Reconstruction of total and spectral solar irradiance from 1974 to 2013 based on KPVT, SoHO/MDI and SDO/HMI observations
K. L. Yeo, N. A. Krivova, S. K. Solanki, K. H. Glassmeier

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive reconstruction of daily total and spectral solar irradiance from 1974 to 2013 using full-disc observations and the SATIRE-S model, highlighting the role of photospheric magnetism in solar variability.
Contribution
The study develops a consistent long-term solar irradiance reconstruction by cross-calibrating multiple data sets and demonstrates the model's ability to replicate observed variability over several solar cycles.
Findings
The model explains 92% of TSI variability including secular decline.
Reproduces most observed Lyman-alpha and Mg II index variability.
Identifies instrumental effects in UV measurements above 180 nm.
Abstract
Total and spectral solar irradiance are key parameters in the assessment of solar influence on changes in the Earth's climate. We present a reconstruction of daily solar irradiance obtained using the SATIRE-S model spanning 1974 to 2013 based on full-disc observations from the KPVT, SoHO/MDI and SDO/HMI. SATIRE-S ascribes variation in solar irradiance on timescales greater than a day to photospheric magnetism. The solar spectrum is reconstructed from the apparent surface coverage of bright magnetic features and sunspots in the daily data using the modelled intensity spectra of these magnetic structures. We cross-calibrated the various data sets, harmonizing the model input so as to yield a single consistent time series as the output. The model replicates 92% of the variability in the PMOD TSI composite including the secular decline between the 1996 and 2008 solar cycle minima. The model…
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