🐱 Earth’s magnetic field is acting up and geologists don’t know why

CatParty
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-00007-1


Something strange is going on at the top of the world. Earth’s north magnetic pole has been skittering away from Canada and towards Siberia, driven by liquid iron sloshing within the planet’s core. The magnetic pole is moving so quickly that it has forced the world’s geomagnetism experts into a rare move.

On 15 January, they are set to update the World Magnetic Model, which describes the planet’s magnetic field and underlies all modern navigation, from the systems that steer ships at sea to Google Maps on smartphones.

The most recent version of the model came out in 2015 and was supposed to last until 2020 — but the magnetic field is changing so rapidly that researchers have to fix the model now. “The error is increasing all the time,” says Arnaud Chulliat, a geomagnetist at the University of Colorado Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA’s) National Centers for Environmental Information.

The problem lies partly with the moving pole and partly with other shifts deep within the planet. Liquid churning in Earth’s core generates most of the magnetic field, which varies over time as the deep flows change. In 2016, for instance, part of the magnetic field temporarily accelerated deep under northern South America and the eastern Pacific Ocean. Satellites such as the European Space Agency’s Swarm mission tracked the shift.

By early 2018, the World Magnetic Model was in trouble. Researchers from NOAA and the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh had been doing their annual check of how well the model was capturing all the variations in Earth’s magnetic field. They realized that it was so inaccurate that it was about to exceed the acceptable limit for navigational errors.

Wandering pole
“That was an interesting situation we found ourselves in,” says Chulliat. “What’s happening?” The answer is twofold, he reported last month at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in Washington DC.

First, that 2016 geomagnetic pulse beneath South America came at the worst possible time, just after the 2015 update to the World Magnetic Model. This meant that the magnetic field had lurched just after the latest update, in ways that planners had not anticipated.

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Second, the motion of the north magnetic pole made the problem worse. The pole wanders in unpredictable ways that have fascinated explorers and scientists since James Clark Ross first measured it in 1831 in the Canadian Arctic. In the mid-1990s it picked up speed, from around 15 kilometres per year to around 55 kilometres per year. By 2001, it had entered the Arctic Ocean — where, in 2007, a team including Chulliat landed an aeroplane on the sea ice in an attempt to locate the pole.

In 2018, the pole crossed the International Date Line into the Eastern Hemisphere. It is currently making a beeline for Siberia.

The geometry of Earth’s magnetic field magnifies the model’s errors in places where the field is changing quickly, such as the North Pole. “The fact that the pole is going fast makes this region more prone to large errors,” says Chulliat.

To fix the World Magnetic Model, he and his colleagues fed it three years of recent data, which included the 2016 geomagnetic pulse. The new version should remain accurate, he says, until the next regularly scheduled update in 2020.

Core questions
In the meantime, scientists are working to understand why the magnetic field is changing so dramatically. Geomagnetic pulses, like the one that happened in 2016, might be traced back to ‘hydromagnetic’ waves arising from deep in the core1. And the fast motion of the north magnetic pole could be linked to a high-speed jet of liquid iron beneath Canada2.

The jet seems to be smearing out and weakening the magnetic field beneath Canada, Phil Livermore, a geomagnetist at the University of Leeds, UK, said at the American Geophysical Union meeting. And that means that Canada is essentially losing a magnetic tug-of-war with Siberia.

“The location of the north magnetic pole appears to be governed by two large-scale patches of magnetic field, one beneath Canada and one beneath Siberia,” Livermore says. “The Siberian patch is winning the competition.”

Which means that the world’s geomagnetists will have a lot to keep them busy for the foreseeable future.
 
If the History Channel has taught me anything, it's probably aliens.

Nut jobs have been doing "The magnetic field is changing because *insert x creatures here*" nonsense for years. This is why I feel bad for any visiting aliens who don't have bad intentions. They'll be blamed for everything under the sun because aliens. Stay away from Earth, guys. You'll be blamed for Trump getting elected too.
 
Even the magnetic field is moving right, how about that.

It's drifting westward right now, which is left on maps with the north at top. Though, in 2018 on a Mercator projection map with the side edges being the 180th meridian, it would've disappeared from the left side of the map just to appear on the right side of the map Pac-Man-style.
 
This is why I feel bad for any visiting aliens who don't have bad intentions

The possibility of aliens having intentions that we would classify as good to humans is as big as the chance of a planet's atmosphere being good to humans.
 
Even the North Magnetic Pole knew that shit was getting really gay in Canada and started heading towards Russia years in advance
 
Magnetic flip incoming? That could be interesting. And potentially very, very bad depending on how the sun feels like behaving while that happens. IIRC, the models think Earth's magnetic field will weaken or disappear entirely before the flip finalizes, meaning no shields from the solar wind...
 
IIRC, there were articles on the magnetic flip and magnetic destabilization with all the climate fear mongering in the 80's, most of which had about now as the start of the instabilities.

Be funny if that was ALL they got right.
 
The answer is simple. It usually is.

Even the Earth's magnetic field can't stand Canadians. See? Simple.
 
The Earth's poles are shifting and here is why it's GOOD for you!

Anyways, I don't need no stinking scientist. I have the immortal Art Bell:
 
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Micronova incoming?
This channel does these quick space weather updates every morning. They're neat.
I saw years ago on some documentary that the magnetic field constantly flips itself throughout history. And this would be the first time with humans around, or at least the first time we can record/measure it.

A lot of these scientists who were old even said "I wish I could see the change when it happens", so to me, that's the process here.
The above channel also did a documentary in December about a possible polar shift, micronovas, Charles Hapgood, the CIA-classified Adam and Eve Story, the history of crust displacement theory, how Earth goes through cycles, and how it looks like our Sun might be the cause of those cycles. I think he also goes over the 1859 Carrington Event, the worst geomagnetic storm in recorded history, caused by a direct hit to Earth from a coronal mass ejection. The auroras could be seen as far south as Colombia, and telegraph machines that weren't hooked up to a power source could still send and receive messages.
 
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