Solar irradiance variability: A six-year comparison between SORCE observations and the SATIRE model
Will T. Ball, Yvonne C. Unruh, Natalie A. Krivova, Sami Solanki,, Jerald W. Harder

TL;DR
This study compares six years of SORCE satellite measurements with the SATIRE model to evaluate their agreement in solar irradiance variations, revealing high correlation in total irradiance but discrepancies in spectral long-term trends.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed comparison of modeled and observed solar irradiance over multiple years, highlighting limitations in current models and data, and suggesting potential issues with measurement consistency.
Findings
SATIRE captures 97% of TSI variation
Rotational variability well reproduced in spectral data
Long-term spectral trends differ between observations and model
Abstract
Aims: We investigate how well modeled solar irradiances agree with measurements from the SORCE satellite, both for total solar irradiance and broken down into spectral regions on timescales of several years. Methods: We use the SATIRE model and compare modeled total solar irradiance (TSI) with TSI measurements between 2003 and 2009. Spectral solar irradiance over 200-1630nm is compared with the SIM instrument on SORCE between 2004 and 2009 during a period of decline from moderate activity to the recent solar minimum in 10 nm bands and for three spectral regions of significant interest: the UV integrated over 200-300nm, the visible over 400-691nm and the IR between 972-1630 nm. Results: The model captures 97% of observed TSI variation. In the spectral comparison, rotational variability is well reproduced, especially between 400 and 1200 nm. The magnitude of change in the long-term trends…
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