Overview
Centennial climate evolution strongly correlates with the solar activity proxies before the anthropogenically driven contemporary era. However, this correlation hasn’t yet been proven or disproven as a causal relationship because of the large uncertainties in the amplitude of solar forcing reconstructions from these proxies, as well as uncertainties in other forcings like volcanic eruptions. In our proposal, we suggest tackling this problem in a reversed way by establishing the long-term solar forcing variations amplitude from the climate variables reconstructions with the use of Earth system modelling. For this purpose, we will focus on the 17th-18th centuries and exploit our new Earth system model (ESM) SOCOLv4, which was explicitly designed for simulating the volcanic- and solar-related processes in the atmosphere, forced by the updated estimates for the volcanic activity data and a range of solar scenarios with varying amplitudes. Comparing these experiments with the latest reconstructions and reanalysis of climate variables will allow us to answer the question of how large the solar forcing needs to be in order to reproduce the observations.