http://www.climatescienceinternational.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=31:vanishing-sunspots-prelude-to-global-cooling&catid=1:latest

VANISHING SUNSPOTS PRELUDE TO GLOBAL COOLING?
Sunspots have all but vanished, and activity is suspiciously quiet.
The last time this happened was 400 years ago -- and it signaled a
solar event known as a "Maunder Minimum,"  along with the start of
what we now call the "Little Ice Age.

Science Solar Activity Diminishes; Researchers Predict Another Ice Age



Michael Asher (Blog) - February 9, 2008 11:53



Sunspots have all but vanished in recent years.

Henrik Svensmark explains the SKY experiment  Global Cooling comes
back in a big way

 Dr. Kenneth Tapping is worried about the sun. Solar activity comes in
regular cycles, but the latest one is refusing to start. Sunspots have
all but vanished, and activity is suspiciously quiet. The last time
this happened was 400 years ago -- and it signaled a solar event known
as a "Maunder Minimum,"  along with the start of what we now call the
"Little Ice Age."Tapping, a solar researcher and project director for
Canada's National Research Council, says it may be happening again.
Overseeing a giant radio telescope he calls a "stethoscope for the
sun," Tapping says, if the pattern doesn't change quickly, the earth
is in for some very chilly weather.

 During the Little Ice Age, global temperatures dropped sharply. New
York Harbor froze hard enough to allow people to walk from Manhattan
to Staten Island, and in Britain, people reported sighting Eskimos
paddling canoes off the coast. Glaciers in Norway grew up to 100
meters a year, destroying farms and villages.

But will it happen again?In 2005, Russian astronomer Khabibullo
Abdusamatov predicted the sun would soon peak, triggering a rapid
decline in world temperatures.  Only last month, the view was echoed
by Dr. Oleg Sorokhtin, a fellow of the Russian Academy of Natural
Sciences. who advised the world to "stock up on fur coats." Sorokhtin,
who calls man's contribution to climate change "a drop in the bucket,"
predicts the solar minimum to occur by the year 2040, with icy weather
lasting till 2100 or beyond.

Observational data seems to support the claims -- or doesn't
contradict it, at least. According to data from Britain's Met Office,
the earth has cooled very slightly since 1998. The Met Office says
global warming "will pick up again shortly."

Others aren't so sure. Researcher Dr. Timothy Patterson, director of
the Geoscience Center at Carleton University, shares the concern.
Patterson is finding "excellent correlations" between solar
fluctuations, a relationship that historically, he says doesn't exist
between CO2 and past climate changes. According to Patterson, we
shouldn't be surprised by a solar link. "The sun [is] the ultimate
source of energy on this planet," he says.

Such research dates back to 1991, when the Danish Meteorological
Institute released a study showing that world temperatures over the
past several centuries correlated very closely with solar cycles. A
2004 study by the Max Planck Institute found a similar correlation,
but concluded the timing was only coincidental, as the solar variance
seemed too small to explain temperature changes.

However, researchers at DMI continued to work, eventually discovering
what they believe to be the link. The key factor isn't changes in
solar output, but rather changes in the sun's magnetosphere A stronger
field shields the earth more from cosmic rays, which act as "seeds"
for cloud formation. The result is less cloud cover, and a warming
planet. When the field weakens, clouds increase, reflecting more light
back to space, and the earth cools off.

Recently, lead researcher Henrik Svensmark was able to experimentally
verify the link between cosmic rays and cloud formation, in a cloud
chamber experiment called "SKY" at the Danish National Space Center.
CERN plans a similar experiment this year. A few years ago, Stanford
University's Hoover Institution also reported finding a correlation
between the sun and climate.

 Even NASA's Goddard Institute of Space Studies -- long the nation's
most ardent champion of anthropogenic global warming -- is getting in
on the act. Drew Shindell, a researcher at GISS, says there are some
"interesting relationships we don't fully understand" between solar
activity and climate.


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