Posted on 05/22/2018 6:52:32 PM PDT by BenLurkin
Have you been keeping an eye on Sol lately? One of the top astronomy stories for 2018 may be whats not happening, and how inactive our host star has become.
The strange tale of Solar Cycle #24 is ending with an expected whimper: as of May 8th, the Earthward face of the Sun had been spotless for 73 out of 128 days thus far for 2018, or more than 57% of the time. This wasnt entirely unexpected, as the solar minimum between solar cycle #23 and #24 saw 260 spotless days in 2009 the most recorded in a single year since 1913. Cycle #24 got off to a late and sputtering start, and though it produced some whopper sunspots reminiscent of the Sol we knew and loved on 20th century cycles past, it was a chronic under-performer overall. Mid-2018 may see the end of cycle #24 and the start of Cycle #25 or will it?
One things for certain: if the current trend continues, with spotless days more the rule than the exception, we could be in for a deep profound solar minimum through the 2018 to 2020 season, the likes of which would be unprecedented in modern astronomy.
Fun fact: a similar dearth of sunspots was documented during the 1645-1715 period referred to as the Maunder Minimum. During this time, crops failed and the Thames River in London froze, making frost fairs along its frozen shores possible. Ironically, the Maunder Minimum also began just a few decades after the dawn of the age of telescopic astronomy. During this time, the idea of spots on the Sun was regulated to a controversial, and almost mythical status in mainstream astronomy.
(Excerpt) Read more at universetoday.com ...
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