Evolution of the solar irradiance during the Holocene
Luis Eduardo A. Vieira, Sami K. Solanki, Natalie A. Krivova and, Ilya Usoskin

TL;DR
This paper presents a physics-based reconstruction of the total solar irradiance over the Holocene, revealing its variation and potential impact on climate change, based on magnetic features and cosmogenic isotope data.
Contribution
It extends the SATIRE model to estimate Holocene solar irradiance using cosmogenic isotopes and magnetic flux, providing the first such reconstruction over this period.
Findings
TSI varies by about 1.5 W/m2 between grand maxima and minima.
Uncertainties stem from historical sunspot data and Earth's magnetic dipole evolution.
Reconstruction useful for understanding climate change over the last 11500 years.
Abstract
Aims. We present a physically consistent reconstruction of the total solar irradiance for the Holocene. Methods. We extend the SATIRE models to estimate the evolution of the total (and partly spectral) solar irradiance over the Holocene. The basic assumption is that the variations of the solar irradiance are due to the evolution of the dark and bright magnetic features on the solar surface. The evolution of the decadally averaged magnetic flux is computed from decadal values of cosmogenic isotope concentrations recorded in natural archives employing a series of physics-based models connecting the processes from the modulation of the cosmic ray flux in the heliosphere to their record in natural archives. We then compute the total solar irradiance (TSI) as a linear combination of the jth and jth + 1 decadal values of the open magnetic flux. Results. Reconstructions of the TSI over the…
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