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  • You may have heard that the earth’s magnetic poles tend to move around.

  • I mean, so do the geographic poles, but magnetic North and South are really mobile...and magnetic

  • North in particular is moving real fast.

  • Like, way faster than we thought it would.

  • And the scientific community is coming up with some really exciting and creative ways

  • to figure out why.

  • The prevailing theory about why our planet has a magnetic field in the first place is

  • because of what’s underneath the crust.

  • Dynamo theory, as it’s called, is the idea that the molten metals of the outer core,

  • like iron are being convectedbasically, swirledall around the Earth’s interior,

  • around the solid inner core.

  • This continuously creates electric currents as charged particles move through this liquid

  • metal, andin combination with the rotation of the Earthbecomes what’s called a dynamo:

  • the source of a magnetic field.

  • This also explains why the magnetic poles are not necessarily fixed points, because

  • the liquid that creates the magnetic field is turbulent, and always shifting, the poles

  • move as the fluid does. Right now, for instance, the North magnetic Pole has been slipping

  • down into Siberia for the past 150 years or so...and it’s speeding up.

  • Our magnetic field actually has a name. It's called the magnetosphere and it plays a crucial role

  • in making Earth a habitable planet.

  • It wards off much of space’s harmful radiation like cosmic rays, acting like an essential

  • protective cloak around the Earth.

  • Which is one reason why scientists and governments are so invested in knowing how it works and how

  • it will behave.

  • Like with the World Magnetic Model, for example.

  • This huge and innovative computer model of Earth’s magnetic field behavior is used

  • by many international bodies as the guiding standard on what the world’s magnetic field

  • is up to.

  • It combines sensor measurements of the field’s strength and position, measurements which

  • are then used in simulations of the geodynamo’s past, present, and future behavior.

  • The WMM releases updates to the model every five years, but in 2019, it was forced to

  • release a mid-cycle update because magnetic North has been sauntering vaguely downwards

  • much faster than anticipated...the perfect example of the fact that even though were

  • measuring and predicting to the best of our abilities, the geodynamo is too unpredictable

  • and complex to make a truly complete model of it.

  • That uncertainty means scientists are also looking for experimental ways to further probe

  • the Earth’s magnetic behavior, which typically involves creating models of the Earth out

  • of liquid sodium.

  • Which is quite the commitment, because sodium is a highly reactive metal that is extremely

  • difficult to handle and likes to spontaneously burst into flame.

  • New sodium ball experiments are being used in several labs worldwide, andin combination

  • with improvements in computing and machine learningcould help us gain more insight

  • into how Earth’s magnetic field will change...and how we could prepare for when it does.

  • Because what does a shifting magnetic field actually mean for us?

  • Flipped poles would mean that the names of Earth’s hemispheres may be a bit confused

  • for a while, and compasses would point in the opposite direction than they did previously.

  • But more importantly, as the poles shift around, the magnetosphere could get weaker, with several

  • smaller magnetic poles popping up in other places around Earth.

  • A weakened magnetosphere means many things: the Northern lights will be visible in new

  • parts of the world, for a start.

  • All our satellites would need to be extra fortified against radiation, or we risk them

  • getting totally fried by space weather like solar wind.

  • Electronics here on Earth would be extremely vulnerable to interference and destruction

  • by space radiation too, like our power grids.

  • And that’s not even mentioning the human health effects of being exposed to much higher

  • degrees of radiation from space, which let me tell you, are not great.

  • We know from studying magnetic inclusions that Earth’s magnetic field has flipped

  • entirely in the pastthey trade places about every 300,000 years, or so but it’s

  • been over double that since the last time we know they flipped.

  • So we are long overdue for some magnetic migration and it’s happening...fast.

  • And scientists are working hard to understand why and how they move and what exactly it

  • may mean for us when they do.

  • The next update to the WMM is expected in early 2020.

  • Do you want to know more about it when it comes out?

  • Let us know down in the comments below.

  • Make sure you subscribe to Seeker for all your science news, and for more on surprising

  • things inside the planet, check out this video here.

  • As alwaysthanks for watching, and well see ya next time.

You may have heard that the earth’s magnetic poles tend to move around.

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地球的磁北極正在南移......那麼現在怎麼辦? (Earth’s Magnetic North Pole Is Shifting South… So What Now?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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