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A Geomagnetic Estimate of Heliospheric Modulation Potential over the Last 175 Years

Owens, Mathew J. ; Barnard, Luke A. ; Muscheler, Raimund LU orcid ; Herbst, Konstantin ; Lockwood, Mike ; Usoskin, Ilya and Asvestari, Eleanna (2024) In Solar Physics 299(6).
Abstract

Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) interact with the Earth’s atmosphere to produce energetic neutrons and cosmogenic radionuclides, such as 14C. The atmosphere is partially shielded from the interstellar GCR spectrum by both the geomagnetic and solar magnetic fields. Solar shielding is often expressed as the heliospheric modulation potential ϕ, which consolidates information about the strength and structure of the solar magnetic field into a single parameter. For the period 1951 to today, ϕ can be estimated from ground-based neutron monitor data. Prior to 1950, 14C in tree rings can be used to estimate ϕ and hence the solar magnetic field, back centuries or millennia. Bridging the gap in the ϕ record is therefore of vital... (More)

Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) interact with the Earth’s atmosphere to produce energetic neutrons and cosmogenic radionuclides, such as 14C. The atmosphere is partially shielded from the interstellar GCR spectrum by both the geomagnetic and solar magnetic fields. Solar shielding is often expressed as the heliospheric modulation potential ϕ, which consolidates information about the strength and structure of the solar magnetic field into a single parameter. For the period 1951 to today, ϕ can be estimated from ground-based neutron monitor data. Prior to 1950, 14C in tree rings can be used to estimate ϕ and hence the solar magnetic field, back centuries or millennia. Bridging the gap in the ϕ record is therefore of vital importance for long-term solar reconstructions. One method is to model ϕ using the sunspot number (SN) record. However, the SN record is only an indirect measure of the Sun’s magnetic field, introducing uncertainty, and the record suffers from calibration issues. Here we present a new reconstruction of ϕ based on geomagnetic data, which spans both the entire duration of the neutron monitor record and stretches back to 1845, providing a significant overlap with the 14C data. We first modify and test the existing model of ϕ based on a number of heliospheric parameters, namely the open solar flux FS, the heliospheric current sheet tilt angle α, and the global heliospheric magnetic polarity p. This modified model is applied to recently updated geomagnetic estimates of FS and cyclic variations of α and p. This approach is shown to produce an annual estimate of ϕ in excellent agreement with that obtained from neutron monitors over 1951 – 2023. It also suggests that ionisation chamber estimates of ϕ – which have previously been used to extend the instrumental estimate back from 1951 to 1933 – are not well calibrated. Comparison of the new geomagnetic ϕ with 14C estimates of ϕ suggests that the long-term trend is overestimated in the most recent 14C data, possibly due to hemispheric differences in the Suess effect, related to the release of carbon by the burning of fossil fuels. We suggest that the new geomagnetic estimate of ϕ will provide an improved basis for future calibration of long-term solar activity reconstructions.

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; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Solar Physics
volume
299
issue
6
article number
84
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:85196302198
ISSN
0038-0938
DOI
10.1007/s11207-024-02316-9
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
66731352-2cea-4568-bb00-b9a75a3e73e4
date added to LUP
2024-08-19 14:36:31
date last changed
2024-08-19 14:37:09
@article{66731352-2cea-4568-bb00-b9a75a3e73e4,
  abstract     = {{<p>Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) interact with the Earth’s atmosphere to produce energetic neutrons and cosmogenic radionuclides, such as <sup>14</sup>C. The atmosphere is partially shielded from the interstellar GCR spectrum by both the geomagnetic and solar magnetic fields. Solar shielding is often expressed as the heliospheric modulation potential ϕ, which consolidates information about the strength and structure of the solar magnetic field into a single parameter. For the period 1951 to today, ϕ can be estimated from ground-based neutron monitor data. Prior to 1950, <sup>14</sup>C in tree rings can be used to estimate ϕ and hence the solar magnetic field, back centuries or millennia. Bridging the gap in the ϕ record is therefore of vital importance for long-term solar reconstructions. One method is to model ϕ using the sunspot number (SN) record. However, the SN record is only an indirect measure of the Sun’s magnetic field, introducing uncertainty, and the record suffers from calibration issues. Here we present a new reconstruction of ϕ based on geomagnetic data, which spans both the entire duration of the neutron monitor record and stretches back to 1845, providing a significant overlap with the <sup>14</sup>C data. We first modify and test the existing model of ϕ based on a number of heliospheric parameters, namely the open solar flux F<sub>S</sub>, the heliospheric current sheet tilt angle α, and the global heliospheric magnetic polarity p. This modified model is applied to recently updated geomagnetic estimates of F<sub>S</sub> and cyclic variations of α and p. This approach is shown to produce an annual estimate of ϕ in excellent agreement with that obtained from neutron monitors over 1951 – 2023. It also suggests that ionisation chamber estimates of ϕ – which have previously been used to extend the instrumental estimate back from 1951 to 1933 – are not well calibrated. Comparison of the new geomagnetic ϕ with <sup>14</sup>C estimates of ϕ suggests that the long-term trend is overestimated in the most recent <sup>14</sup>C data, possibly due to hemispheric differences in the Suess effect, related to the release of carbon by the burning of fossil fuels. We suggest that the new geomagnetic estimate of ϕ will provide an improved basis for future calibration of long-term solar activity reconstructions.</p>}},
  author       = {{Owens, Mathew J. and Barnard, Luke A. and Muscheler, Raimund and Herbst, Konstantin and Lockwood, Mike and Usoskin, Ilya and Asvestari, Eleanna}},
  issn         = {{0038-0938}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Solar Physics}},
  title        = {{A Geomagnetic Estimate of Heliospheric Modulation Potential over the Last 175 Years}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11207-024-02316-9}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s11207-024-02316-9}},
  volume       = {{299}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}