Monday, June 15, 2009
The controversial new paper published in
New Journal of Physics (co-owned by the Institute of Physics and the German
Physical Society), 'Secular variation of the Earth's magnetic field: induced by
the ocean flow?', will deflect geophysicists' attention from postulated motion
of conducting fluids in the Earth's core, the twentieth century's answer to the
mysteries of geomagnetism and magnetosphere.
Professor Gregory Ryskin
from the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern
University in Illinois, US, has defied the long-standing convention by applying
equations from magnetohydrodynamics to our oceans' salt water (which conducts
electricity) and found that the long-term changes (the secular variation) in the
Earth's main magnetic field are possibly induced by our oceans' circulation.
With calculations thus confirming Ryskin's suspicions, there were also
time and space correlations - specific indications of the integral relationship
between the oceans and our magnetospheric buffer. For example, researchers had
recorded changes in the intensity of current circulation in the North Atlantic;
Ryskin shows that these appear strongly correlated with sharp changes in the
rate of geomagnetic secular variation ("geomagnetic jerks").
Tim Smith,
senior publisher of the New Journal of Physics, said, "This article is
controversial and will no doubt cause vigorous debate, and possibly strong
opposition, from some parts of the geomagnetism community. As the author
acknowledges, the results by no means constitute a proof but they do suggest the
need for further research into the possibility of a direct connection between
ocean flow and the secular variation of the geomagnetic field."
In the
early 1920s, Einstein highlighted the large challenge that understanding our
Magnetosphere poses. It was later suggested that the Earth's magnetic field
could be a result of the flow of electrically-conducting fluid deep inside the
Earth acting as a dynamo.
In the second half of the twentieth century,
the dynamo theory, describing the process through which a rotating, convecting,
and electrically conducting fluid acts to maintain a magnetic field, was used to
explain how hot iron in the outer core of the Earth creates a magnetosphere.
The journal paper also raises questions about the structure of our
Earth's core.
Familiar text book images that illustrate a flow of hot
and highly electrically-conducting fluid at the core of the Earth are based on
conjecture and could now be rendered invalid. As the flow of fluids at the
Earth's core cannot be measured or observed, theories about changes in the
magnetosphere have been used, inversely, to infer the existence of such flow at
the core of the Earth.
While Ryskin's research looks only at long-term
changes in the Earth's magnetic field, he points out that, "If secular variation
is caused by the ocean flow, the entire concept of the dynamo operating in the
Earth's core is called into question: there exists no other evidence of
hydrodynamic flow in the core."
On a practical level, it means the next
time you use a compass you might need to thank the seas and oceans for
influencing the force necessary to guide the way.
Dr Raymond Shaw,
professor of atmospheric physics at Michigan Technological University, said, "It
should be kept in mind that the idea Professor Ryskin is proposing in his paper,
if valid, has the potential to deem irrelevant the ruling paradigm of
geomagnetism, so it will be no surprise to find individuals who are strongly
opposed or critical."
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Institute of Physics