1999, indicate a poor correlation of r
0. 46. The interaction of UV irradiance and
climate should be indirect (Foukal, 2002).
29- A good correlation between total cloud cover
changes and cosmic rays for 1983-1994 (Svensmark
and Friis-Christensen,1997). Extrapolated to time
scales of decades and longer. - Further work seemed to confirm this for low level
clouds (Marsh and Svensmark, 2000 Pallé and
Butler, 2000). Serious criticisms have been
raised concerning the handling of the data (Laut,
2003). -
- A thermodynamic climatic model for 1984-1990
showed responses of few tenths of degrees in the
NH temperature using as forcing change in
total and low cloud cover (Ramírez et al.,2004
Mendoza et al., 2004). -
30Reconstructed temperature change for the northern
hemisphere and model simulations using
different TSI forcings (Cubasch and Voss, 2000)
31Simulations that take the greenhouse gases
according to observations but without Suns
influence simulate a trend of 0.43 K for the 20th
century (Paeth et al., 1999) . When taking
greenhouse gases increase and a TSI model, the
trend is of 0.6K, very close to observations
however the aerosol cooling effect, neglected in
the model, should lower the temperature below
the
32DISCUSSION
-
- A constant or a variable output of the
quiet Sun? - Willson (1997, 2003) in his composite TSI
found a secular upward trend of 0.05 per decade
between consecutive solar cycles 22 and 23, while
Fröhlich and Lean ( 1998) and Fröhlich (2000) in
their composite series do not see a change.
However the data is too short to draw any
conclusion. - Are TSI changes due to surface solar
magnetic activity? - de Toma et al. (1999) pointed out that
although solar cycle 23 seems magnetically weaker
than solar cycle 22, TSI space observations
indicate a similar radiative output for both
cycles. One possibility is that sunspot and
facular indices may not adequately represent the
TSI from cycle to cycle, pointing to the possible
existence of other sources of solar cycle TSI
variability. -
33DISCUSSION
- Does TSI always increase in consonance with
solar activity? -
- Observations of the last two cycles
indicated that faculae and bright magnetic
network elements dominate over spots at maximum
times within the solar cycle. - Foukal (1993) showed that for 1874 - 1976,
for the Sun at maximum this was true except for
the highest activity cycle in that time span,
cycle 19, when sunspots dominated over faculae. - This result implies that the change of solar
irradiance in consonance with solar activity may
be reversed if the Sun becomes much more active
than today. Furthermore, it has been proposed
that not only the high activity Sun but also the
low activity Sun can become dimmer when evolving
from minimum to maximum.
34DISCUSSION
- Is there a long-term component of TSI?
- TSI secular forcings of climate consider a
long-term component. Foukal (2002) TSI
variations are closely proportional to the
difference between spot and facular areas, which
varies from cycle to cycle, then there is little
reason to expect that TSI tracks any of the
familiar solar activity indices. - Lean et al. (2002) TSI comes mainly from
closed solar magnetic flux regions (total solar
magnetic flux). The open and total magnetic
flux variations behave differently the total
flux does not present a long-term trend as does
the open flux. Then the TSI should not show a
long-term change, in agreement with Foukals
(2002) study and with the composite of TSI by
Fröhlich and Lean) and Fröhlich), and in
disagreement with Willson) and Willson and
Mordvinov. -
35DICUSSION
- Why a long-term trend in TSI?
- Is based on extrapolations to the Sun of
photometric behavior of Sun-like stars there is
evidence that the Ca II H and K emission in
solar-type stars exhibit a much wider scatter
than the Sun does along a solar cycle. On the Sun
Ca II brightness is well correlated with magnetic
features (faculae and the network) (Baliunas and
Jastrow, 1990). -
- Also the variation of cosmogenic isotopes
(Beer, 2000) suggest that the Sun may present a
wider range of activity (irradiance changes).
But as the open and total (mainly closed)
magnetic flux variations are not the same, we
cannot expect cosmic rays/ cosmogenic isotopes,
modulated by the open flux, to reproduce TSI
which is modulated by the closed flux. Then
cosmogenic isotopes changes do not imply TSI
changes.
36DISCUSSION
- Mechanism of amplification of the TSI
changes at Earth? - If long-term changes of TSI are inexistent
then the solar radiative forcing of climate in
long-term climate models will be reduced by a
factor of 3 , and those climate models will be
overestimating the role of TSI variability. Then
how to explain the close correlation between
solar irradiance and temperature? - Perhaps the answer is in some models that
indicate that the noise of atmospheric natural
climate fluctuations amplify a weak solar forcing
(Rahmstorf and Alley, 200). Then long-term
climate changes may appear to follow the solar
cycle because the stochastic response increases
with cycle amplitude, not because there is an
actual irradiance change. - Or indirect interactions of TSI with
climate a high anticorrelation between TSI and
low cloud cover has been presented by
Kristjánsson et al. (2003) for 1983-1999, they
suggest that TSI variations are amplified by
interacting with sea surface temperature and
subsequently with low cloud cover in subtropical
regions.
37CONCLUSIONS
- The secular reconstructed TSI variations can
account for a considerable part of the
temperature variations of the Earth in the
pre-industrial era. But even for those times the
temperature changes are not fully reconstructed
from TSI. Which means that other sources of
solar variability as well as internal natural
causes were contributing to the Earths
temperature variability. -
- During the 20th century TSI produces less than
half of the observed temperature changes,
confirming suggestions that for this century
besides natural causes, man-made activities are
contributing to the Earths temperature
variability, particularly the latter. - Several questions on TSI variations and climate
challenge well established results.