The solar cycle, or the solar magnetic activity cycle, is the main source of periodic solar variation driving variations in space weather. The cycle is observed by counting the frequency and placement of sunspots visible on the Sun.
The solar cycle was discovered in 1843 by Samuel Heinrich Schwabe, who after 17 years of observations noticed a periodic variation in the average number of sunspots seen from year to year on the solar disk. Rudolf Wolf compiled and studied these and other observations, reconstructing the cycle back to 1745, eventually pushing these reconstructions to the earliest observations of sunspots by Galileo and contemporaries in the early seventeenth century. Starting with Wolf, solar astronomers have found it useful to define a standard sunspot number index, which continues to be used today.
The average duration of the sunspot cycle is about 11 years (about 28 cycles in the 309 years between 1699 and 2008), but cycles as short as 9 years and as long as 14 years have been observed. Significant variations in amplitude also occur. Solar maximum and solar minimum refer respectively to epochs of maximum and minimum sunspot counts. Individual sunspot cycles are partitioned from one minimum to the next.
Are we at 04 now?
pgm98387 1 year ago
Its just fartin
sun ate beans
keyofdoornarutorscat 1 year ago
Count down to the Big Event.
HGSpaceTime 2 years ago
Most recent science shows that the current solar minimum is at such a minimum they have revised the 2012 solar max to be of minor intensity and more likely to come later.
kenny10spot 2 years ago
around 2012 It's a giant solar flares heading towards earth, run everybody! run!
ALFA2029 2 years ago
tell them aboght the coming ice age
Mr9s9s9s9s9s 2 years ago
nice video thank you let me know more about this
dady148 2 years ago