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Maunder minimum

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Maunder minimum

In astronomy, period 1645–1715 when sunspots were rarely seen and no auroras were recorded. The Maunder minimum coincided with a time of unusually low temperature on Earth, known as the Little Ice Age, and is often taken as evidence that changes in solar activity can affect the Earth's climate. The Maunder minimum is named after the English astronomer Edward Walter Maunder, who drew attention to it.



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History shows, for example, that very few sunspots were observed from 1650 to 1700, a period known as the Maunder Minimum when Europe endured particularly bitter winters.
The Maunder Minimum corresponded to a profound lull in sunspots.
The longest one, called the Maunder minimum, happened between 1645 and 1715, when the sun appeared to miss a whole cycle.
 
 
 
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