Physics
Scientific paper
Sep 2007
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2007jgra..11209106m&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 112, Issue A9, CiteID A09106
Physics
21
Interplanetary Physics: Cosmic Rays, Interplanetary Physics: Interplanetary Magnetic Fields, Interplanetary Physics: Solar Cycle Variations (7536), Interplanetary Physics: Instruments And Techniques
Scientific paper
The cosmic ray record for the interval 1428-2005 has been inverted using the method of Caballero-Lopez et al. (2004) to estimate the annual averages of the heliomagnetic field (HMF) near Earth. There is good agreement with the results obtained by others using two independent methodologies based upon the sunspot and geomagnetic records. This provides confidence in the overall validity of all three methods and supports the use of the cosmogenic record to investigate the HMF prior to the commencement of the sunspot record. There is disagreement with another method based on the geomagnetic record that remains to be resolved. Throughout the ~580-year interval studied here, the estimated HMF increased by a factor of ~4.5 from an 11-year average of ~1.5 nT during the Spoerer Minimum (1420-1540) to ~7 nT since 1950. Between the several Grand Minima, it exhibits increasing ``floor'' values similar to the lower asymptote of ~5.2 nT evident in satellite data since 1965. The cosmogenic cosmic ray data exhibit a ~2300-year periodicity, and it is proposed that the steadily increasing HMF since the 15th century represents the first quarter cycle of an associated ~2300-year periodicity in the HMF. Recent theoretical studies of the origin of the open magnetic field are used to infer that the total magnetic flux of the Sun has increased by a factor of ~4.5 since the Spoerer Minimum and might increase further over the next ~500 years. In more recent time, the sunspot minimum estimates for the Dalton minimum (1810-1820) and Gleissberg minimum (1889-1901) are ~2.5 nT, rising to ~4 nT in the vicinity of 1850. The amplitude of the 11-year cycle throughout the Gleissberg cycle (1810-1900) is estimated to be ~2 nT. The estimated field is ~3.5 nT for each of the sunspot minima 1911-1944, increasing in a stepwise fashion to ~5.2 nT between the minima of 1944 and 1954. The cosmic ray and satellite data indicate that the field strength then approximated 5.2 nT for the four sunspot minima, 1965-1996.
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