Sun's Activity Levels Reconstructed
neutron_p writes "An international team of scientists has reconstructed the Sun's activity over the last 11 millennia and forecasts decreased activity within a few decades. The activity of the Sun over the last 11,400 years, i.e., back to the end of the last ice age on Earth, has now for the first time been reconstructed quantitatively. The scientists have analyzed the radioactive isotopes in trees that lived thousands of years ago. As scientists report in the current issue of the science journal Nature, one needs to go back over 8,000 years in order to find a time when the Sun was, on average, as active as in the last 60 years."
The Sun is approximately 4.5 billion years old. An increase in the average brightness of 30% over that time is equal to 6.7% per billion years, or .00000067% per century. If you think that this will become a measurable change in the next century, you obviously never learned anything worthwhile from a lab course (and nobody should trust you with numerical methods, either).
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