Reconstruction of spectral solar irradiance since 1700 from simulated magnetograms
M. Dasi-Espuig, J. Jiang, N. A. Krivova, S. K. Solanki, Y., C. Unruh, K. L. Yeo

TL;DR
This paper reconstructs spectral solar irradiance from 1700 to 2009 using a physics-based model driven by simulated magnetograms, providing insights into solar variability over three centuries.
Contribution
It introduces a novel reconstruction method combining semi-synthetic sunspot records with surface flux transport modeling to estimate spectral irradiance since 1700.
Findings
Reconstructed TSI increased by about 1.2 W/m^2 since 1700.
Model accurately reproduces observed TSI and spectral irradiance.
Reconstruction aligns well with satellite measurements and historical data.
Abstract
We present a reconstruction of the spectral solar irradiance since 1700 using the SATIRE-T2 (Spectral And Total Irradiance REconstructions for the Telescope era version 2) model. This model uses as input magnetograms simulated with a surface flux transport model fed with semi-synthetic records of emerging sunspot groups. We used statistical relationships between the properties of sunspot group emergence, such as the latitude, area, and tilt angle, and the sunspot cycle strength and phase to produce semi-synthetic sunspot group records starting in the year 1700. The semisynthetic records are fed into a surface flux transport model to obtain daily simulated magnetograms that map the distribution of the magnetic flux in active regions (sunspots and faculae) and their decay products on the solar surface. The magnetic flux emerging in ephemeral regions is accounted for separately based on…
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