Which leaves unanswered, I suppose, the question of why warming trends analogous to trends observed on Earth have been observed on other planets in the Solar System, most notably Mars. It also leaves unanswered, one must note, the question of why most of the observed global average temperature increases have been undone in recent months, corresponding to the observation that the , having finished one cycle, has not begun another one (contrary to expectations).

The article’s headline is a bit misleading, methinks. The specific solar radiation under discussion is what are called , the really intense radiation that the Sun gives off. Most of that stuff gets blocked by the ’s anyhow — one of those beautifully-designed things, you know? Of course, cosmic rays are not the only sort of emitted by the Sun, and radiation in other parts of the spectrum can penetrate the magnetic field ( would be an easy example to point to here).

The fact is, we can be fairly certain that what solar radiation does penetrate the magnetic field must be responsible for warming the Earth, because we are fairly certain that were the Sun to suddenly stop emitting said radiation, the Earth would become a frozen wasteland. Whatever solar radiation gets through the magnetic field is responsible, in large measure, for the fact that the temperature in most places on the Earth’s surface is in a range that humans find liveable. It still seems reasonable, even in light of findings which suggest that may have been wrong in his theories about cosmic rays, that variations in the Sun’s output in other spectra still do produce changes in the Earth’s climate and average temperature.

Especially, I note again, since similar trends have been observed on other orbital bodies in the Solar System which, last time I checked, were not home to advanced, industrialized societies.