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The glacial cycles and cosmic rays

The cause of the glacial cycles remains a mystery. The origin is widely accepted to be astronomical since paleoclimatic archives contain strong spectral components that match the frequencies of Earth's orbital modulation. Milankovitch insolation theory contains similar frequencies and has becom...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kirkby, Jasper, Mangini, A, Müller, R A
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/749918
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author Kirkby, Jasper
Mangini, A
Müller, R A
author_facet Kirkby, Jasper
Mangini, A
Müller, R A
author_sort Kirkby, Jasper
collection CERN
description The cause of the glacial cycles remains a mystery. The origin is widely accepted to be astronomical since paleoclimatic archives contain strong spectral components that match the frequencies of Earth's orbital modulation. Milankovitch insolation theory contains similar frequencies and has become established as the standard model of the glacial cycles. However, high precision paleoclimatic data have revealed serious discrepancies with the Milankovitch model that fundamentally challenge its validity and re-open the question of what causes the glacial cycles. We propose here that the ice ages are initially driven not by insolation cycles but by cosmic ray changes, probably through their effect on clouds. This conclusion is based on a wide range of evidence, including results presented here on speleothem growth in caves in Austria and Oman, and on a record of cosmic ray flux over the past 220 kyr obtained from the 10Be composition of deep-ocean sediments.
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spelling cern-7499182019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/749918engKirkby, JasperMangini, AMüller, R AThe glacial cycles and cosmic raysOther Fields of PhysicsThe cause of the glacial cycles remains a mystery. The origin is widely accepted to be astronomical since paleoclimatic archives contain strong spectral components that match the frequencies of Earth's orbital modulation. Milankovitch insolation theory contains similar frequencies and has become established as the standard model of the glacial cycles. However, high precision paleoclimatic data have revealed serious discrepancies with the Milankovitch model that fundamentally challenge its validity and re-open the question of what causes the glacial cycles. We propose here that the ice ages are initially driven not by insolation cycles but by cosmic ray changes, probably through their effect on clouds. This conclusion is based on a wide range of evidence, including results presented here on speleothem growth in caves in Austria and Oman, and on a record of cosmic ray flux over the past 220 kyr obtained from the 10Be composition of deep-ocean sediments.physics/0407005CERN-PH-EP-2004-027oai:cds.cern.ch:7499182004-07-01
spellingShingle Other Fields of Physics
Kirkby, Jasper
Mangini, A
Müller, R A
The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title_full The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title_fullStr The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title_full_unstemmed The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title_short The glacial cycles and cosmic rays
title_sort glacial cycles and cosmic rays
topic Other Fields of Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/749918
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