Sunspots and Earth’s climate
But does the lack of sunspots affect climate at all? Guinan says the only way he could see solar activity affecting global climate is via its effects on Earth’s upper atmosphere.
During the solar cycle, the Sun’s luminosity varies by only 0.2 percent, Guinan explains. But he notes that solar X-ray intensity can vary by a factor of six to eight times while solar output in the far ultraviolet spectrum can vary by 20 percent over any given solar cycle. So if high-energy solar emissions affect Earth’s thermosphere and stratosphere via some unknown amplified feedback mechanism, this could affect the energy dynamics of Earth’s lower atmosphere, even to the extent of altering planetary circulation and inducing a small change in global temperatures, Guinan says. But recent space missions have allowed researchers to study the connections between internal solar dynamics (through probes of the Sun’s internal flows) and its magnetic and particulate output.
What more can we do to figure this all out? State-of-the-art computing power is enabling more realistic solarlike physical parameters in computer simulations. But what would really help would be a space mission that can observe the Sun’s polar field from above or below and observe how it behaves during the 11-year solar cycle, says Nandi.
The European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter, expected to launch in 2018, would do exactly that and lead to more accurate sunspot cycle forecasts. Nandi says a dedicated mission to study the X-ray output of solarlike stars at different hydrogen-burning main-sequence ages (including the Sun’s age) would also be helpful in terms of figuring out the variability of stellar magnetism over a star’s lifetime.
“We are just beginning to appreciate the intricate ways in which the activity of parent stars influence planetary evolution and habitability,” says Nandi. Future missions such as Solar Orbiter, NASA’s Solar Probe Plus (due for launch in 2018), and ISRO’s Aditya-L1 mission (India’s first mission to study the Sun by 2020) are expected to contribute to this understanding.
“But what we really need is an expansion of observational work dedicated to recording the long-term and short-term nature of activity in a sample of stars [that] closely resemble the Sun,” says Giampapa. Then we need a complementary sample of stars that is different from our Sun in the key parameters that theorists need to test their models of the Sun’s magnetic field generation and evolution.
This would help researchers understand the relative importance of certain physical parameters such as solar rotation, convection zone depth, the Sun’s effective temperature, and its age or evolutionary status. The Sun’s convection zone ranges from about 124,000 miles (200,000 kilometers) in depth up to the photosphere, where photons are created. “We need more modeling work on the dynamics of the Sun’s convection zone and the effects of the Sun’s rotation on those dynamics,” says Hathaway. “Solar Orbiter [will] reveal the details of the Sun’s subsurface convection zone dynamics.”
But which has the bigger impact on climate: solar dynamics or anthropogenic climate change? “Relevant questions include whether solar effects amplify or mitigate human impacts,” says Guinan. Nandi, however, remains skeptical that the vagaries of the Sun’s 11-year cycles have made a significant impact on Earth’s climate.
Climate physicists and climate modelers have concluded that the impact of solar variations on global temperature change in the past few decades is far less than that due to anthropogenic factors, says Nandi. Until they understand the Sun much better, solar researchers still won’t be able to definitively connect the dots between climate on terra firma and the absence or abundance of sunspots on our nearest star.