Here is an excellent video from Tony Heller giving us the actual data disproving the propaganda put out by the USA administration and parroted by most of the mainstream media. How long can this fraud keep going? Here is the link:
The 1995 IPCC report showed that hurricane wind speeds were declining. ipcc_sar_wg_I_full_report.pdf This contradicted claims made by Hansen and others in 1988. “Global warming may increase the strength of hurricanes, posing a lethal threat to low-lying areas already facing inundation … Continue reading →
Indeed we think that this paper is very important on various fronts, including even the rather clear and revisionist attempts by several activists during the last 10 years or more to try to modify the Group Sunspot Number (GSNs) record with rather flawed reasonings and evidence as documented in this detailed paper.
If we are wrong, let the debate begin openly and objectively in the public and science spheres. The rather ugly approach by the revisionists may not be clear but throughout the last 10 years, they have been systematically ignored and censored any constructive criticisms and suggestions by Douglas Hoyt, our co-author, who is a serious scholar on the reconstruction of sunspot activity records.
For some of us that called America home, the fun aspect of this paper is to point to the possible recovery of the long-lost first sunspot drawings from Colonial America by Humphry Marshall (1722-1801).
Cordially,
Willie together with colleagues Victor Velasco Herrera, Doug Hoyt and Judit Murakozy
ps: for some of you whom may be interested in more details and discussion concerning the origin of this article, please consider these two talks
(1) Studying the role of the Sun on Climate
(2) Studying Sunspot Activity Cycles: Hindcasting and Forecasting
Here is the paper’s abstract.
Abstract
Historical sunspot records and the construction of a comprehensive database are among the most sought after research activities in solar physics. Here, we revisit the issues and remaining questions on the reconstruction of the so-called group sunspot numbers (GSN) that was pioneered by D. Hoyt and colleagues. We use the modern tools of artificial intelligence (AI) by applying various algorithms based on machine learning (ML) to GSN records. The goal is to offer a new vision in the reconstruction of sunspot activity variations, i.e. a Bayesian reconstruction, in order to obtain a complete probabilistic GSN record from 1610 to 2020. This new GSN reconstruction is consistent with the historical GSN records. In addition, we perform a comparison between our new probabilistic GSN record and the most recent GSN reconstructions produced by several solar researchers under various assumptions and constraints. Our AI algorithms are able to reveal various new underlying patterns and channels of variations that can fully account for the complete GSN time variability, including intervals with extremely low or weak sunspot activity like the Maunder Minimum from 1645 – 1715. Our results show that the GSN records are not strictly represented by the 11-year cycles alone, but that other important timescales for a fuller reconstruction of GSN activity history are the 5.5-year, 22-year, 30-year, 60-year, and 120-year oscillations. The comprehensive GSN reconstruction by AI/ML is able to shed new insights on the nature and characteristics of not only the underlying 11-year-like sunspot cycles but also on the 22-year Hale’s polarity cycles during the Maunder Minimum, among other results previously hidden so far. In the early 1850s, Wolf multiplied his original sunspot number reconstruction by a factor of 1.25 to arrive at the canonical Wolf sunspot numbers (WSN). Removing this multiplicative factor, we find that the GSN and WSN differ by only a few percent for the period 1700 to 1879. In a comparison to the international sunspot number (ISN) recently recommended by Clette et al. (Space Sci. Rev. 186, 35, 2014), several differences are found and discussed. More sunspot observations are still required. Our article points to observers that are not yet included in the GSN database.
The oceans are driving the warming this century. SSTs took a step up with the 1998 El Nino and have stayed there with help from the North Atlantic, and more recently the Pacific northern “Blob.” The ocean surfaces are releasing a lot of energy, warming the air, but eventually will have a cooling effect. The decline after 1937 was rapid by comparison, so one wonders: How long can the oceans keep this up? If the pattern of recent years continues, NH SST anomalies may rise slightly in coming months, but once again, ENSO which has weakened will probably determine the outcome.