Records of sunspot and aurora during CE 960-1279 in the Chinese chronicle of the Sòng dynasty
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DOI[10.1186/s40623-015-0250-y]to the data of the same series
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- Material Type
- 記事
- Author/Editor
- Hisashi HayakawaHarufumi TamazawaAkito Davis Kawamura
- Publication, Distribution, etc.
- Publication Date
- 2015-05-29
- Publication Date (W3CDTF)
- 2015-05-29
- Periodical title
- EPS : Earth, Planets and Space
- No. or year of volume/issue
- 67(82)
- Volume
- 67(82)
- ISSN (Periodical Title)
- 1880-5981
- ISSN-L (Periodical Title)
- 1343-8832
- Text Language Code
- eng
- DOI
- 10.1186/s40623-015-0250-y
- Persistent ID (NDL)
- info:ndljp/pid/9497166
- Collection
- 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)
- 2015-09-15T20:13:28+09:00
- Date Captured (W3CDTF)
- 2015-08-20
- 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
- 可
- Periodical Title (URI)
- Periodical Title (Persistent ID (NDL))
- info:ndljp/pid/9227920
- 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
- Summary, etc.
- Records of sunspot and aurora observations in pre-telescopic historical documents can provide useful information about solar activity in the past. This is also true for extreme space weather events, as they may have been recorded as large sunspots observed by the naked eye or as low-latitude auroras. In this paper, we present the results of a comprehensive survey of records of sunspots and auroras in the Sòngshǐ, a Chinese formal chronicle spanning the tenth to the thirteenth century. This chronicle contains a record of continuous observations with well-formatted reports conducted as a policy of the government. A brief comparison of the frequency of observations of sunspots and auroras and the observations of radioisotopes as an indicator of the solar activity during corresponding periods is provided. This paper is the first step of our project in which we survey and compile the records of sunspots and auroras in historical documents from various locations and languages, ultimately providing it to the science community as online data.
- DOI
- 10.1186/s40623-015-0250-y10.48550/arxiv.1506.03715
- Access Restrictions
- インターネット公開
- Rights (production)
- © 2015 Hayakawa et al.; licensee Springer.This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
- Related Material (URI)
- Is Referenced By
- Earliest datable records of aurora-like phenomena in the astronomical diaries from BabyloniaSporadic Aurora near Geomagnetic Equator: In the Philippines, on 27 October 1856Do the Chinese Astronomical Records Dated A.D. 776 January 12/13 Describe an Auroral Display or a Lunar Halo? A Critical Re-examinationHistorical Auroras in the 990s: Evidence of Great Magnetic StormsEast Asian observations of low-latitude aurora during the Carrington magnetic stormRevisiting Kunitomo’s Sunspot Drawings During 1835 – 1836 in JapanUnaided-eye Sunspot Observations in 1769 November: A Comparison of Graphical Records in the East and the WestUnusual rainbow and white rainbow: A new auroral candidate in oriental historical sourcesAurora candidates from the chronicle of <i>Qíng</i> dynasty in several degrees of relevanceRecords 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 KingdomsHistorical space weather monitoring of prolonged aurora activities in Japan and in ChinaSheath-accumulating Propagation of Interplanetary Coronal Mass EjectionSunspot Observations on 10 and 11 February 1917: A Case Study in Collating Known and Previously Undocumented RecordsIwahashi Zenbei’s Sunspot Drawings in 1793 in JapanA great space weather event in February 1730A Transit of Venus Possibly Misinterpreted as an Unaided-Eye Sunspot Observation in China on 9 December 1874A candidate auroral report in the Bamboo Annals, indicating a possible extreme space weather event in the early 10th century BCE
- References
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- Data Provider (Database)
- 国立情報学研究所 : CiNii Research
- Original Data Provider (Database)
- 学術機関リポジトリデータベース雑誌記事索引データベースCrossref科学研究費助成事業データベースCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossrefCrossref
- Bibliographic ID (NDL)
- 9497166