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Why is the sun going quiet?

Why is the sun going quiet?
What’s going on up there? Credit: VinothChandar

The sun is our nearest star and the source of all our light and heat on Earth but recent have highlighted an ongoing steep decline in solar activity.

This story is a reminder that our is a variable star whose dynamic production of magnetism, activity and winds have implications for our planet.

Solar magnetic fields power solar activity, including sunspots, explosive events known as solar flares and , and an outward-flowing solar wind.

The sun's activity and wind bathes Earth in a changing space environment of high-energy radiation and fast-moving particles called "". This gives us both the beauty of the aurorae and disruptive effects on .

Solar activity varies over time, with the 11-year sunspot cycle being the most familiar example. Solar activity also varies more widely over longer timescales, producing "" and "grand minima".

Why is the sun going quiet?
Credit: NASA

The most famous of these is the in sunspot activity from around .

The current rate and extent at which solar activity is falling has been interpreted as the beginning of , and raises the issue of what it means for Earth's climate.

Why is the sun going quiet?
The convoluted magnetic field lines extending from the sun. Credit: NASA

Variations in solar activity have long been linked to climate variability on Earth, with the most familiar historical example being the Maunder minimum. This corresponded to relatively cold climatic conditions described as the "" when rivers that were normally ice-free froze and snow fields remained year-round at lower altitudes.

Question of how solar activity influences the Earth's climate remains the subject of . What is becoming clearer is that variations in radiation resulting from solar activity can provide a physical mechanism for the Sun to influence the Earth's atmosphere.

However, it is important to understand that research also indicates that these solar effects are compared to modern-day . Even if there is measurable cooling, a grand minimum should not be relied upon to slow .

Climatic effects aside, a grand minimum in solar activity would mean reduced auroral displays, and some lessening of the hazards caused by for spacecraft, and any occupants.

Why the fluctuations?

The answer lies in how the sun generates its .

As a typical star our sun is a ball of hot gas, more than a hundred times the diameter and hundreds of thousands of times more massive than the Earth.

Inside the sun, the effects of heat, pressure and motion produce electrical currents that in turn generate magnetic fields. This results in magnetic fields emerging from the sun's visible surface to power its activity and winds and the space weather experienced by Earth.

Explaining the variable nature of comes down to understanding the physics of the solar dynamo. At present there is a general of how the dynamo can produce magnetic fields and even cycles.

What is less certain is how the dynamo changes into the special state that corresponds to grand minimum, and whether such occurrences are to some extent predictable or purely random.

One way to learn more about the sun and its dynamo is to study other stars. Dynamos occur in many other stars, so observations of stars of different ages can offer clues regarding the past and future of solar magnetism and its effects. These of stars and their activity and winds can be used to better test the predictions of dynamo theory.

An improved understanding of stellar dynamos may then help us know more about what is happening to the sun today, and perhaps provide a useful tool to forecast future changes in our variable sun.

This story is published courtesy of (under Creative Commons-Attribution/No derivatives).
The Conversation

Citation: Why is the sun going quiet? (2014, January 22) retrieved 13 May 2025 from /news/2014-01-sun-quiet.html
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