Readdressing the UV solar variability with SATIRE-S: non-LTE effects
R. V. Tagirov, A. I. Shapiro, N. A. Krivova, Y. C. Unruh, K. L. Yeo, and S. K. Solanki

TL;DR
This paper improves the SATIRE-S solar irradiance model by replacing LTE assumptions with non-LTE calculations, resulting in more physically consistent spectral irradiance predictions that align well with empirical corrections.
Contribution
It introduces non-LTE spectral synthesis into SATIRE-S, enhancing the physical accuracy of solar spectral irradiance modeling over the LTE-based approach.
Findings
Non-LTE contrasts agree with empirically corrected LTE results.
The model accurately reproduces solar cycle 24 irradiance variations.
Non-LTE approach improves physical consistency of spectral predictions.
Abstract
Context. Solar spectral irradiance (SSI) variability is one of the key inputs to models of the Earth's climate. Understanding solar irradiance fluctuations also helps to place the Sun among other stars in terms of their brightness variability patterns and to set detectability limits for terrestrial exo-planets. Aims. One of the most successful and widely used models of solar irradiance variability is SATIRE-S. It uses spectra of the magnetic features and surrounding quiet Sun computed with the ATLAS9 spectral synthesis code under the assumption of Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium (LTE). SATIRE-S has been at the forefront of solar variability modelling, but due to the limitations of the LTE approximation its output SSI has to be empirically corrected below 300 nm, which reduces the physical consistency of its results. This shortcoming is addressed in the present paper. Methods. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
