Shadowy Man
Contributor
Point me to the correlation. I have not seen nor do I understand there to be a strong connection between solar activity and global temperature rise. Upper atmosphere temperatures, which do often correlate with solar activity, are not the same nor do they have the same inputs as tropospheric temperatures.
I linked a solar study from Max Planck Institute above (post 93). I also included a chart of solar activity from that study that could easily be confused for the IPCC global temperature chart if someone doesn't look at the labels for the axis. If two graphs covering thousands of years can easily be confused then the correlation is obvious. Note: correlation does not mean causation but such close correlation over thousands of years does certainly suggest a strong indication of causation.
Correlations:
Where the IPCC chart shows global temperatures higher, the Max Planck study shows solar activity higher. Where the IPCC chart shows global temperatures lower, the Max Planck study shows solar activity lower. And this trend was over thousands of years, including the current up-spike in both.
Ok. I’ll take a look and run it by the climate scientists I know to get some opinions.
Edited to add: I see now that the article is from 2004, so I’m sure there are some opinions and potential updates since then.
Also, no doubt that solar activity can drive the climate as the solar irradiance is the power input. However, my understanding is that over recent history there is no correlation between TSI and the sharply rising global temperatures we are seeing.