alpha2cen Posted January 18, 2011 Posted January 18, 2011 There is a theory about Earth's magnetic fields origin. But, how about this origin theory possibility, i.e., nuclear reaction in the core? I think the nuclear reaction makes heat and radiation, and the heat and radiation make electric current in the Earth inside. The electric current movement induces the Earth's magnetic fields. And, the heat generated from the nuclear reaction induces the Earth cluster movement, and the movement caused to volcanic eruption and earth quake. This is one possibility.
John Cuthber Posted January 18, 2011 Posted January 18, 2011 Much of the Earth's heat is produced by nuclear reactions. If it were not then we would have cooled down ages ago. This was the flaw in Lord Kelvin's estimate of the age of the Earth; he didn't know about radioactivity. However the important thing to remember is that maintaining a magnetic field does not (in principle) require power so you don't need a power source. It's sufficient that the earth's core is molten and moving through the field to maintain that field. The current will have resistive losses so there will be a transfer of energy which will slow down the rotation over the ages.
Moontanman Posted January 18, 2011 Posted January 18, 2011 Georeactor... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georeactor The Earth's magnetic field in relation to the reactorAccording to Herndon, the energy produced by the reactor is what sustains the magnetic field of the Earth. He says the energy produced maintains the field. The field has weakened in recent years to indicate a possible polarity switch of our planet's poles. In his theory the switches in the field are caused by the reactor turning on and off.
steevey Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 If iron and other magnetic metals lose their magnetic properties when they become molten, how could the core of the Earth be appropriately 9000 degrees?
alpha2cen Posted January 19, 2011 Author Posted January 19, 2011 Does the Sun have South pole and North pole same direction as Earth magnetic pole? How big is the intensity ?
insane_alien Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 Does the Sun have South pole and North pole same direction as Earth magnetic pole? no. it has many north and south poles and the number varies with time as does their location. How big is the intensity ? far greater than earths. This is all due to the fact that the sun is a conductor all the way through while the earth only has a little bit of molten metal near the center.
alpha2cen Posted January 19, 2011 Author Posted January 19, 2011 no. it has many north and south poles and the number varies with time as does their location. Then we can not use campus near the Sun. Does it have average magnetic pole?
michel123456 Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 If iron and other magnetic metals lose their magnetic properties when they become molten, how could the core of the Earth be appropriately 9000 degrees? What is the answer to that question?
imatfaal Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 The magnetic field is not caused by a simple lump of iron which is magnetic - as you pointed out the iron is above the curie point (about 1000 deg c IIRC) and is no longer a simple magnet. The field is caused by electric currents which flow around/through the core in a rolling cylindircal formation (caused by coriolis) that are aligned NS. You could visualise this as a series of convection currents which form the outer realm of the liquid core - the axis of these rotations is north south - ie a ring of rotating currents around the central mass. This is known as the dynamo effect - but I cannot find a decent webpage to demonstrate nor can I find the words to explain.
michel123456 Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 (edited) The magnetic field is not caused by a simple lump of iron which is magnetic - as you pointed out the iron is above the curie point (about 1000 deg c IIRC) and is no longer a simple magnet. The field is caused by electric currents which flow around/through the core in a rolling cylindircal formation (caused by coriolis) that are aligned NS. You could visualise this as a series of convection currents which form the outer realm of the liquid core - the axis of these rotations is north south - ie a ring of rotating currents around the central mass. This is known as the dynamo effect - but I cannot find a decent webpage to demonstrate nor can I find the words to explain. Shouldn't in this case the geographic & magnetic pole coincide? IIRC the cause of Earth's magnetic field has not been fully described yet. Edited January 19, 2011 by michel123456
D H Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 If iron and other magnetic metals lose their magnetic properties when they become molten, how could the core of the Earth be appropriately 9000 degrees? Magnetohydrodynamics (google that phrase). These lecture slides from an upper-level undergraduate Earth Sciences class at Berkeley give a nice overview: http://seismo.berkeley.edu/~rallen/eps122/lectures/L07.pdf.
insane_alien Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 Then we can not use campus near the Sun. Does it have average magnetic pole? you can use a compass near the sun if you want. It will still show you where the nearest north pole is. whether this is the information you want is another matter.
dalemiller Posted January 20, 2011 Posted January 20, 2011 There is a theory about Earth's magnetic fields origin. But, how about this origin theory possibility, i.e., nuclear reaction in the core? I think the nuclear reaction makes heat and radiation, and the heat and radiation make electric current in the Earth inside. The electric current movement induces the Earth's magnetic fields. And, the heat generated from the nuclear reaction induces the Earth cluster movement, and the movement caused to volcanic eruption and earth quake. This is one possibility. We really have a south magnetic pole amid the Artic Circle (That is on our left when we face East.) If we just spin the earth Eastward and charge the earth with a negative charge, that would do to produce a South magnetic pole up North. I tried it and it works!
alpha2cen Posted January 21, 2011 Author Posted January 21, 2011 If there were no Earth magnetic line, how much amount of the solar radiation on the surface of the Earth is increased?
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now