'No
Sun link' to climate change
|
By Richard Black BBC Environment
Correspondent |
A new scientific
study concludes that changes in the Sun's output cannot be causing modern-day
climate change.
It shows that for the
last 20 years, the Sun's output has declined, yet temperatures on Earth have
risen.
It also shows that
modern temperatures are not determined by the Sun's effect on cosmic rays, as
has been claimed.
Writing in the Royal
Society's journal Proceedings A, the researchers say cosmic rays may have
affected climate in the past, but not the present.
"This should settle
the debate," said Mike Lockwood, from the UK's Rutherford-Appleton
Laboratory, who carried out the new analysis together with Claus Froehlich from
the World Radiation Center in Switzerland.
|
|
This paper
re-enforces the fact that the warming in the last 20 to 40 years can't have
been caused by solar activity Dr Piers Forster |
Dr Lockwood initiated
the study partially in response to the TV documentary The Great Global Warming
Swindle, broadcast on Britain's Channel Four earlier this year, which featured
the cosmic ray hypothesis.
"All the graphs
they showed stopped in about 1980, and I knew why, because things diverged
after that," he told the BBC News website.
"You can't just
ignore bits of data that you don't like," he said.
Warming
trend
The scientists'
main approach on this new analysis was simple: to look at solar output and
cosmic ray intensity over the last 30-40 years, and compare those trends with
the graph for global average surface temperature, which has risen by about 0.4C
over the period.
The Sun varies on a
cycle of about 11 years between periods of high and low activity.
But that cycle comes on
top of longer-term trends; and most of the 20th Century saw a slight but steady
increase in solar output.
However, in about 1985,
that trend appears to have reversed, with solar output declining.
Yet this period has seen
temperatures rise as fast as - if not faster than - any time during the
previous 100 years.
"This paper
reinforces the fact that the warming in the last 20 to 40 years can't have been
caused by solar activity," said Dr Piers Forster from Leeds University, a
leading contributor to this year's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) assessment of climate science.
Cosmic
relief
The IPCC's February
summary report concluded that greenhouse gases were about 13 times more
responsible than solar changes for rising global temperatures.
But the
organisation was criticised in some quarters for not taking into account the
cosmic ray hypothesis, developed by, among others, Henrik Svensmark and Eigil
Friis-Christensen of the Danish National Space Center.
Their theory holds
that cosmic rays help clouds to form by providing tiny particles around which
water vapour can condense. Overall, clouds cool the Earth.
During periods of
active solar activity, cosmic rays are partially blocked by the Sun's more
intense magnetic field. Cloud formation diminishes, and the Earth warms.
Mike Lockwood's
analysis appears to have put a large, probably fatal nail in this intriguing
and elegant hypothesis.
He said: "I do
think there is a cosmic ray effect on cloud cover. It works in clean maritime
air where there isn't much else for water vapour to condense around.
"It might even
have had a significant effect on pre-industrial climate; but you cannot apply
it to what we're seeing now, because we're in a completely different ball
game."
Drs Svensmark and
Friis-Christensen could not be reached for comment.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/6290228.stm
Published: 2007/07/10 23:00:30 GMT
© BBC MMVII