A New Calibrated Sunspot Group Series Since 1749: Statistics of Active Day Fractions
I.G. Usoskin, G.A. Kovaltsov, M. Lockwood, K. Mursula, M. Owens, S.K., Solanki

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel calibration method for historical sunspot observations using active-day fractions, leading to a more accurate and bias-reduced sunspot group series since 1749, revealing key solar activity minima and maxima.
Contribution
A new calibration approach based on active-day fractions that corrects observer biases without linear assumptions, improving historical sunspot data accuracy.
Findings
Revealed secular minima around 1800 and 1900.
Confirmed the uniqueness of the Modern grand maximum.
Showed linear assumptions cause significant data distortions.
Abstract
Although the sunspot-number series have existed since the mid-19th century, they are still the subject of intense debate, with the largest uncertainty being related to the "calibration" of the visual acuity of individual observers in the past. Daisy-chain regression methods are applied to inter-calibrate the observers which may lead to significant bias and error accumulation. Here we present a novel method to calibrate the visual acuity of the key observers to the reference data set of Royal Greenwich Observatory sunspot groups for the period 1900-1976, using the statistics of the active-day fraction. For each observer we independently evaluate their observational thresholds [S_S] defined such that the observer is assumed to miss all of the groups with an area smaller than S_S and report all the groups larger than S_S. Next, using a Monte-Carlo method we construct, from the reference…
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