Solar Irradiance Variability
Sami K. Solanki, Yvonne C. Unruh

TL;DR
This paper reviews the history, mechanisms, and open questions regarding solar irradiance variability, emphasizing its potential influence on Earth's climate and comparing it with other stars.
Contribution
It synthesizes current understanding of solar irradiance variations, highlights unresolved issues, and discusses implications for climate studies and stellar comparisons.
Findings
Solar irradiance varies with solar rotation and cycle.
Magnetic surface features primarily drive irradiance changes.
Open questions remain about long-term variability and spectral changes.
Abstract
The Sun has long been considered a constant star, to the extent that its total irradiance was termed the solar constant. It required radiometers in space to detect the small variations in solar irradiance on timescales of the solar rotation and the solar cycle. A part of the difficulty is that there are no other constant natural daytime sources to which the Sun's brightness can be compared. The discovery of solar irradiance variability rekindled a long-running discussion on how strongly the Sun affects our climate. A non-negligible influence is suggested by correlation studies between solar variability and climate indicators. The mechanism for solar irradiance variations that fits the observations best is that magnetic features at the solar surface, i.e. sunspots, faculae and the magnetic network, are responsible for almost all variations (although on short timescales convection and…
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