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Can the ¹⁴C production in 1054 CE be affected by SN1054?

Authors :
Terrasi, F. (F)
Marzaioli, F. (F)
Buompane, R. (R)
Passariello, I. (I)
Porzio, G. (G)
Capano, M. (M)
Helama, S. (S)
Oinonen, M. (M)
Nöjd, P. (P)
Uusitalo, J. (J)
Jull, A. J. (A J T)
Panyushkina, I. P. (I P)
Baisan, C. (C)
Molnar, M. (M)
Varga, T. (T)
Kovaltsov, G. (G)
Poluianov, S. (S)
Usoskin, I. (I)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2020.

Abstract

Annually resolved radiocarbon (¹⁴C) measurements on tree rings led to the discovery of abrupt variations in ¹⁴C production attributed to large solar flares. We present new results of annual and subannual ¹⁴C fluctuations in tree rings from a middle-latitude sequoia (California) and a high-latitude pine (Finland), analyzed for the period 1030–1080 CE, to trace a possible impact of the Crab supernova explosion, occurring during the Oort minimum of solar activity. Our results indicate an increase of Δ¹⁴C around 1054/55 CE, which we estimate is higher in magnitude than the cyclic variability due to solar activity at a 2σ significance level. The net signal appears to be synchronized in the studied locations. Several sources of this event are possible including γ-rays from the Crab supernova, an unusually weak solar minimum or a solar energetic particle incident. More data are needed to provide more insight into the origin of this ¹⁴C event.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2423..b0dc47663445d09149558cdc57f2102e