Abstract

Long-term series of solar irradiation measured at ground level are not available in the old times. However, long-term series of actinometric degree data obtained by using the Arago-Davy instrument have been recorded in the second half of the 19th century in several locations of the world. We have developed recently a method to estimate global solar irradiance on horizontal surface from actinometric degree data (doi.org/10.1007/s00704-023-04485-2). This opens a way of finding proxy information about the incident solar irradiance on various areas of the globe before the 20th century. Hourly actinometric degree data for the years 1892-1903 are available at the Filaret Observatory (Bucharest, Romania, South-Eastern Europe). The observed series have a systematic decreasing tendency, which has been removed by using a correction procedure. The proposed method is used here to evaluate solar global irradiance at Filaret Observatory. Solar irradiance data provided by the Twentieth Century Reanalysis Project version 3 (20CRv3) are used as a reference. The expected hourly and daily average solar irradiance values show reasonable qualitative consistency with the 20CRv3 data. This consistency is notably stronger during the warmer months from April to September. Much better agreement is found for the monthly averaged solar global irradiance values. At this level, the proposed method and the procedure of the 20CRv3 project seem to validate each other.

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