Discussion on the spectral coherence between planetary, solar and climate oscillations: a reply to some critiques
Nicola Scafetta

TL;DR
This paper defends the planetary influence hypothesis on solar and climate oscillations, providing spectral analysis evidence of persistent astronomical harmonics in climate records over various timescales, countering recent critiques.
Contribution
It offers detailed spectral analysis supporting planetary theories of solar and climate variation, addressing critiques and confirming harmonic coherence across multiple datasets and timescales.
Findings
Spectral peaks at 103, 115, 130, 150 years in solar proxies.
Persistent astronomical harmonics confirmed at multiple periods.
Spectral coherence between planetary, solar, and climate oscillations.
Abstract
During the last few years a number of works have proposed that planetary harmonics regulate solar oscillations and the Earth climate. Herein I address some critiques. Detailed analysis of the data do support the planetary theory of solar and climate variation. In particular, I show that: (1) high-resolution cosmogenic 10Be and 14C solar activity proxy records both during the Holocene and during the Marine Interglacial Stage 9.3 (MIS 9.3), 325-336 kyr ago, present four common spectral peaks at about 103, 115, 130 and 150 yrs (this is the frequency band that generates Maunder and Dalton like grand solar minima) that can be deduced from a simple solar model based on a generic non-linear coupling between planetary and solar harmonics; (2) time-frequency analysis and advanced minimum variance distortion-less response (MVDR) magnitude squared coherence analysis confirm the existence of…
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