Florian Mekhaldi
1 – 15 of 20
- show: 15
- |
- sort: year (new to old)
Close
Embed this list
<iframe src=" "
width=" "
height=" "
allowtransparency="true"
frameborder="0">
</iframe>
- 2024
-
Mark
Modeling Atmospheric Transport of Cosmogenic Radionuclide 10Be Using GEOS-Chem 14.1.1 and ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3 : Implications for Solar and Geomagnetic Reconstructions
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
The Role of Deposition of Cosmogenic 10Be for the Detectability of Solar Proton Events
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2023
-
Mark
Multiproxy Reconstructions of Integral Energy Spectra for Extreme Solar Particle Events of 7176 BCE, 660 BCE, 775 CE, and 994 CE
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Evaluating the 11-year solar cycle and short-Term 10Be deposition events with novel excess water samples from the East Greenland Ice-core Project (EGRIP)
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
High-resolution aerosol data from the top 3.8kyr of the East Greenland Ice coring Project (EGRIP) ice core
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Extreme Solar Events : Setting up a Paradigm
(
- Contribution to journal › Scientific review
- 2022
-
Mark
Tree-rings reveal two strong solar proton events in 7176 and 5259 BCE
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Cosmogenic radionuclides reveal an extreme solar particle storm near a solar minimum 9125 years BP
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2021
-
Mark
The Signal of Solar Storms Embedded in Cosmogenic Radionuclides : Detectability and Uncertainties
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
The potential for a continuous 10Be record measured on ice chips from a borehole
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2020
-
Mark
Radionuclide wiggle matching reveals a nonsynchronous early Holocene climate oscillation in Greenland and western Europe around a grand solar minimum
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
Solar Longitude Distribution of High-energy Proton Flares : Fluences and Spectra
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
The extreme space weather event in 1903 october/november : An outburst from the quiet sun
(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2019
-
Mark
Multiradionuclide evidence for an extreme solar proton event around 2,610 B.P. (∼660 BC)
2019) In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 116(13). p.5961-5966(
- Contribution to journal › Article
- 2018
-
Mark
Cosmogenic radionuclides in environmental archives – A paleo-perspective on space climate and a synchronizing tool for climate records
2018) 86.(
- Thesis › Doctoral thesis (compilation)