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Source
The sun is nearly 150 million kilometres away, but it seems to have Earth's rivers on a leash. The flow of a huge South American river - and thus the rainfall that feeds it - appears to rise and fall with the number of sunspots.
the study should not be used to link any variability in the sun's activity to global warming, because it makes no link between the sun and global surface air temperature.
Originally posted by Dermo
What?? This fella can't be serious..!! The suns activity does not affect surface/air temperature but yet controls precipitation??
Originally posted by pieman
there isn't any connection between rain and air temperature beyond the temperature needed for rain to become hail or snow.
he didn't say there was no affect, he said he hadn't measured the effect.
Originally posted by Dermo
I may be completely wrong here but I was under the impression that more evaporation takes place during warmer periods or under direct sunlight.
More solar activity = more solar rays = warmer matter upon contact & more evaporation
More evaporation = more precipitation which therefore affects the rivers.