How much has the Sun influenced Northern Hemisphere temperature trends? An ongoing debate
Ronan Connolly, Willie Soon, Michael Connolly, Sallie Baliunas, Johan, Berglund, C. J. Butler, Rodolfo Gustavo Cionco, Ana G. Elias, Valery M., Fedorov, Hermann Harde, Gregory W. Henry, Douglas V. Hoyt, Ole Humlum, David, R. Legates, Sebastian L\"uning, Nicola Scafetta

TL;DR
This study assesses the influence of solar variability on Northern Hemisphere temperature trends, highlighting uncertainties in data and the significant role of human activity in recent warming.
Contribution
It compares multiple TSI and temperature estimates, revealing potential biases and emphasizing the importance of considering diverse data sources for accurate climate attribution.
Findings
Urbanization bias affects temperature trend estimates.
All methods confirm warming since 1850.
Solar forcing's role varies from negligible to dominant.
Abstract
To evaluate the role of Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) on Northern Hemisphere (NH) surface air temperature trends it is important to have reliable estimates of both quantities. 16 different TSI estimates were compiled from the literature. 1/2 of these estimates are low variability and 1/2 are high variability. 5 largely-independent methods for estimating NH temperature trends were evaluated using: 1) only rural weather stations; 2) all available stations whether urban or rural (the standard approach); 3) only sea surface temperatures; 4) tree-ring temperature proxies; 5) glacier length temperature proxies. The standard estimates using urban as well as rural stations were anomalous as they implied a much greater warming in recent decades than the other estimates. This suggests urbanization bias might still be a problem in current global temperature datasets despite the conclusions of some…
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.
