Modelling solar irradiance from ground-based photometric observations
Theodosios Chatzistergos, Ilaria Ermolli, Fabrizio Giorgi and, Natalie A. Krivova, Cosmin Constantin Puiu

TL;DR
This study uses ground-based photometric data to reconstruct and analyze the long-term trends of total solar irradiance since 1996, revealing a weak declining trend and insights into spectral variation phases.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate TSI from ground-based observations, providing long-term insights and addressing uncertainties in phase and trend assessments.
Findings
Weak declining trend in TSI between 1996 and 2008
No significant trend in TSI from 2008 to 2019
Spectral variations in the visible range are minimal or uncertain
Abstract
Total solar irradiance (TSI) has been monitored from space since 1978. The measurements show a prominent variability in phase with the solar cycle, as well as fluctuations on timescales shorter than a few days. However, the measurements were done by multiple and usually relatively short-lived missions making the possible long-term trend in the TSI highly uncertain. While the variability in the UV irradiance is clearly in-phase with the solar cycle, the phase of the variability in the visible range has been debated. In this paper, we aim at getting an insight into the long-term trend of TSI since 1996 and the phase of the solar irradiance variations in the visible part of the spectrum. We use independent ground-based full-disc photometric observations in Ca~II~K and continuum from the Rome and San Fernando observatories to compute the TSI since 1996. We follow the empirical San Fernando…
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