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However, core research has tended to focus along classical
disciplinary lines rather than on the coordinated, long-term,
cross-disciplinary monitoring activities that are essential for
documenting how and why the Earth's environment changes. The
fundamental sources of information will be data bases that are
built up slowly over relatively long periods, and the
interpretation of the changes that occur will involve
cross-disciplinary analyses that use information from many such
data bases. To be effective, global change research must transcend
existing disciplinary barriers and encourage interactions that
cross disciplinary lines. Such interactions are currently difficult
to establish.
This chapter assesses specific ongoing and planned research
activities most relevant to solar influences on global change, and
then discusses some programmatic issues. The core research programs
that exist at present neither accommodate nor foster
cross-disciplinary global change research needs. Measuring and
modeling the variations in energy input from the Sun to the Earth
is essential for research on solar influences on global change. But
it is not a prime goal of existing or planned solar physics
research, since knowledge of solar processes is better achieved
with highly spatially resolved observations of portions of the
solar disk. Nor is it a prime goal of Earth science research, for
which it is an initiator but not an indicator of the physical
processes of interest. As a distinct cross-disciplinary task, the
study of solar influences on global change is championed by neither
the Earth science nor the solar astrophysics community.
Monitoring Solar Forcing
Reliable measurements of solar energy inputs to the Earth system
extend over less than 20 years (which is less than two solar
activity cycles). Existing measurements indicate significant
variability of essentially all solar parameters on essentially all
time scales, from minutes to decades. In acquiring a suite of solar
irradiance measurements with sufficient long term precision for
global change research, important aspects of space based solar
metrology obtained from the experiences of the 1980s must be used
to guide research strategies for the 1990s and beyond.