Nitrate ion spikes in ice cores not suitable as proxies for solar proton events
Nitrate ion spikes in polar ice cores are contentiously used to estimate the intensity, frequency, and probability of historical solar proton events, quantities that are needed to prepare for potentially society‐crippling space weather events. We use the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model to c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of geophysical research. Atmospheres 2016-03, Vol.121 (6), p.2994-3016 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nitrate ion spikes in polar ice cores are contentiously used to estimate the intensity, frequency, and probability of historical solar proton events, quantities that are needed to prepare for potentially society‐crippling space weather events. We use the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model to calculate how large an event would have to be to produce enough odd nitrogen throughout the atmosphere to be discernible as nitrate peaks at the Earth's surface. These hypothetically large events are compared with probability of occurrence estimates derived from measured events, sunspot records, and cosmogenic radionuclides archives. We conclude that the fluence and spectrum of solar proton events necessary to produce odd nitrogen enhancements equivalent to the spikes of nitrate ions in Greenland ice cores are unlikely to have occurred throughout the Holocene, confirming that nitrate ions in ice cores are not suitable proxies for historical individual solar proton events.
Key Points
SPE‐enhanced atmospheric NOy does not account for NO3− spikes in ice cores
NO3− in ice cores is a poor proxy for historical SPEs |
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ISSN: | 2169-897X 2169-8996 |
DOI: | 10.1002/2015JD023805 |