List of solar cycles
Solar cycles are nearly periodic 11-year changes in the Sun's activity that are based on the number of sunspots present on the Sun's surface. The first solar cycle conventionally is said to have started in 1755. The source data are the revised International Sunspot Numbers, as available at SILSO.
Sunspot counts exist since 1610 but the cycle numbering is not well defined during the Maunder minimum. It was proposed that one cycle might have been lost in the late 18th century, but this remains not fully confirmed.
Solar cycles can be reconstructed indirectly, using the radiocarbon 14C proxy, for the last millennium.
The smoothing is done using the traditional SIDC smoothing algorithm. Using this algorithm, if the month in question is notated month 0, a weighted average is formed of months −6 to 6, where months −5 to 5 are given weightings of 1, and months −6 and 6 are given weightings of 0.5. Other smoothing formulas exist, and they usually give slightly different values for the amplitude and timings of the solar cycles. An example is the Meeus smoothing formula, with related solar cycles characteristics available in this STCE news item.
The start of solar cycle 25 was declared by SIDC on September 15, 2020 as being in December 2019. This makes cycle 24 the only "11-year solar cycle" to have lasted precisely 11 years.
Details of cycles 1 to 25
| Solar cycle | Start | Min SSN | Max | Max SSN | Ave spots per day | Time of Rise | Length |
| Solar cycle 1 | 1755 – Feb | 14.0 | 1761 – Jun | 144 | 6-4 | 11-4 | |
| Solar cycle 2 | 1766 – Jun | 18.6 | 1769 – Sep | 193 | 3-3 | 9-0 | |
| Solar cycle 3 | 1775 – Jun | 12.0 | 1778 – May | 264 | 2-11 | 9-3 | |
| Solar cycle 4 | 1784 – Sep | 15.9 | 1788 – Feb | 235 | 3-5 | 13-7 | |
| Solar cycle 5 | 1798 – Apr | 5.3 | 1805 – Feb | 82 | 6-10 | 12-3 | |
| Solar cycle 6 | 1810 – Jul | 0.0 | 1816 – May | 81 | 5-10 | 12-10 | |
| Solar cycle 7 | 1823 – May | 0.1 | 1829 – Nov | 119 | 6-6 | 10-6 | |
| Solar cycle 8 | 1833 – Nov | 12.2 | 1837 – Mar | 245 | 3-4 | 9-8 | |
| Solar cycle 9 | 1843 – Jul | 17.6 | 1848 – Feb | 220 | 4-7 | 12-5 | |
| Solar cycle 10 | 1855 – Dec | 6.0 | 1860 – Feb | 186 | 92 | 4-2 | 11-3 |
| Solar cycle 11 | 1867 – Mar | 9.9 | 1870 – Aug | 234 | 89 | 3-5 | 11-9 |
| Solar cycle 12 | 1878 – Dec | 3.7 | 1883 – Dec | 124 | 57 | 5-0 | 11-3 |
| Solar cycle 13 | 1890 – Mar | 8.3 | 1894 – Jan | 147 | 65 | 3-10 | 11-10 |
| Solar cycle 14 | 1902 – Jan | 4.5 | 1906 – Feb | 107 | 54 | 4-1 | 11-6 |
| Solar cycle 15 | 1913 – Jul | 2.5 | 1917 – Aug | 176 | 73 | 4-1 | 10-1 |
| Solar cycle 16 | 1923 – Aug | 9.3 | 1928 – Apr | 130 | 68 | 4-8 | 10-1 |
| Solar cycle 17 | 1933 – Sep | 5.8 | 1937 – Apr | 199 | 96 | 3-7 | 10-5 |
| Solar cycle 18 | 1944 – Feb | 12.9 | 1947 – May | 219 | 109 | 3-3 | 10-2 |
| Solar cycle 19 | 1954 – Apr | 5.1 | 1958 – Mar | 285 | 129 | 3-11 | 10-6 |
| Solar cycle 20 | 1964 – Oct | 14.3 | 1968 – Nov | 157 | 86 | 4-1 | 11-5 |
| Solar cycle 21 | 1976 – Mar | 17.8 | 1979 – Dec | 233 | 111 | 3-9 | 10-6 |
| Solar cycle 22 | 1986 – Sep | 13.5 | 1989 – Nov | 213 | 106 | 3-2 | 9-11 |
| Solar cycle 23 | 1996 – Aug | 11.2 | 2001 – Nov | 180 | 82 | 5-3 | 12-4 |
| Solar cycle 24 | 2008 – Dec | 2.2 | 2014 – Apr | 116 | 49 | 5-4 | 11-0 |
| Solar cycle 25 | 2019 – Dec | 1.8 | 2024 – Oct | 161 | Progr: SC25 SC24 | 4–10 | |
| Median | 9.3 | 180 | 4–1 | 11–3 |
- Notes on Solar cycle 25
- * The maximum SSN of 160.9 for October 2024 is 73% above the maximum SSN predicted by Zharkova for SC25.
- * SILSO has announced October 2024 as the peak of the cycle. It says: "For the coming years, another maximum remains a possibility, but it is unlikely it will be higher than the one in October last year because the Sun has completed its polar field reversal in 2023, and because the ongoing solar cycle is already 5.5 years in progress."
Unofficial cycles starting with a maximum
The following table is instead divided into cycles starting and ending with a maximum, for the purpose of indicating the number of spotless days associated with each minimum. It begins with cycle 10-11 due to the significant amount of missing daily data before this time, which allows estimated averages to be calculated, but does not permit totals to be counted.| Solar Cycles | Start | Spotless days |
| Solar cycle 10–11 | 1860 – Feb | 406 |
| Solar cycle 11–12 | 1870 – Aug | 1028 |
| Solar cycle 12–13 | 1883 – Dec | 736 |
| Solar cycle 13–14 | 1894 – Jan | 934 |
| Solar cycle 14–15 | 1906 – Feb | 1023 |
| Solar cycle 15–16 | 1917 – Aug | 534 |
| Solar cycle 16–17 | 1928 – Apr | 568 |
| Solar cycle 17–18 | 1937 – Apr | 269 |
| Solar cycle 18–19 | 1947 – May | 446 |
| Solar cycle 19–20 | 1958 – Mar | 227 |
| Solar cycle 20–21 | 1968 – Nov | 272 |
| Solar cycle 21–22 | 1979 – Dec | 273 |
| Solar cycle 22–23 | 1989 – Oct | 309 |
| Solar cycle 23–24 | 2001 – Nov | 817 |
| Solar cycle 24–25 | 2014 – Apr | 849 |
| Solar cycle 25–26 | 2024 – Oct | 0 |
Comparison of cycles 24 and 25 by 13-month running averages
Following is a comparison of the growth of cycle 25 versus cycle 24, using the 13-month sunspot averages, beginning with the months of the respective minimums.Numbers in brackets for cycle 25 indicate the minimum possible value for that month, assuming there are no more sunspots between now and six months after the end of the month in question.
The table shows averages for each hemisphere and the average for the entire Sun.
Comparison of cycles 24 and 25 by daily spots
The following table gives the number of days so far in cycle 25 against the number up to the same point in cycle 24, which have passed various thresholds for the numbers of sunspots.| Counts | ||
| ≥100 | ||
| ≥125 | ||
| ≥150 | ||
| ≥175 | ||
| ≥200 | ||
| ≥225 | ||
| ≥250 | ||
| ≥275 |
As at Feb 1, 2026, solar cycle 25 is averaging 30% more spots per day than solar cycle 24 at the same point in the cycle.
- Year 1 of SC25 averaged 101% more spots per day than year 1 of SC24.
- Year 2 of SC25 averaged 7% more spots per day than year 2 of SC24.
- Year 3 of SC25 averaged 8% more spots per day than year 3 of SC24.
- Year 4 of SC25 averaged 41% more spots per day than year 4 of SC24.
- Year 5 of SC25 averaged 71% more spots per day than year 5 of SC24.
- Year 6 of SC25 averaged 10% more spots per day than year 6 of SC24.
- Year 7 of SC25 is averaging 14% more spots per day than at the same point in year 7 of SC24.