Ice and Solar Activity: Cosmic Threads of Earth's Weather
Introduction: Searching for Connections in Climate Chaos
The question of the influence of solar activity on weather phenomena, particularly the severity of cold snaps, is one of the most intriguing and controversial in modern climatology and heliophysics. At a popular level, it is often heard that there is a connection between "solar storms" and abnormal cold snaps. However, the scientific picture is much more complex: a direct and unambiguous influence of solar flares or the number of Wolf's numbers on the temperature of the next day is a myth. It is about weak, but statistically significant correlations in long-term cycles and through complex chains of atmospheric processes. Searching for these connections is a detective story with many intermediaries: the magnetosphere, stratosphere, ocean currents.
Solar Activity: Key Indicators
Key indicators of solar activity include:
Wolf's Number (W) — an index that takes into account the number of sunspots and their groups. Reflects the 11-year cycle of solar activity.
Solar wind — a stream of charged particles (mainly protons and electrons), whose speed and density change.
Ultraviolet (UV) and X-ray radiation — sharply increases during flares.
Galactic cosmic rays (GCR) — high-energy particles from outside the Solar System. Their flux is anti-correlated with solar activity: in years of solar maximum, the magnetic field and solar wind of the Sun better screen Earth from GCR.
Hypothetical Mechanisms of Influence on Weather and Climate
There is no direct heating of the atmosphere from flares (the energy is negligible compared to the overall flow of solar radiation). Scientists consider several indirect channels:
Influence through the change in the overall ultraviolet (UV) flux: During periods of high solar activity, UV radiation may increase by 6-8%. This leads to additional heating and changes in circulation in the stratosphere (a layer at an altitude of 10-50 km). In ...
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