12

Solar Minimum: The Sun Is Getting Quieter and Is Displaying Some Very Weird Behavior

Posted by $ nickursis 8 years ago to Science
52 comments | Share | Flag

Several people in the Gulch hve mentioned this, and a whole slew of You Tubers have videos on it going back a few years. I gues the question is: does it impact climate change? Is the increased variations in solar output to blame, maybe there has been a small increase in output not identified? These are all things I would like to see addressed before I would jump in on the greenhouse bandwagon, along with a complete explanation of why, if CO2 is climing to huge levels, are certain nations allowed to destroy some of the great CO2 absorption machines (like the Amazon rainforest) with nothng being said, no action taken, but "evil" man always the culprit for producing it? Maybe I am too simplistic but...


All Comments


Previous comments...   You are currently on page 3.
  • Posted by CircuitGuy 8 years ago
    I am not at all knowledgeable about how sunspots affect climate. They definitely affect radio propagation. My first sunspot peak was in '89. I thought they would all be like that. I worked DX on 10m (28MHz) well into the night. 2000 wasn't as intense. 2011 was even less so. I moved and haven't put an antenna since 2011. I should put one up, maybe something for low frequencies, which propagate slight better (according to folklore) in low sunspot times.

    Regarding the point about deforestation, I'm unclear how much it affects the carbon cycle because I imagine much of the carbon captured gets released eventually. Intuitively, though, it's a doubly whammy of increasingly global warming and hasting the current mass-extinction event. I would guess the decreased bio-diversity would be more costly than its contribution to climate change, but that's a wild guess.
    Reply | Permalink  
  • Posted by $ blarman 8 years ago
    The number one source of climate is the Sun - not the planet. I just shake my head when people don't immediately look at the Sun as the cause of most climate events. Back in the late 80's and 90's El Nino and La Nina at least got that part right in acknowledging that it was the sun's energy which created the hot spots in the Pacific in the first place. Nowadays "scientists" have abandoned rational thinking in favor of their next grant.
    Reply | Permalink  

  • Comment hidden. Undo