Abstract

Abstract While the quiet-Sun magnetic field shows only little variation with the solar cycle, long-term variations cannot be completely ruled out from first principles. We investigate the potential effect of quiet-Sun magnetism on spectral solar irradiance through a series of small-scale dynamo simulations with zero vertical flux imbalance ( ) and varying levels of small-scale magnetic field strength, and one weak network case with an additional flux imbalance corresponding to a flux density of G. From these setups, we compute the dependence of the outgoing radiative energy flux on the mean vertical magnetic field strength in the photosphere at a continuum optical depth τ = 1 ( ). We find that a quiet-Sun setup with a mean vertical field strength of G is about 0.6% brighter than a non-magnetic reference case. We find a linear dependence of the outgoing radiative energy flux on the mean field strength with a relative slope of 1.4 × 10−4 G−1. With this sensitivity, only a moderate change of the quiet-Sun field strength by 10% would lead to a total solar irradiance variation comparable to the observed solar cycle variation. While this does provide strong indirect constraints on possible quiet-Sun variations during a regular solar cycle, it also emphasizes that potential variability over longer timescales could make a significant contribution to longer-term solar irradiance variations.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call