The Long-Term Variation of Galactic Cosmic Ray Flux and Its Possible Connection with the Current Trend of the Global Warming

Physics

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Scientific paper

Referring to the observational results on the cosmic ray fluxes obtained from several observing sites and the solar activity for more than a century since the year 1870, it is shown that the long-term variation of the cosmic ray intensity in the space of the inner solar system may have been strongly controlled by the magnetic fields transported from the sun. According to this variation, the cosmic rays in this space have a tendency to steadily decrease for the last hundred years. This tendency seems to have been deeply effective to the formation of cloud layers all over the earth's surface. It could thus be concluded that the gradual decrease of the cosmic ray intensity in the space of the inner solar system is responsible for the global warming for the last hundred years or more.

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