Though the sun is currently in the peak year of its 11-year solar
weather cycle, our closest star has been rather quiet over all, scientists
say. This year's solar maximum is
shaping up to be the weakest in 100 years and the next one could be even more
quiescent, scientists said July 11. "It's the smallest maximum we've seen in the Space Age," David
Hathaway of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., told reporters
in a teleconference'It's the smallest maximum we've seen in the Space Age.' -
David Hathaway of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center During a solar maximum, the number of sunspots increases.
These dark temporary regions on the surface of the sun are thought to be caused
by interplay between the sun's plasma and its magnetic field. Sunspots are the
source of the solar flares and ejections that can send charge particles
hurtling toward Earth, which can damage satellites, surge power grids, cause
radio blackouts and, more benignly, produce dazzling auroras above the
planet. About every 11 years, the sun goes through a cycle defined by an
increasing and then decreasing number of sunspots. Solar Cycle 24 has been
underway since 2011 and its peak was expected in 2013, but there have been
fewer sunspots observed this year compared with the maximums of the last
several cycles. Giuliana de Toma, a scientist at the High Altitude Observatory
in Colorado, said the sunspots occurring during a calm maximum have the same
brightness and area as the ones observed during a more turbulent peak. "We just have fewer of them and this is normal," de Toma said
during Thursday's briefing. "This is why weak cycles are weak." The
quiet maximum is allowing scientists to test their knowledge of how the sun works
and hone their predictions of the strength of future solar cycles. "You
might think that having a small cycle is disappointing to us but it's quite the
contrary," Hathaway said. North-south, or meridional, flows carry magnetic
elements from sunspots to the sun's poles, building up the polar magnetic
fields until they eventually flip around the time of the solar maximum,
Hathaway explained. Scientists are noticing that the strength of the polar
fields when a new cycle begins influences the strength of the cycle, he added.
For example, weak polar fields observed in 2008 led to the current weak cycle,
while strong polar fields in 1986 spawned a strong Cycle 22. The polar fields
have been slowly reversing at this maximum, Hathaway said, suggesting that they
are not going get much stronger during Cycle 24. This also sets the stage for
an even smaller maximum during Cycle 25, scientists believe. "We're seeing
fields that suggest the next sun cycle will be even weaker than this one,"
Hathaway said. A small Cycle 24 also fits in with a 100-year pattern of
building and waning solar cycles. Scientists don't know exactly what causes
this trend, but there were weak solar cycles in the beginning of the 19th and
20th centuries.
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