The AD775 cosmic event revisited: the Sun is to blame
I.G. Usoskin, B. Kromer, F. Ludlow, J. Beer, M. Friedrich, G. A., Kovaltsov, S. K. Solanki, and L. Wacker

TL;DR
This study revises the estimated strength of the AD775 cosmic event, confirming its solar origin through new data and models, and refuting previous overestimations that suggested an exotic cosmic ray source.
Contribution
The paper provides a corrected analysis of the AD775 event using independent datasets and appropriate models, establishing its solar origin and magnitude within known solar activity.
Findings
The AD775 event's magnitude was overestimated by previous studies.
New measurements confirm the event's occurrence and solar origin.
Historical records show increased auroral activity correlating with the event.
Abstract
Miyake et al. (henceforth M12) recently reported, based on 14C data, an extreme cosmic event ca. AD775. Using a simple model, M12 claimed that the event was too strong to be caused by a solar flare within the standard theory. This implied a new paradigm of either an impossibly strong solar flare or a very strong cosmic ray event of unknown origin occurred ca. AD775. We show that the strength of the event was significantly overestimated by M12. Several subsequent works have attempted to find a possible exotic source for such an event, but they are all based on incorrect estimates by M12. We revisit this event with analysis of new datasets and consistent theoretical modelling. We verified the experimental result for the AD775 event using independent datasets including 10Be series and newly measured 14C annual data. We surveyed available historical chronicles for astronomical observations…
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