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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Global Ice Age Alert: Sun Goes Longer Than Normal Without Producing Sunspots
2008-06-10
The sun has been laying low for the past couple of years, producing no sunspots and giving a break to satellites.

That's good news for people who scramble when space weather interferes with their technology, but it became a point of discussion for the scientists who attended an international solar conference at Montana State University. Approximately 100 scientists from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa and North America gathered June 1-6 to talk about "Solar Variability, Earth's Climate and the Space Environment."

The scientists said periods of inactivity are normal for the sun, but this period has gone on longer than usual. "It continues to be dead," said Saku Tsuneta with the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, program manager for the Hinode solar mission. "That's a small concern, a very small concern."

The Hinode satellite is a Japanese mission with the United States and United Kingdom as partners. The satellite carries three telescopes that together show how changes on the sun's surface spread through the solar atmosphere. MSU researchers are among those operating the X-ray telescope. The satellite orbits 431 miles above ground, crossing both poles and making one lap every 95 minutes, giving Hinode an uninterrupted view of the sun for several months out of the year.

Dana Longcope, a solar physicist at MSU, said the sun usually operates on an 11-year cycle with maximum activity occurring in the middle of the cycle. Minimum activity generally occurs as the cycles change. Solar activity refers to phenomena like sunspots, solar flares and solar eruptions. Together, they create the weather than can disrupt satellites in space and technology on earth.

The last cycle reached its peak in 2001 and is believed to be just ending now, Longcope said. The next cycle is just beginning and is expected to reach its peak sometime around 2012. Today's sun, however, is as inactive as it was two years ago, and scientists aren't sure why. "It's a dead face," Tsuneta said of the sun's appearance.

Tsuneta said solar physicists aren't like weather forecasters; They can't predict the future. They do have the ability to observe, however, and they have observed a longer-than-normal period of solar inactivity. In the past, they observed that the sun once went 50 years without producing sunspots. That period, from approximately 1650 to 1700, occurred during the middle of a little ice age on Earth that lasted from as early as the mid-15th century to as late as the mid-19th century.

Tsuneta said he doesn't know how long the sun will continue to be inactive, but scientists associated with the Hinode mission are ready for it to resume maximum activity. They have added extra ground stations to pick up signals from Hinode in case solar activity interferes with instruments at other stations around the world. The new stations, ready to start operating this summer, are located in India, Norway, Alaska and the South Pole.

Establishing those stations, as well as the Hinode mission, required international cooperation, Tsuneta said. No one country had the resources to carry out those projects by itself.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#7  The middle of a little ice age is not the beginning of an ice age - given the poor record of many qualified scientists in explaining and forecasting Global Warming, and the Goracle, it just might get hotter for a subjective or unknown duration of time before an ice age even begins. We won't know until the ice flakes start falling and never stop.

My two cents.
Posted by: Slineng Fillmore8499   2008-06-10 20:27  

#6  I suppose Time (or was it Newsweek) will come back with a "I guess we were right back in the 70's" covers to herald the advancing glaciers.
Posted by: Grenter Protector of the Geats4975   2008-06-10 13:29  

#5  

We are doomed! We must escape the earth!
Posted by: BigEd   2008-06-10 13:06  

#4  Here in Southern California we would welcome a mild summer.
Posted by: Iblis   2008-06-10 12:54  

#3  It is beautiful here right now - perhaps our esteemed governor should also ban the development of new sunspots.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2008-06-10 12:46  

#2  Importantly, what we should be looking at is higher than normal high and lower than normal low temperatures. This means that the greenhouse effect is working less than normal, because there is less in the type of atmospheric moisture that reflects heat. (Think of the Moon, with blistering hot days and freezing nights because it has no atmosphere.)

Another thing to look forward to is if the La Nina continues or intensifies. It is supposed to dissipate in July and then be gone for some years, but if it comes back in September, winter is going to be very, very cold and long.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-06-10 12:30  

#1  YEAH!!! SLED CITY!!! NEW ICE AGE!!!
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-06-10 11:14  

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