Kopp Greg
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, 80303 USA.
Living Rev Sol Phys. 2025;22(1):1. doi: 10.1007/s41116-025-00040-5. Epub 2025 Jul 11.
The Sun provides nearly all the energy powering the Earth's climate system, far exceeding all other energy sources combined. The incident radiant energy, the "total solar irradiance," has been measured by an uninterrupted series of temporally overlapping precision space-borne radiometric instruments since 1978, giving a record spanning more than four 11-year solar cycles. Short-term total-irradiance variations exceeding 0.1% can occur over a few days while variations of ~ 0.1% in-phase with the solar cycle are typical. Knowledge of solar variability on timescales longer than the current multi-decadal space-borne record relies on solar-activity proxies and models, which indicate similar-magnitude changes over centuries. Spectrally resolved space-borne irradiance measurements in the ultraviolet have been acquired continuously since 1979, while measurements contiguously spanning the near-ultraviolet to the near-infrared began in 2003. The combination of long-term total- and spectral-irradiance measurements helps determine both the solar causes of irradiance variability, which are primarily due to solar-surface magnetic-activity regions such as sunspots and faculae, and the mechanisms by which solar variability affects the Earth's climate system, with global and regional temperatures responding to variability at solar-cycle and longer timescales. To better understand these solar influences, the most modern total-irradiance instruments are approaching the needed climate-driven measurement accuracy and stability requirements for detection of potential long-term solar-variability trends, while the latest spectral-irradiance instruments are beginning to be able to discern solar-cycle variability. Focusing on the space-borne era where such measurements are the most accurate and stable, this article describes solar-irradiance instrument designs, capabilities, and operational methodologies. It summarizes the many total- and spectral-irradiance measurements available and the measured solar variabilities on timescales from minutes to solar cycles and discusses extrapolations via models to longer timescales. Measurement composites and reference spectra are reviewed. Current capabilities and future directions are described along with the climate-driven solar-irradiance measurement requirements.
太阳提供了几乎所有驱动地球气候系统的能量,远远超过所有其他能源的总和。自1978年以来,通过一系列时间上重叠的精密星载辐射测量仪器对入射辐射能,即“总太阳辐照度”进行了不间断的测量,记录跨越了四个多11年的太阳周期。短期总辐照度变化超过0.1%可能在几天内发生,而与太阳周期同相位的约0.1%的变化是典型的。对于比当前数十年的星载记录更长时间尺度上的太阳变化的了解,依赖于太阳活动代理和模型,这些代理和模型表明在几个世纪内有类似幅度的变化。自1979年以来持续获取了紫外光谱分辨的星载辐照度测量数据,而从近紫外到近红外连续测量始于2003年。长期总辐照度和光谱辐照度测量的结合有助于确定辐照度变化的太阳成因,这主要归因于太阳表面磁活动区域,如黑子和光斑,以及太阳变化影响地球气候系统的机制,全球和区域温度在太阳周期及更长时间尺度上对这种变化做出响应。为了更好地理解这些太阳影响,最现代的总辐照度仪器正接近检测潜在长期太阳变化趋势所需的气候驱动测量精度和稳定性要求,而最新的光谱辐照度仪器开始能够辨别太阳周期变化。本文聚焦于此类测量最准确和稳定的星载时代,描述了太阳辐照度仪器的设计、能力和操作方法。总结了现有的许多总辐照度和光谱辐照度测量数据以及从分钟到太阳周期时间尺度上测量到的太阳变化,并讨论了通过模型外推到更长时间尺度的情况。回顾了测量合成数据和参考光谱。描述了当前能力和未来方向以及气候驱动的太阳辐照度测量要求。