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Historical sunspot records

2020, Arlt, Rainer, Vaquero, José M.

Sunspot observations are available in fairly good numbers since 1610, after the invention of the telescope. This review is concerned with those sunspot observations of which longer records and drawings in particular are available. Those records bear information beyond the classical sunspot numbers or group sunspot numbers. We begin with a brief summary on naked-eye sunspot observations, in particular those with drawings. They are followed by the records of drawings from 1610 to about 1900. The review is not a compilation of all known historical sunspot information. Some records contributing substantially to the sunspot number time series may therefore be absent. We also glance at the evolution of the understanding of what sunspots actually are, from 1610 to the 19th century. The final part of the review illuminates the physical quantities that can be derived from historical drawings.

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Comparison of telescopic and naked-eye sunspots for the very small spots on February 15, 1900 and January 30, 1911

2020, Neuhäuser, Ralph, Geymeier, Michael, Arlt, Rainer, Chapman, Jesse

In a recent discussion of the Maunder Minimum, two sunspot observations by Chinese court astronomers on February 15, 1900 and January 30, 1911 (±1 day) – presumably made with the unaided eye – were considered false detections because the spot areas of the largest spot on those days (±1 day) as recorded by the Royal Greenwich Observatory, would be too small for naked-eye detection, namely 11 and 13 millionths of a solar disk (msd), respectively (Usoskin et al. 2015). We revisit this issue here. First, we review theoretical and empirical considerations of the lower limit for the sunspot area detectable by the naked eye: under optimal conditions, very good observers can detect spots as small as ∼100 msd (and we present one example, where an observer reported a spot, when the largest spot on that day was only 65 msd, but being part of a longish group facilitating the detection). Then, we review all known sunspot observations on and around February 15, 1900 and January 30, 1911, including full-disk drawings. For February 15, 1900, Kalocsa observatory, Hungary, shows a feature close to the western limb with an area of 134 msd, but it is not clear whether it was a spot or faculae or pores (as spot, it could have been detectable even by naked-eye). The two spot groups detected in Kodaikanal, India, on January 31, 1911 and February 1 with 18.5 to 33.0 msd area would be too small for detection by the naked eye. However, the Chinese records for February 15, 1900 and January 30, 1911 do not even mention whether the observations were performed with a telescope or by the unaided eye. We conclude that there is no convincing evidence that these two – or even all – Chinese sunspot records are unreliable.