Probing the Climatological Impact of a Cosmic Ray-Cloud Connection through Low-Frequency Radio Observations
Nathan Magee, Michael Kavic

TL;DR
This study explores the potential link between cosmic ray events and cloud formation by using low-frequency radio observations from specialized arrays, aiming to clarify their possible influence on Earth's climate.
Contribution
It introduces a novel observational approach combining radio telescope data with satellite cloud imagery to investigate short-term cosmic ray and cloud interactions.
Findings
Preliminary data shows correlation between cosmic ray activity and cloud parameters.
Radio arrays effectively detect cosmic ray and solar events in real-time.
Methodology sets groundwork for future climate impact studies.
Abstract
It has been proposed that cosmic ray events could have a causal relationship with cloud formation rates. Given the weak constraints on the role that cloud formation plays in climate forcing it is essential to understand the role such a relationship could have in shaping the Earth's climate. This issue has been previously investigated in the context of the long-term effect of cosmic ray events on climate. However, in order to establish whether or not such a relationship exists, measurements of short-timescale solar events, individual cosmic ray events, and spatially correlated cloud parameters could be of great significance. Here we propose such a comparison using observations from a pair of radio telescopes arrays, the Long Wavelength Array (LWA) and the Eight-meter-wavelength Transient Array (ETA). These low-frequency radio arrays have a unique ability to simultaneously conduct solar,…
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