Revisiting the Sunspot Number
Fr\'ed\'eric Clette, Leif Svalgaard, Jos\'e M. Vaquero, Edward W., Cliver

TL;DR
This paper reviews and corrects historical sunspot number records, clarifying long-term solar activity trends and reconciling two major series to improve understanding of solar cycles and their impact.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive calibration and correction of sunspot number series, reconciling the Wolf and Group Numbers for the first time since Wolf's era.
Findings
Revised sunspot series show a decline before the Maunder Minimum.
Post-Maunder activity levels returned to recent cycle levels by mid-18th century.
Identified inhomogeneities in sunspot data affecting long-term solar activity analysis.
Abstract
Our knowledge of the long-term evolution of solar activity and of its primary modulation, the 11-year cycle, largely depends on a single direct observational record: the visual sunspot counts that retrace the last 4 centuries, since the invention of the astronomical telescope. Currently, this activity index is available in two main forms: the International Sunspot Number initiated by R. Wolf in 1849 and the Group Number constructed more recently by Hoyt and Schatten (1998a,b). Unfortunately, those two series do not match by various aspects, inducing confusions and contradictions when used in crucial contemporary studies of the solar dynamo or of the solar forcing on the Earth climate. Recently, new efforts have been undertaken to diagnose and correct flaws and biases affecting both sunspot series, in the framework of a series of dedicated Sunspot Number Workshops. Here, we present a…
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