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Martin Minnicino
mminnicino at phenv.com
Wed Jun 15 09:55:13 EDT 2011
New data released Tuesday at the annual meeting of the solar physics division of the American Astronomical Society in Las Cruces, New Mexico<about:blank>, may suggest that we are headed towards a solar event that hasn't happened in hundreds of years.
The new findings came from studies that found a missing jet stream in the solar interior, fading sunspots on the sun's visible surface, and changes in the corona and near the poles - all of which point towards declining solar activity at a time when our closest star should be showing signs of increasing activity.
There are some scientists at the conference believe that the current findings from the studies mean that we are at the beginning of a Maunder Minimum, a decades long period of low solar activity.
http://losangeles.ibtimes.com/articles/162919/20110614/solar-flare-ice-age-global-warming-sun.htm<http://losangeles.ibtimes.com/articles/162919/20110614/solar-flare-ice-age-global-warming-sun.htm><http://losangeles.ibtimes.com/articles/162919/20110614/solar-flare-ice-age-global-warming-sun.htm%3chttp:/losangeles.ibtimes.com/articles/162919/20110614/solar-flare-ice-age-global-warming-sun.htm%3e>
Don:
I have a dedicated solar telescope, and have been watching the sun's activity for years. This prolonged minimum prediction has been discussed for some time, and seems to be coming true. Not great news for hams... On the other side of the coin, let's hope that we never experience that massive solar eruption that occurred in the 1800s that could (today) bring technology to a screeching halt.
More importantly, if we would stop giving Nobel Peace Prizes to non-scientific ex-Vice Presidents with political agendas, we might start to understand that Global Warming may be related to other variables, like the sun.
Martin Minnicino
WN2SJL
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