Long range weather WARNING: Earth set for cold streak as Sun goes BLANK

The Sun is now giving off less heat, and this could mean bad news for heat lovers over the next decade or so. Scientists say the Sun has now gone 191 days of the year without sunspots – that is 59 percent of the year. This is because our host star has now entered the solar minimum, according to experts.

The Sun follows cycles of roughly 11 years where it reaches a solar maximum and then a solar minimum.

During a solar maximum, the Sun gives off more heat and is littered with sunspots. Less heat in a solar minimum is due to a decrease in magnetic waves.

According to Space Weather: “The sun is blank again today – the 191st day of 2018 that the Sun has been without spots.

“To find a similar stretch of blank suns, you have to go back to 2009 when the Sun was experiencing the deepest solar minimum in a century.

“Solar minimum has returned.”

The Sun was not expected to head into a solar minimum until around 2020, and if it is heading in early, it will mean a prolonged cold snap.

The last time there was a prolonged solar minimum, it led to a ‘mini ice-age’, scientifically known as the Maunder minimum – which lasted for 70 years.

The Maunder minimum, which saw seven decades of freezing weather, began in 1645 and lasted through to 1715, and happened when sunspots were exceedingly rare.

During this period, temperatures dropped globally by 1.3 degrees celsius leading to shorter seasons and ultimately food shortages.

Vencore Weather, a meteorological website, said: “Low solar activity is known to have consequences on Earth’s weather and climate and it also is well correlated with an increase in cosmic rays that reach the upper part of the atmosphere.

“The blank Sun is a sign that the next solar minimum is approaching and there will be an increasing number of spotless days over the next few years.”