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Brief Communications Arising
Nature 436, E3-E4 (28 July 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature04045; Published online 27 July 2005
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Climate: How unusual is today's solar activity?
Raimund Muscheler1, Fortunat Joos2, Simon A. Müller2 & Ian Snowball3
Abstract
Arising from: S. K. Solanki, I. G. Usoskin, B. Kromer, M. Schüssler & J. Beer Nature 431, 1084–1087 (2004); Solanki et al. reply.
To put global warming into context requires knowledge about past changes in solar activity and the role of the Sun in climate change. Solanki et al.1 propose that solar activity during recent decades was exceptionally high compared with that over the preceding 8,000 years. However, our extended analysis of the radiocarbon record reveals several periods during past centuries in which the strength of the magnetic field in the solar wind was similar to, or even higher than, that of today.
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