The Solar Cycle
Solar maximum is the term for the maximum in solar
activity that takes place approximately every eleven years;
solar minimum is the lowest point of solar activity.
The last solar maximum was in 2001.Solar events can interact and interfere with each other, creating a very complex system. Their frequency varies with time. The smaller flares tend to follow the eleven year cycle and peak at several tens of flares per day. The largest flares usually occur only a few times during solar maximum. Sunspots increase with solar maximum, and are relatively rare during solar quiet times. Coronal holes do not last as long during solar maximum. Monthly averages of the sunspot numbers show that the number of sunspots visible on the Sun waxes, during solar maximum and wanes, solar minimum with an approximate 11-year cycle. Image courtesy of David Hathaway, NASA MSFC.
More about sunspots and the solar cycle...
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Last modified: November 14, 2008
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