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Transcript
Our Home in Space:
The Sun-Earth System
Judith Lean
Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC
SATURN
JUPITER
EARTH
SUN
AASM, 11APR06
Sun-Earth System – an overview
The Sun, a Star, is our energy source
The Earth, a planet, is our home
Variability in the Space Era – past 30 years
Total Irradiance – Climate … where we live
UV Irradiance –
Ozone … our protective atmosphere
EUV Irradiance, particles, plasma –
Space Weather … technology
Relationships in the Past
- last century
- last millennium
- last 10,000 years –the Holocene
…… our current interglacial
SUN
5770 K
100,000 K
convection zone
radiative zone
core

4.5 billion years 
Thermosphere
T
T
deep space 4K
Stratosphere
EARTH
288 K
1,000 K
Troposphere
radiated photons
reflected photons
photons
surface
surface
atmosphere
atmosphere
1,391,980 km
not to scale
149,597,900 km
1 Astronomical Unit
12,742 km
Solar Radiation Establishes the Thermal
Structure of the Earth and its Atmosphere
Altitude - km

wavelengths < 100 nm
Thermosphere
Ionosphere
T
Mesosphere
Stratosphere
wavelengths 100-300 nm
Troposphere
wavelengths > 300 nm
SUN (255 K) + GHG (33 K) = 288 K
SUN
convection zoe
radiative zone
core
galactic cosmic rays
EARTH
solar wind
particles
(mainly protons)
and magnetic fields
photons
bow
shock
surface
atmosphere
plasmasphere
magnetosphere
surface
sunspot
atmosphere faculae, plage
coronal mass ejection
heliosphere
not to scale
mixed layer
deep ocean
ENERGY FLOW
1.5108 km
0.00065 0.00035
0.05
0.002 0.002
galactic cosmic
rays
0.0000007
300-1000 nm
plasma
wind
414.2
0.0009
0.1
0.45
W m-2
0.0032
14.9
936.3
Cycle Amplitude
Earth’s surface
energetic
particles
1000-10000 nm
troposphere
120-300 nm
thermosphere/
Ionosphere
mesosphere
stratosphere
electromagnetic
radiation
5-120 nm
plasmasphere
Energy Flux
magnetosphere
EARTH
EARTH SPACE
OCEAN ATMOSPHERE ENVIRONMENT
HELIOSPHERE
chromosphere
transition region
corona
Sun’s surface
Wavelength
photosphere
SOLAR
SOLAR
ATMOSPHERE INTERIOR
core
radiative zone
convection zone
Sun-Earth System – an overview
The Sun, a Star, is our energy source
The Earth, a planet, is our home
Variability in the Space Era – past 30 years
Total Irradiance – Climate … where we live
UV Irradiance –
Ozone … our protective atmosphere
EUV Irradiance, particles, plasma –
Space Weather … technology
Relationships in the Past
- last century
- last millennium
- last 10,000 years –the Holocene
…… our current interglacial
12DEC96
The Sun’s Activity Drives
the Sun-Earth System
Heliosphere
SOHO/MDI
29 Mar 2001
sunspots have an 11-year cycle
21
22
16JAN03
31JAN03
LASCO
23
Corona
EIT
Chromosphere-TR
KPNO magnetic flux
Photosphere
Surface Magnetic Field
MDI
SOHO
The Solar “Constant”
Varies!
data: Fröhlich & Lean,AARev,2004 http://www.pmodwrc.ch
cycle 21
cycle 22
cycle 23
Total Solar Irradiance:
 5-min oscillation ~ 0.003%
 27-day solar rotation ~ 0.2%
 11-year solar cycle ~ 0.1%
 longer-term variations not
yet detectable –
……do they occur?
Past Solar Activity
sunspot cycle amplitudes have
increased from the
Maunder Minimum … to the
Modern Maximum
SOHO: 1996 
ACRIMSAT: 1999 
SORCE: 2003 
http://lasp.colorado.edu/sorce/
Sources of Solar
Irradiance Variations:
17 OCT 03
- dark sunspots
- bright faculae
30 OCT 03
2 AUG
6 AUG
sunspots dominate faculae
during solar rotation
solar photosphere
faculae
dominate
sunspots
during
solar cycle
16 JUN 96
25 FEB 02
near UV,VIS,IR
radiation
1366 Wm-2
climate
Causes of Recent Climate Change
Anthropogenic Forcings
• atmospheric GH gases - CO2, CH4, CFCs, O3, N2O
• tropospheric aerosols - direct and indirect effects
of soot, sulfate, carbon, biomass burning, soil dust
Land Cover Changes
Internal Oscillations
• atmosphere-ocean couplings
- El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
- North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)
Natural Forcings
• solar variability - direct and indirect effects
• volcanic eruptions - stratospheric aerosols
• Climate Change Science,
“An Analysis of Some Key
Questions”, National
Research Council, 2001
• IPCC, 1992, 1995, 2001
Solar and Anthropogenic Climate Signals
GISS Land+Ocean Global Temperature
monthly means
El Nino
La Nina
volcanic
aerosols
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/
greenhouse gases
industrial aerosols
Climate Response to Radiative Forcing
water vapor
forcing
FEEDBACKS
surface
temperature
change
ΔT =  F
climate sensitivity
IPCC range: 0.2-1oC per Wm-2
paleoclimate: 0.75oC per Wm-2
http://visibleearth.nasa.gov
Hansen, 2004
mixed layer
BUT…. response to cyclic decadal forcing
is assumed to be attenuated by  5
compared with “equilibrium” response
cloud cover
http://www.hpl.umces.edu/~lzhong/mixed_layer/sml.htm
Solar Irradiance Cycle
ΔT = 0.1oC
F = 0.15 Wm-2 (0.850.7/4)
  = 0.67oC per Wm-2
sea-ice/
snow cover
Solar Cycle Signals in Earth’s Atmosphere
MIDDLE
TROPOSPHERE
8 km
Temperature Anomaly (K)
SURFACE
0 km
solar increase  warming
CO2 increase  warming
volcanoes  cooling
LOWER
STRATOSPHERE
20 km

El Nino
El Chichon
Pinatubo
La Nina
solar increase  warming
CO2 & CFC increase  cooling
volcanoes  warming
UV radiation
(λ < 315 nm)
Sun
Sun,
Stratosphere,
Ozone
20 Wm-2
O2 photodissociation
O3 production
O3 destruction
unit
optical
depth
near UV,VIS,IR
Radiation
(λ > 315 nm)
1346 Wm-2
Stratosphere
The Ozone Layer:
Recent Variations
4%
Total Ozone 50S-50N ~ 280 DU
GSFC TOMS Total
Ozone Sep 16, 2001
1996-06-16
+1.2%
UV radiation:
200-295 nm
Nimbus 7
Pittock (1978): Sun-ozone correlations …
“experiments
in autosuggestion”
solar upper photosphere/
2000-02-25
chromosphere
EP/TOMS Total Ozone Sep 16, 2001
2.2%



Stratosphere – Climate Coupling
Dynamical Coupling via
Wind-Wave Interactions
Radiative Forcing Sensitivity
Lower
Middle
Atmosphere Atmosphere
Radiative Coupling via
Absorption and Emission
Change Ozone & Temperature
Change Winds & Planetary Waves
Change Temperature Advection &Temperature
Change Winds & Planetary Waves
Change Climate
Shindell et al., 2003; Rind et al., 2004
Lacis et al., 1979
NORTH ATLANTIC OSCILLATION
• solar irradiance cycle modulates
stratospheric polar vortex
• tropospheric circulation
• NAO (solar min) AO (solar max)
Kodera, 2003
Positive NAO
Negative NAO
solar min max
SPACE
Sun = 400K
WEATHER solar increase  warming GHG = -3K
CO2 increase  cooling

Thermosphere
Ionosphere
solar EUV radiation
λ< 100 nm
Altitude
T
TOMS UV radiation
exposure: January
Stratosphere
Troposphere
solar min max
Sun = +0.3K
GHG = -0.4K
solar increase  warming
CO2 increase  cooling
ozone depletion
climate change
GLOBAL
CHANGE
solar increase  warming
CO2 increase  warming
solar min max
Sun = +0.1K
GHG = +0.2K
Sun and Thermosphere-Ionosphere
solar EUV photon energy
100%
quiet Sun
response to EUV photons
response to particles, plasma, fields
solar wind kinetic energy
(~protons)
500 km


temperature
16 JAN 03
neutral density
spacecraft drag
corona
electron density
chromosphere
heliosphere
communication,
navigation
July 1979
solar EUV irradiance
changes modulate
upper atmospheric
densities, affecting the
orbits of >10,000
resident space objects
Spacecraft Drag
EUV Irradiance
1999
International Space
Station: 400 km
YOHKOH Altitude
Density at YOHKOH
Yohkoh:
Space Command
Radar Fence
launched 30 AUG 1991
Re-entered 12 SEPT 2005
surface
SOHO/EIT 171
20031028 13:00
“Halloween” Solar Storm
chromosphere-TR
October 28th, 2003
active region with big
sunspot erupts ….
8 minutes later ... X-class
flare recorded by GOES
EIT 304
20031028 13:19
coronal mass ejection
leaves the Sun ….
8 hours later... particles
saturate SOHO/LASCO
detector and reach Earth
SOHO/LASCO
20031028 12:42
X-ray photons
NOAA National Weather Service
http://www.sec.noaa.gov/
30 Rsun
heliosphere
… at L1 20031028 20:49
energetic protons
Solar Variability Drives
Space Weather
solar photons & solar and
magnetospheric particles
heat and ionize Earth’s
atmosphere and ionosphere

aurora

spacecraft drag, collisions, loss
communications & navigation
 currents induced in power grids


hazards to humans in space

spacecraft detector upsets
www.nas.edu.ssb/cover.html
March 1989:
Auroral Oval
Power
System
Events
Sun-Earth System – an overview
The Sun, a Star, is our energy source
The Earth, a planet, is our home
Variability in the Space Era – past 30 years
Total Irradiance – Climate … where we live
UV Irradiance –
Ozone … our protective atmosphere
EUV Irradiance, particles, plasma –
Space Weather … technology
Relationships in the Past
- last century
- last millennium
- last 10,000 years – the Holocene
…. our current interglacial
In early September in
1859, telegraph wires
suddenly shorted out in
the United States and
Europe, igniting
widespread fires.
Colorful aurora,
normally visible only in
polar regions, were
seen as far south as
Rome and Hawaii.
Sun and Climate in Recent Centuries
1613 Galileo
1995 SOHO
sunspot cycle amplitudes
have increased from the
Maunder Minimum to the
Modern Maximum
1960-2000
Earth’s surface temperature has
increased in the last century..
changes are non-uniform,
globally and temporally
http://giss/nasa/gov
1900-1950
3
2.4
2
1
CO2
0.35
0.25
halocarbons
N2 O
CH4 tropospheric
ozone
fossil
fuel
burning
0
-1
stratospheric
ozone
-2
0.2
0.1
0.3
mineral aviation
dust contrails
& cirrus
biomass
burning
sulphate
0.4
0.05
indirect
aerosol
0.25
(FSUN=ΔS0.7/4)
solar
landuse
(albedo)
0.23
-3
solar
forcing
Pre-Industrial
Solar Forcing
F = 0.3 Wm-2
ΔT = 0.2oC
 = 0.6oC
per Wm-2
volcanic
forcing
anthropogenic
& solar forcing
(Bradley & Jones, 1993)
Tamboora Coseguina Krakatoa
Lean et al., 1995
cooling warming
Radiative Forcing (Wm-2)
1750-2000
Industrial-Era Climate Forcing: IPCC 2001
Climate Change in Recent Centuries
forcings
GCM simulation:  ~ 4oC for 2×CO2
Robinson et al., 2001
EBM simulation:  ~ 2oC for 2×CO2
Crowley, 2000
omitting solar forcing 
.. poorer tracking of centennial
variations
.. higher sensitivity to GHGs
Holocene Sun-Climate Connections
INTERTROPICAL
CONVERGENCE
ZONE
18O in stalagmites in
Oman track 14C for 3,000
years in mid-Holocene
Neff et al., Nature, 2001
NORTH ATLANTIC
CLIMATE
surface winds and ocean
hydrography affected by
solar variability -North Atlantic Deep Water
may amplify solar signals
Bond et al., Science, 2001
high solar activity low 14C
low 18O
high rainfall
high solar activity low 14C
less drift ice southward
Centennial-Millennial Solar Variability
cosmogenic isotope changes
- 14C in tree-rings, 10Be in icecores imply long-term solar activity
… do they also imply long-term
solar irradiance variations?
0.1%
chromosphere corona
photosphere
Mechanisms of Cosmogenic Isotope and
Solar Irradiance Variability
EIT284
EIT304
open
flux in
coronal
holes –
extends
to heliosphere
open flux modulates
cosmogenic isotopes
Radial
Interplanetary
Magnetic Field
closed
flux in
active
regions
and
network
MDI
surface
magnetic
fields of
opposite
polarity
24 June 2002
closed flux
modulates
irradiance
Irradiance at Earth
1365 Wm-2
Galactic Cosmic Ray Flux at Earth
0.0000007 Wm-2
Evolution of the Sun’s Surface Magnetic Field
Drives Long-Term Solar Irradiance Changes
magnetogram
magnetic flux is
transported by….
surface magnetic fields
of opposite polarity
differential
rotation
poleward
meridional
flow
diffusion
Long-Term Solar Irradiance Simulated
by a Flux Transport Model
sub-surface dynamo
0.08%
0.2%
www.hao.ucar.edu, Y.-M. Wang, N. Sheeley
science.nasa.gov/ssl/pad/solar
Causes of
Climate
Change
in the
Recent Past
0.9K
0.1K
Radiative Forcing
1750-2000
0.7K
IPCC 2001:
(Wm-2)
Greenhouse Gases
+2.4
Ozone
+0.15
+0.12
Solar
+0.3
Landuse
-0.23
Tropospheric
-0.4 to -1.4
Aerosols
Hansen et al., 2001
Tropospheric
Aerosols
-0.6
Empirical Reconstruction
Sun-Earth System:
Emerging Questions
Long-term solar variability and terrestrial responses
- solar dynamo action, irradiance and heliospheric modulation, terrestrial responses
Eruptive energy outputs and terrestrial responses
- flare spectra, relative impacts of flares and CMEs, time scales of terrestrial responses
Solar-driven versus other influences on Earth
- volcanic influences, internal modes (ENSO, NAO, QBO), geenhouse gases
Vertical couplings of solar and other influences
-radiative and dynamical up & down atmospheric couplings - surface to themosphere
-radiative and plasma couplings of thermo/ionsophere and plasma/megnetosphere
Non-linear system responses
-mode amplification (ENSO), stochastic resonance, frequency modulation, triggering
altered stability states
Ability of models to simulate system responses
-mechanisms, data assimilation, subsystem interfaces, transition to operations
In seeking answers to such questions oncedisparate fields are coalescing slowly and a
new paradigm is emerging –
… of the Sun and Earth
as one unified system, our
home in space that
extends well beyond the
surface where we live.
Physics Today, June 2005: “Living with a Variable Sun”
Communication, Navigation
Bastille Day 2000
solar eruption
flares
active region evolution
solar cycle
X-ray and EUV
irradiance variation
ionospheric electron
density response
Yohkoh SXT
NRL SAMI2 model
(Huber and Joyce)
Meier et al., 2000
nemax=1.24×104fo2
reflection, refraction
time delays, phase shifts
fades, polarization rotation
• disrupts communications
• degrades radar accuracy
et al., GRL, 2001
• disrupts/degrades Meier
navigation
• degrades precision targeting
Sun – Climate - Ozone:
Future Decadal Variability
Radiative Forcing
Total Ozone
solar
cycle
Total Solar
Irradiance
Monitoring
SORCE
GLORY
NPOESS ??
C. Jackman, GSFC
Sun’s role in future climate change depends on irradiance
cycles and trends relative to anthropogenic scenarios
Coronal Mass Ejections
Propagate to Earth through the
Heliosphere … hours to days
Coronal Mass Ejection
SOHO/LASCO 1997-11-06
103 cm-1 sec-1 str-1
Particle
Transport
Particle-Plasma
Wave
Interactions
 solar magnetic
cloud perturbs Earth’s
magnetic field lines
 affects energetic
particle penetration of
Earth’s atmosphere