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Recurrent Large‐Scale Solar Proton Events Before the Onset of the Wolf Grand Solar Minimum

Hiroko Miyahara, Fuyuki Tokanai, Tôru Moriya, Mirei Takeyama, Hirohisa Sakurai, Motonari Ohyama, Kazuho Horiuchi, Hideyuki Hotta

2022Geophysical Research Letters24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Carbon‐14 in tree rings have suggested there had been multiple extreme solar proton events (SPEs) in the past. While the largest events such as in 774–775 CE can be significantly detected by the typical precision of accelerator mass spectrometry, smaller but possibly more frequent events have been difficult to be detected. Thus, the frequency or any characteristics of such relatively smaller events are still largely unknown. In this paper, we report that large SPEs had occurred in 1261–1262, 1268–1269, and 1279–1280 CE before the onset of the Wolf minimum based on high‐precision carbon‐14 analyses. It is suggested that they had occurred at the maximum and the declining phase of solar cycles, and that they had occurred during the transition time of solar activity into a deep minimum. We propose that this episode may provide a unique opportunity to elucidate a potential interaction between the solar dynamo and extreme solar flares.

Topics & Concepts

Solar minimumSolar flareCoronal mass ejectionSolar maximumDynamoSolar cycle 22Solar cycleSolar dynamoProtonPhysicsSolar cycle 23AstrophysicsSolar physicsAtmospheric sciencesEnvironmental scienceAstronomyDynamo theoryNuclear physicsSolar windPlasmaMagnetic fieldQuantum mechanicsSolar and Space Plasma DynamicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism StudiesAstro and Planetary Science
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