Empirical evidences for a planetary modulation of total solar irradiance and the TSI signature of the 1.09-year Earth-Jupiter conjunction cycle
Nicola Scafetta, Richard C. Willson

TL;DR
This study provides empirical evidence that planetary alignments, especially Earth-Jupiter conjunctions, influence solar activity and total solar irradiance, revealing planetary signatures in TSI data and suggesting planetary modulation of solar dynamics.
Contribution
It identifies specific planetary harmonic signatures in TSI records and links them to planetary cycles, highlighting a planetary influence on solar irradiance variations.
Findings
Detection of a 1.09-year Earth-Jupiter conjunction cycle in TSI data.
Identification of multiple planetary harmonic cycles in TSI records.
Evidence of a 0.5-year cycle possibly related to solar latitudinal asymmetry.
Abstract
The time series of total solar irradiance (TSI) satellite observations since 1978 provided by ACRIM and PMOD TSI composites are studied. We find empirical evidence for planetary-induced forcing and modulation of solar activity. Power spectra and direct data pattern analysis reveal a clear signature of the 1.09-year Earth-Jupiter conjunction cycle, in particular during solar cycle 23 maximum. This appears to suggest that the Jupiter side of the Sun is slightly brighter during solar maxima. The effect is observed when the Earth crosses the Sun-Jupiter conjunction line every 1.09 years. Multiple spectral peaks are observed in the TSI records that are coherent with known planetary harmonics such as the spring, orbital and synodic periods among Mercury, Venus, Earth and Jupiter: the Mercury-Venus spring-tidal cycle (0.20 year); the Mercury orbital cycle (0.24 year); the Venus-Jupiter…
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