Level and length of cyclic solar activity during the Maunder minimum as deduced from the active day statistics
J.M. Vaquero, G. A. Kovaltsov, I.G. Usoskin, V.M.S. Carrasco, M.C., Gallego

TL;DR
This study reconstructs the solar activity during the Maunder minimum using historical records, revealing a persistent low activity level, clear cyclicity with approximately 9-year cycles, and no evidence of high solar cycles during this period.
Contribution
It provides a conservative, data-driven assessment of the Maunder minimum's solar cycle length and activity level based on active and inactive day records.
Findings
Detected clear solar cycle variability during the Maunder minimum.
Estimated cycle length of about 9 years with low sunspot numbers.
Confirmed low solar activity with no evidence of high cycles during the period.
Abstract
The Maunder minimum (MM) of greatly reduced solar activity took place in 1645-1715, but the exact level of sunspot activity is uncertain as based, to a large extent, on historical generic statements of the absence of spots on the Sun. Here we aim, using a conservative approach, to assess the level and length of solar cycle during the Maunder minimum, on the basis of direct historical records by astronomers of that time. A database of the active and inactive days (days with and without recorded sunspots on the solar disc respectively) is constructed for three models of different levels of conservatism (loose ML, optimum MO and strict MS models) regarding generic no-spot records. We have used the active day fraction to estimate the group sunspot number during the MM. A clear cyclic variability is found throughout the MM with peaks at around 1655--1657, 1675, 1684 and 1705, and possibly…
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