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A&A 372, 1005-1018 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010280
On the relation between total irradiance and radius variations
J. Pap1, J. P. Rozelot2, S. Godier2 and F. Varadi31 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
2 OCA/CERGA, Avenue Copernic, 06130 Grasse, France
3 UCLA, Department of Physics, 90095-1562, Los Angeles, USA
(Received 29 August 2000 / Accepted 18 January 2001 )
Abstract
We use Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) to analyze total solar irradiance
variations and CERGA radius measurements. Total solar irradiance has been
monitored from space for more than two decades, whilst ground-based radius
measurements are available as a coherent time series from 1975. We compare
these indicators to try to understand the origin of energy
production inside the Sun.
One of the main objectives was to assess the reality of the observed
variations of the Sun's radius by distinguishing the signal from the noise.
Two approaches were used: one using SSA on ground-based
data averaged over 90 days, in order to smooth the signal (especially over
periods when no data were obtained, mainly in winter time); the second
repeats the analysis on individual measurements corrected by
reporting data to the zenith. As expected, the level of noise is higher in
the first case and the reconstructed noise level, which is large,
indicates the difficulty in ascertaining the solar origin in the
apparent variability of the solar radius. It is shown from the
reconstructed components that the main variation in amplitude (over 930 days) is pronounced during the
first part of the measurements and seems to disappear after 1988. There is also
a variation with a periodicity of 1380 days, of
lower amplitude than that of the shorter component. In both cases,
these variations disappear during the rising portion of cycle 23. The first
reconstructed component shows
that total irradiance varies in parallel with the solar cycle, being
higher during maximum activity conditions. The reconstructed
radius trend indicates that the solar radius was higher during the minimum
of solar cycle 21, but its decrease with the rising activity of cycle
23 is less obvious. The observed value of the solar radius increased by
about 0.11 arcsec from the maximum of cycle 21 to the minimum
between cycles 21 and 22. Most importantly, we report a long-term
radius variation which increased from the maximum of cycle 21 to
minimum by about 0.015% , while a smaller decrease (around 0.01% ) is
seen
from the minimum of cycle 21 to the maximum of cycle 22. This study
indicates need for measurements of the degree
of the radius changes taken from space, together with total irradiance
measurements to establish the phase
relation between these two quantities.
Key words: Sun: general -- Sun: fundamental parameters
Offprint request: J. P. Rozelot, rozelot@obs-azur.fr
© ESO 2001
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