SOLARIS-HEPPA – Solar Influences on Climate

Coordinating Experts Driving the Project

Activity Leads

Miriam Sinnhuber
KIT – Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Karlsruhe, Germany
miriam.sinnhuber@kit.edu

Wenjuan Huo
GEOMAR – Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research
Kiel, Germany
whuo@geomar.de

Overview of the Project’s Objectives and Scope

Activity Description

The importance of solar forcing on climate has been recognized since decades. However, the atmospheric solar signal and its transfer mechanism(s) remain still uncertain. To address these questions, the international working group SOLARIS (in 2012 renamed to SOLARIS-HEPPA) was created to clarify the effects of solar influence on climate with a special focus on the importance of middle atmosphere chemical and dynamical processes and their coupling to the Earth’s surface with state-of-the-art chemistry-climate models (CCMs) as well as mechanistic models and observations. We foster and initiate detailed studies targeting the characterization of the radiative and energetic particle forcing, a better understanding of the transfer and amplification mechanisms responsible for surface climate impacts, as well as on the detection and attribution of the solar-forced climate variability and its impact on predictability. In addition, SOLARIS-HEPPA aims to provide a platform for the coordination and discussion of solar-related observational and model studies. This includes recommendations for the solar irradiance and particle-induced ionization used to drive middle atmosphere and climate models within e.g. the APARC-CCMI initiative and the CMIP simulations.

SOLARIS-HEPPA collaborates with a number of other programms and groups such as WCRP-LHA “Explaining and Predicting Earth System Change WG2”, the activities in APARC, including LOTUS, SNAP, CCMI, DynVar, and SCOSTEP’s PRESTO (Predictability of the variable solar-terrestrial coupling) programme. The SOLARIS-HEPPA initiative will give a more complete picture of “Solar Influence on Climate”. A primary goal is a recommendation for upcoming IPCC rounds which processes (solar radiation and particles) to include in future climate studies.

Working groups

The following working groups (WGs) were defined at SOLARIS-HEPPA meetings in 2022 (SPARC newsletter 59, 2022, p. 36):

  • WG1 (Bernd Funke, Daniel Marsh, and Natalie Krivova): Solar and geomagnetic forcing datasets
  • WG2 (Wenjuan Huo, Tobias Spiegl, and Timo Asikainen): Solar influence on climate (solar signals, possible mechanisms and processes) and near-term prediction
  • WG3 (Aleš Kuchař): Statistical analysis and methodological aspects

The WG leaders will coordinate the analyses within their WG. If you are interested in participating in one of the WGs, please get in touch with the respective WG leaders or contact Bernd Funke or Wenjuan Huo.

Peer-Reviewed Contributions to Climate Science

Journal Publications

Seppälä A., Kalakoski, N., Verronen, P. T., Marsh, D. R., Karpechko, A. Y., and Szelag, M. E.: Polar mesospheric ozone loss initiates downward coupling of solar signal in the Northern Hemisphere, Nature communications, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-55966-z, 2025.

Funke, B., Dudok de Wit, T., Ermolli, I., Haberreiter, M., Kinnison, D., Marsh, D., Nesse, H., Seppälä, A., Sinnhuber, M., and Usoskin, I.: Towards the definition of a solar forcing dataset for CMIP7, Geosci. Model Dev., 17, 1217–1227, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-17-1217-2024, 2024.

Sinnhuber, M., Tyssøy, H. N., Asikainen, T., Bender, S., Funke, B., Hendrickx, K., Pettit, J. M., Reddmann, T., Rozanov, E., Schmidt, H., Smith‐Johnsen, C., Sukhodolov, T., Szeląg, M. E., Kamp, M., Verronen, P. T., Wissing, J. M. and Yakovchuk, O. S.: Heppa III Intercomparison Experiment on Electron Precipitation Impacts: 2. Model‐Measurement Intercomparison of Nitric Oxide (NO) During a Geomagnetic Storm in April 2010, J. Geophys. Res., 127, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JA029466, 2022

Nesse Tyssøy, H., Sinnhuber, M., Asikainen, T., Bender, S., Clilverd, M. A., Funke, B., et al. (2021). HEPPA III intercomparison experiment on electron precipitation impacts: 1. Estimated ionization rates during a geomagnetic active period in April 2010. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 127, e2021JA029128. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JA029128

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Latest Developments and Ongoing Efforts

SPARC Activity Updates

SPARC newsletter No. 59, 2022, p. 36, Report on the 8th HEPPA-SOLARIS Workshop, by H. Nesse Tyssøy, V. Maliniemi, and B. Funke.

SPARC newsletter No. 54, 2020, p. 30, Report on the SOLARIS-HEPPA Working Group Meeting, by B. Funke and K. Matthes.

Explore Detailed Resources and Updates

Website for Further Information

For a more comprehensive look into the project, its activities, and its ongoing contributions to atmospheric and climate science, visit the dedicated SOLARIS-HEPPA website at https://www.solarisheppa.kit.edu.  Explore the site to stay informed and engaged with the project’s progress and achievements.

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