Is Our Sun Going Into Hibernation?
All About Space|Issue 117
Each sunspot cycle has been getting less intense. Is our star falling asleep?
Kulvinder Singh Chadha
Is Our Sun Going Into Hibernation?
Solar activity refers to the state of the Sun’s magnetic field and associated phenomena: sunspots, flares, solar wind and coronal ejections. During periods of minimal solar activity, such events are often uncommon and weak. During solar maximum, they’re at their strongest and most frequent. Magnetic field fluctuations on the Sun can happen on drastically different timescales, ranging from seconds all the way to billions of years. When astronomers speak of a ‘slow down’ or a period of quiescence in the Sun’s activity, it doesn’t mean the Sun will stop shining, but that there’s a slow down in activity.

The Sun has one particular rhythm, lasting approximately 11 years, in which its polar magnetic field flips polarity. Sunspots serve as an indicator of this change. Indeed, it’s often known as ‘the sunspot cycle’.

Although sunspots themselves were first observed by Galileo, Christoph Scheiner and others from 1609 onwards, the cyclical nature of their appearance and disappearance was first noted in 1775 by Danish astronomer Christian Horrebow. It was then rediscovered in 1843 by Heinrich Schwabe. In 1848, Swiss astronomer Rudolf Wolf used Schwabe and others’ results, as well as performing his own observations, to calculate the 11-year cycle and a mathematical method to count the number of sunspots. This so-called ‘Wolf number’ remains in use today.

This story is from the Issue 117 edition of All About Space.

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This story is from the Issue 117 edition of All About Space.

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