Is Climate Change Responsible for the 2017 Hurricanes in Texas. Louisiana, Georgia and Florida? Return to Homepage







Related book - Solar Flares and Their Effect Upon Behavior and Human Health. Published July 2017



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How to Find Changes in Your Local Weather Using the Sun's Solar Flux


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According to Forbes magazine, certain regions in Texas have had so much record breaking rainfall, the National Weather Service has had to invent new rainfall measuring equipment. In 2017, record floods have been occurring across Nepal and India. I mentioned in my book Solar Flares and Their Effect Upon Behavior and Human Health,  released just a few months ago, that certain regions on earth may receive above average amounts of rainfall. This is due to the fact that earth is entering a phase of very low solar activity. The last period of such low solar activity was from 1650 to 1810, known as "The Little Ice Age", which included the Spörer Minimum, from 1450 to 1530; the Dalton Minimum, from 1790 to 1820 and the Maunder Minimum, from 1645 to 1720; and the Dalton Minimum. I state clearly in my book that scientific evidence has proven that when sunspot activity is lower, more cosmic rays will occur. This is because stronger solar activity acts as a shield against incoming cosmic rays that flood earth's upper atmosphere. The period from 2015 to 2019 is cycle of very low sunspot activity. A paper published in nature written by Stanford researchers stated that the intensity of extremely rapid wet spells and extremely dry spells has been increasing over the decades during the south Asian monsoon season.

Reference:
Observed changes in extreme wet and dry spells during the South Asian summer monsoon season

 


Scientific References

Cosmic rays as the main factor affecting solar variability on climatic and atmospheric parameters

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9914850


The influence of galactic cosmic ray on all India annual rainfall and temperature
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015AdSpR..55.1158C


Cosmic rays, solar activity and the climate
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/8/4/045022  


Reply to 'Influence of cosmic ray variability on the monsoon rainfall and temperature': a false-positive in the field of solar-terrestrial research
https://arxiv.org/abs/1502.00505 


The influence of cosmic rays on terrestrial clouds and global warming
http://www.solarstorms.org/CloudCover.htm 

 



Solar Cycle #24.


 



Reference: Solar Cycle #24


Sunspot Activity
As of 2017 we are in Solar Cycle 24, approaching Solar Minimum. Numbers of sunspots began their decline around 2014. During this decline, we have seen a major increase in water moisture content in the atmosphere. This is what is responsible for the strong hurricanes. Because we are in a declining sunspot cycle, there is less solar radiation causing an effect on cosmic rays. We shall show this in greater depth later on.

As we shall show in the following images, when the hurricanes began first forming we see an accumulative effect in the sun's solar radiation (X-Ray Background Flux). This is what is responsible for giving the hurricane's winds a "push" creating the forces necessary for it to build up energy.

This increase in solar radiation also causes inflammation in the body. I outline this effect in greater detail along with the scientific references in the book. It is as if the effect of a solar flare leaves a lasting resonance that manifests itself over the course of a few days, playing out its effects on weather and the immune system.

 




HURRICANE HARVEY

Reference:
http://legacy-www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/quar_DSD.txt


HURRICANE IRMA


HURRICANE MARIA


Reference:
http://legacy-www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/quar_DSD.txt




Geomagnetic Activity 


Just before all the hurricane's formed, earth's geomagnetic activity reached a high of 96.  This is way above average. 
Reference
http://legacy-www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/DGD.txt



 

Now let's look at cosmic ray activity around the time the hurricanes formed.

Reference. Cosmic Ray Data:
https://cosmicrays.oulu.fi



Cosmic rays over the long term (shown below), we see there are less cosmic rays during sunspot minimum (which we are in now as of 2017).


Variation of cosmic ray intensity and monthly sunspot activity since 1958 according to the Germany Cosmic Ray Monitor in Kiel  (GCRM) and NOAA's National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC), respectively. High sunspot activity correlates with low cosmic ray intensity, and vice versa.