A shared frequency set between the historical mid-latitude aurora records and the global surface temperature
Nicola Scafetta

TL;DR
This study identifies common oscillation frequencies in aurora records, climate data, and astronomical records, suggesting a natural astronomical influence on climate variability and potential implications for future climate trends.
Contribution
It reveals a shared frequency set linking aurora records with climate and astronomical data, supporting the hypothesis of an astronomical origin of climate oscillations.
Findings
Identified ~9, 10-11, 20-21, 30, 60-year cycles in aurora and climate records.
Demonstrated a harmonic model based on astronomical frequencies can forecast temperature oscillations.
Suggested that 60-year climate cycle may be naturally induced, affecting recent warming trends.
Abstract
Herein we show that the historical records of mid-latitude auroras from 1700 to 1966 present oscillations with periods of about 9, 10-11, 20-21, 30 and 60 years. The same frequencies are found in proxy and instrumental global surface temperature records since 1650 and 1850, respectively and in several planetary and solar records. Thus, the aurora records reveal a physical link between climate change and astronomical oscillations. Likely, there exists a modulation of the cosmic ray flux reaching the Earth and/or of the electric properties of the ionosphere. The latter, in turn, have the potentiality of modulating the global cloud cover that ultimately drives the climate oscillations through albedo oscillations. In particular, a quasi 60-year large cycle is quite evident since 1650 in all climate and astronomical records herein studied, which also include an historical record of meteorite…
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