Perilous Times
Shields down! Earth's magnetic field may disappear in a flash
* 04 March 2010
* New Scientist Magazine
There'll be little warning if Earth's magnetic field flips
EVEN if we knew precise details of Earth's core, we would not be able
to predict a catastrophic flip in the polarity of its magnetic field
more than a decade or two ahead.
Our planet's magnetic field has reversed polarity from time to time
throughout its history. Some models suggest that a flip would be
completed in a year or two, but if, as others predict, it lasted
decades or longer we would be left exposed to space radiation. This
could short-circuit satellites, pose a risk to aircraft passengers and
play havoc with electrical equipment on the ground.
To test whether we would see a flip coming, Gauthier Hulot of Denis
Diderot University in Paris, France, and colleagues ran computer
simulations of Earth's magnetic dynamo based on a range of plausible
values for inputs such as the viscosity, electrical and thermal
conductivity of the outer core, and the temperature difference across
it. The model's predictions remained consistent over this range of
values for no more than a few decades, Hulot's team will report in
Geophysical Research Letters. Their result implies that we can forecast
a flip only this far in advance - and then only with data that is as
precise as possible. "It's like predicting the weather," says Hulot.
The last polarity switch was around 800,000 years ago. Over the past
few decades, the magnetic field has weakened rapidly enough to flip
within a few thousand years, but this could also be part of a more
limited variation.