BMAONE23 wrote:Now wait a minute...I thought we were supposed to be going into a 20 - 30 year cooling period. Further it has been proposed that a solar activity decrease would be responsible. Now, you are telling us that this new Model provides accurate predictive capabilities for the next solar cycle. Yet it is predicting a solar cycle of greater intensity than the last one. How does increased solar activity equate with a 20 - 30 year cooling period?
Variations in solar activity over periods of several solar cycles don't correlate well with measured climate, so I wouldn't look too hard at that. As far as this model is concerned (and it is a few years old), I wouldn't put a lot of faith in it. There are a few problems. First, take a look at what it predicts: it is the summed
area of sunspots as a function of time. The historical record of that is quite poor; forecasts almost always look at cycle activity in terms of sunspot
count. That's an easier measurement, and one that is more reliable when considering historical values. Climate models, in fact, look at sunspot count, not area, in their inputs. So I don't even know how they would be able to use the output of this particular model. Second, the model is based fundamentally on plasma flow on the Sun. That's a very plausible mechanism for explaining solar cycle activity, but it's only something that has been measurable for the last cycle or two. So I'm curious what the model used for input in predicting the past cycles back to 1880? I'm sure the full paper would provide some clues about this, but it is unfortunately unavailable as a free download.
To be clear, I'm not saying this model isn't good, or backed by good science, or has any credibility problems. I'm just saying that it's too early to take it as anything other than a preliminary theory that is going to require time to test. Solar cycle predictions are better than guesses, but not by a lot. Consider that NOAA just released its prediction for the current cycle (Cycle 24) and suggests that it will have a fairly low maximum. See the
NOAA report and compare it with the
NCAR report.
And, of course, none of this has very much to do with the issue of global warming, the topic at hand.