No, but you do manage to make grave errors quite regularly in your interpretations.doubtingthomas wrote: ↑Fri Jan 06, 2023 9:01 pm
Okay, so I did some research and found some fatal flaws with your interpretation.
Here are some points you should consider:
1. About three-quarters of the stars in the galaxy are 1 billion years older, on average, than the Sun. Most of the non-periodic stars may simply be older than the Sun. The Milky Way is about 13 billion years old.
2. All the periodic stars selected are about the same age as the Sun. A similar rotation period is an indication that the stars are about the same age. "For the periodic sample, we select rotation periods in the range 20–30 days (Sun: Prot, = 24.47 days sidereal rotation period)."
3. Characterizing our sun as a "non-periodic" star is just speculation, according to the authors, "the Sun would probably belong to the non-periodic sample if it were observed by Kepler". However, comparing the sun with periodic stars is hard data, "These stars appear nearly identical to the Sun, except for their higher variability".
4. The authors allow for two interpretations. However, the interpretation that our Sun is currently in an unusually quiet period, is unlikely. Does Res Ipsa have any evidence that our Sun has been unusually quiet for 9,000 years.
…I am the only one required to back up my arguments with peer-reviewed research.
Start with your Point 4:
What do you base your conclusion of which interpretation is “unlikely” on? Because that’s not what the authors say in the study you are referencing:4. The authors allow for two interpretations. However, the interpretation that our Sun is currently in an unusually quiet period, is unlikely. Does Res Ipsa have any evidence that our Sun has been unusually quiet for 9,000 years.
Additionally,We suggest two interpretations of our result….According to [the first] interpretation, the periodic stars are in the high-activity regime, while the stars without known periods are either also in transition, or are in the low-activity regime. The second possible interpretation is that…[because], For example, the Sun could alternate between epochs of low and high activity on timescales longer than 9000 years.
Our analysis does not allow us to distinguish between these two interpretations.
The authors of the study you are referring to do:DT wrote:
Does Res Ipsa have any evidence that our Sun has been unusually quiet for 9,000 years.
Your point 4 is wildly incorrect due to cherry-picking, as well as a bizarre formation of the question itself. 1-3 are not documented and in my opinion, reflect similar cherry-picking and lack of understanding, so there’s no point in continuing.
Solar cosmogenic isotope data indicate that in the last 9000 years the Sun has not been substantially more active than in the last 140 years (8).
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2005.01401.pdf