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Earth Loses Magnetism
BBC ^ | 1-1-2004 | Molly Bently

Posted on 01/01/2004 9:49:40 AM PST by blam

Earth loses its magnetism

By Molly Bentley
in San Francisco

Scientists have known for some time that the Earth's magnetic field is fading.

The field is mainly dipolar - but there are anomalies

Like a Kryptonite-challenged Superman, its strength has steadily and mysteriously waned, leaving parts of the planet vulnerable to increased radiation from space.

Some satellites already feel the effects.

What is uncertain is whether the weakened field is on the way to a complete collapse and a reversal that would flip the North and South Poles.

Compasses pointing North would then point South.

It is not a matter of whether it will happen, but when, said scientists who presented the latest research on the subject at a recent meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.

But when is hard to pinpoint. The dipole reversal pattern is erratic.

"We can have periods without reversals for many millions of years, and we can have four or five reversals within one million years," said Yves Gallet, from Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, France, who studies the palaeomagnetic record and estimates that the current decay started 2,000 years ago.

Flip or flop

Over the last century and a half, since monitoring began, scientists have measured a 10% decline in the dipole.

At the current rate of decline it would take 1,500 to 2,000 years to disappear.

SEAFLOOR RECORDER

* As molten rock rises, spreads out and cools, magnetised minerals record field direction
* Over millions of years, the seafloor rocks retain a 'barcode' of pole reversals
* These pole reversal events may take perhaps 10,000 years to complete
* The last major pole flip appears to have been about 780,000 years ago

A particular weakness in the field has been observed off the coast of Brazil in the so-called Southern Atlantic Anomaly. Here, eccentricities in the Earth's core have caused a "dip" in the field, leaving it 30% weaker than elsewhere.

The extra dose of radiation creates electronic glitches in satellites and spacecraft that fly through it. Even the Hubble telescope has been affected.

Magnetic reversals were always preceded by weakened magnetic fields, said Dr Gallet, but not all weakened fields bring on a flip-flop.

The Earth's invisible shield could also grow back in strength. "Then sometime, maybe 10,000 years from now, the dipole will decay again and that will lead to a reversal," said Harvard physicist Jeremy Bloxham.

The theme was recently taken up by Hollywood in the movie The Core, in which the Earth's core mysteriously stops spinning, effectively turning off the electromagnetic field.

The movie is nonsense, scientists told BBC News Online, except that the Earth's magnetic field is generated by activity deep inside it.

Iron record

The heat of the solid inner core keeps the molten cocktail of nickel and iron churning in the outer core, which generates a magnetic field.

It is not known how the core behaves exactly, but scientists have a general understanding of how electrical and fluid currents and magnetic field lines all interact to produce the field we experience outside Earth.

"If we had the equivalent of a space probe that went into the core and made measurements for us, that would tell us a tremendous amount "
Jeremy Bloxham, Harvard

Imagine the magnetic field lines within the core "twisting like spaghetti," said Peter L Olson, geophysics professor at Johns Hopkins University.

As they wind and kink around each other, their interaction can accentuate the magnetic field or diminish it.

"Depending on how it's kinked," he said, "it can be helpful or harmful."

The last time the field lines kinked into a dipole reversal was 780,000 years ago.

By studying seafloor sediment and lava flows, scientists can reconstruct the magnetic field patterns of the past. Iron in lava, for example, points in the direction of the then-existing field and is frozen in that orientation as the lava cools and hardens.

According to Dr Gallet, the oldest reversal that has been studied by lava flows comes from Greenland, dated at 16 million years. The time between reversals varies from a thousand to millions of years.

Global light show

So is the Earth about to flip? The safe bet may disappoint screenplay writers everywhere.

"Chances are we're not," said Dr Bloxham. "Reversals are rare events."

And they would certainly not threaten life on Earth as they do in science fiction. Although there would be extra radiation exposure to satellites and some airplanes, there would also be enough of a residual field to provide protection to people, and certainly no more radiation than what is observed at the poles, where the field lines currently dip.

Supercomputers have modelled the pole flipping process (Image: Los Alamos Nat Lab)

But there would be some bizarre readjustment. Prior to Earth's poles re-establishing themselves, a period of disorder would produce multiple poles, according to Dr Bloxham, which may make backwoods camping tricky.

"Getting around using a magnetic compass would be a more complicated endeavour," he said.

A collapse would also produce a great increase in auroral activity - the beautiful display of lights generated by solar particles that follow the magnetic field lines down into the atmosphere.

And there would be plenty to time to grab a camera - the reversal is gradual.

This would give animals which use the magnetic field for navigation, such as some birds, turtles and bees, time to reorient themselves.

"They'd go through many generations in the period in which the field was entering the phase of reversal," said Dr Bloxham. "Presumably they would learn new behaviour patterns to accommodate it."

Space within

As for the ozone layer - which was thought to be vulnerable without a protective shield - the effects would be negligible unless there was a super-solar proton event, said Charles H Jackman, an atmospheric physicist at the US space agency's Goddard Flight Center, referring to the high-energy radiation that can accompany solar flares.

The charged particles zinging down to Earth, said Dr Jackman, break apart molecules of nitrogen, whose atoms go on to form nitric oxide, which devours up ozone.

This happens all the time, but the effects would be increased during a magnetic reversal or diminished magnetic field.

Fluctuations and movement of field strength across the globe are recorded

But he said scientists saw no significant change in ozone depletion due to the Southern Atlantic Anomaly. In any case, the ozone layer would bounce back quickly from the heavy solar bombardment, healing itself in just two to three years, according to Dr Jackman.

This is not the timeline associated with anthropogenic chlorofluorocarbons.

"Chlorofluorocarbons have a much longer lifetime in the atmosphere than does the nitric oxide and its associated constituents," he said.

But all these scenarios are of an indeterminate future. The Earth's interior will remain unexplored for a long time to come - only in science fiction can humans or their equipment survive the 5,500 Celsius temperature in the core to study its activity.

"If we had the equivalent of a space probe that went into the core and made measurements for us, that would tell us a tremendous amount," said Dr Bloxham. "Hollywood may be able to do these things, but we can't."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: catastrophism; crevolist; earth; environment; gps; loses; magneticfield; magnetism; poleshift
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To: inquest
what would cause it to reverse polarity under the water-vapor hypothesis?

Answer that for any hypothesis and win at least the Nobel.

Are there dipoles in the sun?

No, but due to ionization it doesn't need dipoles. The sun can generate mag fields just by churning ordinary electrical fields.

81 posted on 01/04/2004 2:41:22 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: SC Swamp Fox
Once again, I assume that if you allow molten ferrous material to mingle long enough, the atoms will align themselves to each other. Add to that the complex flow patterns resulting from convection and the earth's rotation.....and all bets are off.

Couple the magnetic field degradation with the fact that there hasn't been a leap second for five years (which is odd), and you've got the makings of a pretty interesting theory.

82 posted on 01/04/2004 2:44:48 PM PST by r9etb
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To: RightWhale
But at least with the core-convection hypothesis there's at least a somewhat plausible explanation, namely that the gyres change direction -or- perhaps that the strength of one gyre overcomes the strength of the other rotating in the opposite direction, and thus its field becomes the dominant field.
83 posted on 01/04/2004 2:51:29 PM PST by inquest (The only problem with partisanship is that it leads to bipartisanship)
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To: inquest
It seems like, and this is a gut feeling, core convection would be too slow and too stable to change quickly enough to correspond with fluctuations and known reversals in the magfield. Something more mobile would be needed. Something that can change quickly and often.
84 posted on 01/04/2004 2:55:06 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: RightWhale
What about the second possibility I raised? It appears that there are at least two main gyres circulating inside the globe in opposite directions from each other. That would explain why at the crust is splitting in two directions at the mid-Atlantic ridge. If they're moving in opposite directions, then the fields they're generating would largely cancel each other out, unless one is a bit stronger than the other. So all it would take for a reversal of polarity would be a change in the relative strength of the two gyres, so that the other one becomes dominant.
85 posted on 01/04/2004 3:01:27 PM PST by inquest (The only problem with partisanship is that it leads to bipartisanship)
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To: inquest
The problem I have with that is that the material would be molten and electrically conductive, and so would lack a net electrical charge and also lack dipoles set in crystalline structure. Magnets are made of solid-state material or moving charge fields. There would be no mechanism to generate a magfield.
86 posted on 01/04/2004 3:10:33 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: inquest
54 - "Only when an outside magnetic field is imposed do the atomic fields line up, which enables iron to "transmit" magnetism that's applied to it."

Magnetizable materials can also be magnetized/demagnetized with a sharp blow.

For example, you can magnetize a screw driver by wrapping a wire around it and briefly touching the wire between the poles of your car battery.

You can also drop a magnet onto a hard surface eg concrete floor, and it will demagnatize, and on occasion a non-magetized item will magnetize. (I have this happen, but have no idea how to control it, which way it goes)
87 posted on 01/04/2004 5:02:19 PM PST by XBob
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To: 75thOVI; agrace; aimhigh; Alice in Wonderland; AndrewC; aragorn; aristotleman; Avoiding_Sulla; ...
Note: this topic is from 1/01/2004 .



88 posted on 07/17/2011 4:47:38 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Yes, as a matter of fact, it is that time again -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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