However, the main issue discussed in the paper by Sloan and Wolfendale was not the greenhouse effect, but rather the question
about galactic cosmic rays and climate.
Not exact matches
The GRAPES - 3 muon telescope located at TIFR's
Cosmic Ray Laboratory in Ooty recorded a burst of galactic cosmic rays of about 20 GeV, on 22 June 2015 lasting for two
Cosmic Ray Laboratory in Ooty recorded a burst of
galactic cosmic rays of about 20 GeV, on 22 June 2015 lasting for two
cosmic rays of
about 20 GeV, on 22 June 2015 lasting for two hours.
After accounting for the deflection of the
cosmic rays by the Milky Way's magnetic field, the team found that the particles are travelling
about 326 million light years from a region of extragalactic space containing several potential sources, such as active
galactic nuclei and starburst galaxies.
Once Ulysses was in its scheduled orbit, it began observing the solar wind and magnetic field strength at high solar latitudes, finding that the solar wind from high latitudes was moving at
about 750 km / s (slower than expected), and that there were large magnetic waves emerging from high latitudes which scattered
galactic cosmic rays.
You can apply the same to the data tests
about a link of climate to
galactic cosmic rays.
But just to be even clearer, in plain English, what this means is that for the most part it appears that
galactic cosmic rays significantly increase the formation of cloud nucleation, the formation of a seed
about which vapor can condense, perhaps orders of magnitude more than previously known.
The
galactic cosmic ray issue is not just
about if it may cause an increase in clouds but how it may contribute to an increase in major volcanic activity which would have major climatic due to those items effecting albedo.
Salvatore, this I don't understand: «The
galactic cosmic ray issue is not just
about if it may cause an increase in clouds but how it may contribute to an increase in major volcanic activity...» I'm not aware of any physical mechanism of controlling ERFvolvano by ERFsolar.
David L. Hagen (11:23:23): Magnetosphere modulating
cosmic rays On what causes those, one possible cause is variation in earth's magnetosphere modulating
galactic cosmic rays The Sun's heliosphere, not the Earth's magnetosphere for time scales we care
about.