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電子書籍・電子雑誌EPS : Earth, Planets and Space
Volume number68
Earliest d...

Earliest datable records of aurora-like phenomena in the astronomical diaries from Babylonia

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Earliest datable records of aurora-like phenomena in the astronomical diaries from Babylonia

Call No. (NDL)
Z22-817
Bibliographic ID of National Diet Library
10267466
Persistent ID (NDL)
info:ndljp/pid/10267466
Material type
記事
Author
Hisashi Hayakawaほか
Publisher
Springer science+business media
Publication date
2016-11-29
Material Format
Paper・Digital
Journal name
EPS : Earth, Planets and Space 68(195)
Publication Page
-
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The astronomical diaries from Babylonia (ADB) are excellent sources of information of natural phenomena, including astronomical ones, in pre-Christ er...

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Digital

Material Type
記事
Author/Editor
Hisashi Hayakawa
Yasuyuki Mitsuma
Yusuke Ebihara
Publication, Distribution, etc.
Publication Date
2016-11-29
Publication Date (W3CDTF)
2016-11-29
Periodical title
EPS : Earth, Planets and Space
No. or year of volume/issue
68(195)
Volume
68(195)
ISSN (Periodical Title)
1880-5981
ISSN-L (Periodical Title)
1343-8832
Text Language Code
eng
Persistent ID (NDL)
info:ndljp/pid/10267466
Collection (Materials For Handicapped People:1)
Collection (particular)
国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション > 電子書籍・電子雑誌 > その他
Acquisition Basis
オンライン資料収集制度
Date Accepted (W3CDTF)
2017-01-25T12:55:04+09:00
Date Captured (W3CDTF)
2017-01-13
Format (IMT)
application/pdf
Access Restrictions
国立国会図書館内限定公開
Service for the Digitized Contents Transmission Service
図書館・個人送信対象外
Availability of remote photoduplication service
Periodical Title (Persistent ID (NDL))
info:ndljp/pid/9963599
Data Provider (Database)
国立国会図書館 : 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション

Digital

Summary, etc.
The astronomical diaries from Babylonia (ADB) are excellent sources of information of natural phenomena, including astronomical ones, in pre-Christ era because it contains the record of highly continuous and systematic observations. In this article, we present results of a survey of aurora-like phenomena in ADB, spanning from BCE 652 to BCE 61. We have found nine records of aurora-like phenomena. Philological and scientific examinations suggest that five of them can be considered as likely candidate for aurora observations. They provide unique information about the solar and aurora activities in the first millennium BCE. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
Access Restrictions
インターネット公開
Rights (production)
© 2016 The Author(s).
Is Referenced By
Possible cause of extremely bright aurora witnessed in East Asia in September 1770
The Earliest Candidates of Auroral Observations in Assyrian Astrological Reports: Insights on Solar Activity around 660 BCE
Historical Auroras in the 990s: Evidence of Great Magnetic Storms
Low-latitude Aurorae during the Extreme Space Weather Events in 1859
Records of sunspot and aurora activity during 581–959 CE in Chinese official histories concerning the periods of <i>Suí</i>, <i>Táng</i>, and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
Historical space weather monitoring of prolonged aurora activities in Japan and in China
Extreme Solar Events: Setting up a Paradigm
The Celestial Sign in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in the 770s: Insights on Contemporary Solar Activity
Long-lasting Extreme Magnetic Storm Activities in 1770 Found in Historical Documents
A great space weather event in February 1730
A candidate auroral report in the Bamboo Annals, indicating a possible extreme space weather event in the early 10th century BCE
Occurrence of great magnetic storms on 6–8 March 1582
References
Records of Sunspot and Aurora during CE 960–1279 in the Chinese Chronicle of the Sòng Dynasty, Earth
Historical Auroras in the 990s: Evidence of Great Magnetic Storms
A signature of cosmic-ray increase in ad 774–775 from tree rings in Japan
East Asian observations of low-latitude aurora during the Carrington magnetic storm
Records of sunspots and aurora candidates in the Chinese official histories of the <i>Yuán</i> and <i>Míng</i> dynasties during 1261–1644
The AD775 cosmic event revisited: the Sun is to blame
Total solar irradiance during the Holocene
Superflares on solar-type stars
SUPERFLARES ON SOLAR-TYPE STARS OBSERVED WITH <i>KEPLER</i> . I. STATISTICAL PROPERTIES OF SUPERFLARES
Unusual rainbow and white rainbow: A new auroral candidate in oriental historical sources
Aurora candidates from the chronicle of <i>Qíng</i> dynasty in several degrees of relevance
The earliest drawings of datable auroras and a two-tail comet from the Syriac Chronicle of Zūqnīn
Variation of the Schwabe Cycle Length During the Grand Solar Minimum in the 4th Century BC Deduced from Radiocarbon Content in Tree Rings
Possible link between multi-decadal climate cycles and periodic reversals of solar magnetic field polarity
Climate and the changing sun
Low‐latitude auroras observed in Japan: 1999–2004
Global observations of a SAR arc
Multiradionuclide evidence for the solar origin of the cosmic-ray events of AD 774/5 and 993/4
Statistical modeling of storm‐level <i>Kp</i> occurrences
Another rapid event in the carbon-14 content of tree rings
Can Superflares Occur on Our Sun?
Babylonian observational astronomy
Astronomical evidence relating to the observed 14C increases in A.D. 774–5 and 993–4 as determined from tree rings
The great auroral exhibition of August 28th to September 4th, 1859
A review of East Asian reports of aurorae and comets circa AD 775
THE MAUNDER MINIMUM IS NOT AS GRAND AS IT SEEMED TO BE
Estimating the frequency of extremely energetic solar events, based on solar, stellar, lunar, and terrestrial records
The Historical Sections of the Astronomical Diaries in Context: Developments in A Late Babylonian Scientific Text Corpus
The great auroral exhibition of Aug. 28th to Sept. 4th, 1859; 7th article
The great auroral exhibition of Aug. 28th to Sept. 4th, 1859
Variations in Mid-Latitude Auroral Activity During the Holocene*
The Solar Cycle
The Carrington event not observed in most ice core nitrate records
The great auroral exhibition of Aug. 28th to Sept. 4th, 1859; and the geographical distribution of auroras and thunder storms
The Case of the Missing Sunspots
The Sun and the Earth's Climate
The Sunspot and Auroral Activity Cycle Derived from Korean Historical Records of the 11th–18th Century
The extreme magnetic storm of 1–2 September 1859
A History of Solar Activity over Millennia
The Sun Recorded Through History
The great auroral exhibition of Aug. 28th to Sept. 4th, 1859
The great auroral exhibition of August 28th to September 4th, 1859
Long-term research: Slow science
Ancient Aurorae
The standard flare model in three dimensions
The earliest datable observation of the aurora borealis
Grand minima and maxima of solar activity: new observational constraints
Duration and extent of the great auroral storm of 1859
On the great auroral exhibition of Aug. 28th to Sept. 4th, 1859 and on auroras generally; 8th article
Description of a Singular Appearance seen in the Sun on September 1, 1859
The 1859 space weather event revisited: limits of extreme activity
A 250‐year cycle in naked‐eye observations of sunspots
Solar cosmic ray events for the period 1561–1994: 1. Identification in polar ice, 1561–1950
Understanding the “SEKKI” phenomena in Japanese historical literatures based on the modern science of low-latitude aurora
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Bibliographic ID (NDL)
10267466
NAID
120005973251