Quote:
Originally Posted by aerohead
I looked online just now and saw that space-based solar observing satellites measure the solar spectral irradiance, from 165nm,to 3000nm,at 0.6nm to 9.5nm spectral resolution,for 10-years now.
Solar wind is space weather,and has nothing to do with the troposphere,where
climate' is.
Even with natural solar output variability,at no time does the solar wind or heliosphere not protect near space and our planet's magnetosphere from relative velocity energetic particles streaming in from outside the solar system.What gets in is basically handled by Earth's magnetosphere.What gets past that doesn't have anything to do with weather or climate.There is never a lack of solar wind.
|
For 10 years?
So in another 20 or 30 years it will be relevant.
I was just going buy a study you linked from 1996. I actually read the study. The one you linked went off 1 single wavelength of UV. Turns out that 1996 study was likely junk science.
All the new papers out are saying exactly the opposite of your second paragraph..
No instruments were in place capable of testing that hypothesis until last year.
It was just assumed space conditions didn't effect the earth beyond causing northern lights and that assumption some how got passes off as fact.
If solar wind and cosmic rays don't reach ground level then why do some scientific studies have to be located deep under ground to block out interface from solar wind and cosmic rays?
__________________
1984 chevy suburban, custom made 6.5L diesel turbocharged with a Garrett T76 and Holset HE351VE, 22:1 compression 13psi of intercooled boost.
1989 firebird mostly stock. Aside from the 6-speed manual trans, corvette gen 5 front brakes, 1LE drive shaft, 4th Gen disc brake fbody rear end.
2011 leaf SL, white, portable 240v CHAdeMO, trailer hitch, new batt as of 2014.
Last edited by oil pan 4; 12-28-2019 at 10:29 PM..
|