An Antarctic ice core recording both supernovae and solar cycles
Abstract
Ice cores are known to be rich in information regarding past climates, and the possibility that they record astronomical phenomena has also been discussed. Rood et al. were the first to suggest, in 1979, that nitrate ion (NO3-) concentration spikes observed in the depth profile of a South Pole ice core might correlate with the known historical supernovae (SNe), Tycho (AD 1572), Kepler (AD 1604), and SN 1181 (AD 1181). Their findings, however, were not supported by subsequent examinations by different groups using different ice cores, and the results have remained controversial and confusing. Here we present a precision analysis of an ice core drilled in 2001 at Dome Fuji station in Antarctica. It revealed highly significant three NO3- spikes dating from the 10th to the 11th century. Two of them are coincident with SN 1006 (AD 1006) and the Crab Nebula SN (AD 1054), within the uncertainty of our absolute dating based on known volcanic signals. Moreover, by applying time-series analyses to the measured NO3- concentration variations, we discovered very clear evidence of an 11-year periodicity that can be explained by solar modulation. This is one of the first times that a distinct 11-year solar cycle has been observed for a period before the landmark studies of sunspots by Galileo Galilei with his telescope. These findings have significant consequences for the dating of ice cores and galactic SN and solar activity histories.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0902.3446,
title = {An Antarctic ice core recording both supernovae and solar cycles},
author = {Yuko Motizuki and Kazuya Takahashi and Kazuo Makishima and Aya Bamba and Yoichi Nakai and Yasushige Yano and Makoto Igarashi and Hideaki Motoyama and Kokichi Kamiyama and Keisuke Suzuki and Takashi Imamura},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0902.3446},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
18 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Nature; please note that this manuscript is subject to press embargo