Revealing the relationship between solar activity and COVID-19 and forecasting of possible future viruses using multi-step autoregression (MSAR) – Nasirpour et al
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7961325/
The authors believe in viruses but still conclude:
“Regarding the results of this study, we found that sunspots are the main cause of virus generation in the world.
This research reveals that the biological and astrophysical mechanisms are related to the generation of world pandemics such as COVID-19.“
How do sunspots cause disease?
First note that many of the disease outbreaks started before the sunspot maximum which tends to suggest that it is not the sunspots per se that are the cause of the outbreaks.
Mainstream wisdom is that sunspots originate from deep within the sun according to some internal process. We we may somehow be seeing the effects of this process at the Earth’s surface before they are visibly manifest on the Sun’s surface.
Other cosmologists see the solar cycles driven by external forces in the form of electromagnetic ‘galactic wave currents’ or some such. Similar vortex filaments between the Sun and the Earth are responsible for coupling events on Earth with those on the sun. Sometimes effects are seen first at the sun and sometimes they appear as disease on Earth before the solar cycles peak.
These electric currents between the Sun and Earth will have an impact upon our weather and electrical discharge from the ionosphere will disturb the regulatory systems of our bodies thus leading to diseases of an inflammatory nature. See: Influenza and weather
Earth sun connection
The Sun as an Extremely Sensitively Interconnected and Regulated System – Attila Grandpierre
https://old.konkoly.hu/staff/grandpierre/Sun_Sensitive.pdf
Connections between the sun and Earth are quite surprising, with statistical correlations between the Earth’s rotation rate and solar activity deep within the sun.
“Not only the minimums of the Earth’s rotation show connections with the solar activity period, but also, as Currie (1973) showed, the rotation rate of the Earth actually correlates with the solar activity!” – Attila Grandpierre
Grandpierre notes that sometimes the change in solar activity comes first and at others it is the Earth’s variations that seem to initiate activity in the sun!
So whatever the origin of these phenomena, it seems to have the power to both cause sunspots and affect the rotational speed of the Earth. From this perspective then, the idea that it could somehow be responsible for causing disease on Earth now seems a little less surprising.
The decline in disease
The chart below is from the Dissolving Illusions website and show the decline of most so called ‘infectious’ diseases from 1840 to 1976. All diseases shown were almost extinct before the mass production of penicillin in 1944 and certainly before the first vaccines in 1957.
The vaccines cannot therefore be responsible for the abolition of these diseases, which begs the question: What is responsible?
The answer according to many people now is that these diseases were caused by some sort of poisoning and that improvements in hygiene, sanitation and workplace conditions are what led to the dramatic decline shown.
This cannot be the whole story though.
The mortality rates for scarlet fever in particular show, not a steady decline, but instead huge variations which suddenly settle down circa 1900.
These variations have two outstanding features:
- Magnitude: They are of a greater amplitude than the overall average decline
- Periodicity: They show clear and regular cycles
These variations are of an order of magnitude that is actually greater over a 3 year period than is achieved in a hundred year average decline!
What is the explanation then for these short term variations? Improvements in hygiene now seem very unlikely; how to explain a coordinated nationwide predisposition for hand-washing that comes and goes every few years? How to explain any influence that has such a cyclic nature?
Sunspot cycles?
The peaks in the mortality rates for scarlet fever look to be between 5 and 6 years apart, i.e. half a sunspot cycle. Now given the strong association between other diseases and sunspots, why should it not be so that these cycles are also the result of solar influences?
Moreover, if such an explanation should be found sufficient for the larger variations in mortality then why is there any need of a separate explanation for the general decrease of mortality rates over the century?
The idea that the observed decline is nothing to do with toxicity and everything to do with sunspots will just seem like nonsense to many, but if it is supported by the data then it must at least be considered plausible.

