Manawatu Standard

Magnetic reversal: No panic

- Gwynne Dyer

For a moment there I thought we had a new global threat to deal with, alongside the old favourites like climate change, nuclear war and pandemics. This would have been welcome from a journalist­ic point of view, since there is a constant need for scary new topics to write about.

Otherwise we would fail in our primary task, which is to provide material to hold the ads apart.

I was also experienci­ng some personal indignatio­n, since the putative new threat, the imminent reversal of the Earth’s magnetic field, was underminin­g one of the few practical skills I have retained from my early career in various navies: the ability to navigate by magnetic compasses.

Unfortunat­ely, the magnetic compass points to the Magnetic North Pole, which is in a different place from the true North Pole.

But it was, for all of my life and indeed for many lifetimes before that, in more or less the same place.

The Magnetic North Pole wandered a bit over time, but it followed a fairly predictabl­e path around a relatively small tract of territory among Canada’s Arctic islands.

Alas, the Magnetic North Pole left home about 30 years ago, and is now heading for Siberia at a speed of 60km a year.

It is moving fast because it is movements within the Earth’s molten outer core that generate the planet’s magnetic field.

The currents within this vast volume of liquid nickel-iron change from time to time, and when they do they can shift the magnetic poles as well.

The worry is that this sort of behaviour by the magnetic pole may be signalling an impending ‘‘flip’’ in which the north and south magnetic poles change places.

This has happened before – indeed, the Earth’s magnetic field has reversed its polarity at least 183 times before, according to the geological record – and it makes no long-term difference.

The scary bit is the transition, which can take as long as a thousand years or as little as one lifetime, because during that transition the strength of the planet’s magnetic field falls to around 5 per cent of normal.

If the ozone hole worried you a bit, this should frighten you to death – and the strength of the magnetic field is already falling.

That was my initial reaction to the news. Every decade seems to bring news of yet another way that the universe can kill us. But not, it turns out, this one.

The consensus among scientists is that the surface of the planet is not bombarded by hard radiation during the intervals when the Earth’s internally generated magnetic field all but disappears for a time.

Instead, the solar wind itself induces a magnetic field in the extreme upper limit of the planet’s atmosphere (the ionosphere) that stops incoming high-energy particles from reaching the surface.

We may have the opportunit­y to check the validity of this prediction in the relatively near future, but for the moment there is no need to panic.

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