Bibcode
Jordan, S. D.; Garcia, M. A.
Bibliographical reference
American Astronomical Society, SPD meeting #34, #19.11; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 35, p.843
Advertised on:
5
2003
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
In order to determine what ground-based proxies are best for evaluating
solar irradiance variation before the advent of space observations, it
is necessary to test these proxies against space observations. We have
tested sunspot number, total sunspot area, and sunspot umbral area
against the Nimbus-7 measurements of total solar irradiance variation
over the eleven year period 1980-1990. The umbral area yields the best
correlation and the total sunspot area yields the poorest.
Reasons for expecting the umbral area to yield the best correlation are
given, the statistical procedure followed to obtain the results is
described, and the value of determining the best proxy is discussed. The
latter is based upon the availability of an excellent database from the
Greenwich Observatory obtained over the period 1876-1976, which can be
used to estimate the total solar irradiance variation before sensitive
space observations were available.
The ground-based observations used were obtained at the Coimbra Solar
Observatory. The analysis was done at Goddard using these data and data
from the Nimbus-7 satellite.