BBC Sky at Night Magazine

THE MAGNETIC UNIVERSE

Lucie Green takes a closer look at how magnetic fields have shaped the cosmos

- ABOUT THE WRITER Lucie is a Professor of Physics and a Royal Society University Research Fellow based at the Mullard Space Science Lab

Discover how Earth’s magnetosph­ere makes life on this planet possible and the crucial role magnetic fields play in shaping our Galaxy.

You can’t see it, but it’s there. All the time, and all around you. Protecting you from harmful space radiation and preventing our atmosphere from being stripped away by solar winds – it’s the Earth’s magnetic field.

For most of us, it hardly ever catches our attention. In observatio­nal astronomy, the Earth’s magnetic poles are far less important than the geographic poles that we rely on to align our equatorial­ly mounted telescopes. Consider this, though: the Earth’s magnetic field probably made life on this planet possible, while more distant, cosmic magnetic fields are the reason that pulsars act like radio lighthouse­s and vast clouds of electrical­ly conducting gas get sculpted into strange and unusual shapes.

As magnetic fields go, Earth’s is the one we’re most familiar with and its origin lies in the electric currents that flow in the molten iron that makes up our planet’s outer core.

Planetary magnetism

Let’s take a step back and look at Earth from the surface of the Moon. From here, we can see the land, oceans and atmosphere. What we can’t see, however,

is how the Earth’s magnetic field envelops it all and extends out into space. For most of the time the Moon is inside the Earth’s magnetic field. It only pops out for a few days around the time of new Moon. When it does, the Moon moves into the solar wind – the Sun’s outer atmosphere that expands into space at a speed of a million miles an hour.

This wind can’t penetrate Earth’s magnetic field and instead slams straight into it. Although this interactio­n is invisible to the human eye, it does produce something spectacula­r: the aurora. As the solar wind pushes against Earth’s magnetic field, it adds energy to it that accelerate­s charged particles down into our atmosphere. When the particles interact with atmospheri­c gas, they pass their energy on and cause the gas to glow.

The solar wind is blocked from reaching our atmosphere because it too contains a magnetic field. We’ve learned that any magnetic field that threads through an electrical­ly charged gas (a plasma) is tied to that gas; they can’t be easily separated, or decoupled, as the process is known. So when the gusty flow of magnetised plasma reaches the Earth’s magnetic field, it flows around it, causing it to move and ripple like a windsock in a breeze. This property prevents the solar wind from reaching our atmosphere and stripping it away, as happened on Mars. It also provides us with protection from electrical­ly charged cosmic rays.

This life-preserving property that planetary magnetic fields have means that it’s important to consider them when it comes to studying exoplanets. So far, we’re unable to directly observe an exoplanet’s magnetic field. But should a technique for detecting them be developed in the future, the presence of a magnetic field around an

“The Sun allows us to investigat­e cosmic magnetism up close. We get a fantastic level of detail that really shows XV KRZ G\QDPLF VWHOODU PDJQHWLF HOGV FDQ EH

exoplanet is likely to influence which ones become targets for further study.

The discovery of the Sun’s magnetic field came in 1908 and was made by American astronomer George Ellery Hale. It’s impossible to look for and study cosmic magnetic fields without the ability to detect them from a distance using electromag­netic radiation. In 1896, Dutch physicist Pieter Zeeman was carrying out experiment­s when he found that a strong magnetic field could affect the light given off by a “luminous vapour”. The spectral lines emitted by the vapour were broadened or, in extreme cases, split into several components. In a paper published in 1897, Zeeman suggested that his discovery might be used to detect cosmic magnetic fields.

Indeed, it was this technique that was used by Hale to detect the magnetic field of sunspots. The Zeeman effect also polarises the light in particular ways that can be used to understand the strength and direction of the distant magnetic field, allowing astronomer­s to probe distant magnetism by studying electromag­netic radiation.

In fact, the Sun allows us to investigat­e cosmic magnetism up close. Observatio­ns of the Sun provide a fantastic level of detail that really shows us how dynamic stellar magnetic fields can be. The Sun has an overall magnetic field that connects the north and south magnetic poles, which are close to the heliograph­ic north and south poles, as they are on Earth.

Small-scale magnetism

But closer inspection of the solar atmosphere reveals arches of magnetic field connecting pairs of sunspots and twisted magnetic field structures known as flux ropes. These ropes are revealed because glowing, electrical­ly charged gas traces them out, similar to the way iron filings sprinkled around a bar magnet align themselves to the field lines. If you watch the Sun over time you’ll see that these magnetic structures are always changing and often erupt into the Solar System. The Sun’s spatially resolved dynamic activity, powered by magnetism, gives us a glimpse of what other stars are also up to. And it’s not just main sequence stars that have important magnetic fields.

Pulsars are a sub-set of neutron stars. Formed from the collapsed cores of high-mass stars that

have undergone a supernova explosion, they spin extremely rapidly. As they spin, they flash out pulses of radio waves, as if they were cosmic lighthouse­s. Some of them flash many times a second. When Jocelyn Bell-Burnell discovered pulsars in 1967 they were viewed as curious objects and jokingly labelled LGM for Little Green Men. But the radio flashes can be understood if you combine a very rapidly spinning star with a strong magnetic field.

As a dying star collapses, its magnetic field is also drawn in with the material of the star itself, intensifyi­ng the field strength to a trillion times that of the Earth’s. The presence of the field causes charged particles to gyrate around the magnetic field lines and when this happens, radio waves can be created. The radio signal will be concentrat­ed at the north and south magnetic poles of the neutron star. The final ingredient in the making of a pulsar is to have an offset between the star’s axis of rotation and the axis connecting the magnetic poles. This means that as the neutron star spins, the radio beam will sweep across space and our radio telescopes can detect it. In fact, neutron stars are record holders when it comes to magnetism: another sub-set of these stars harbour the strongest magnetic fields in the Universe, a thousand times stronger than that of the pulsars. These objects are rather unsurprisi­ngly known as magnetars.

Galactic magnetism

The magnetic field of Earth and the magnetic field of the Sun, thanks to the solar wind, are not the only fields we find ourselves immersed in. Our Galaxy, the Milky Way, has a magnetic field too, albeit with a strength tens of thousands of times less than that of the Earth’s. What the galactic field does have in common with the Earth, though, is that rotation is at the heart of its existence.

“One question that astronomer­s have long wanted to answer is how long PDJQHWLF HOGV have existed for”

Magnetic fields in astrophysi­cal objects are created by dynamos, a mechanism in which the rotation of an electrical­ly conductive liquid (such as the molten iron in the core of a planet) is converted into magnetic energy. In this way, how fast an astronomic­al object spins is an important aspect of magnetic fields and dynamos.

In this context we can understand why Earth has a relatively strong field whereas Mars, once thought to be more Earth-like than it is today, doesn’t. Inside Earth, the rotating molten shell means its dynamo is still acting. Mars, on the other hand, had a dynamo, but it ceased acting when the interior of this smaller planet cooled and solidified, leaving only a remnant of its magnetic field locked up in its rocks.

When it comes to timescales, stars and planets can take anything from hours to weeks to complete a single rotation. But these bodies have been around for so long that plenty of time has passed during their lifetimes to sustain and even evolve their magnetic fields. For example, the Sun rotates once every 27 days and has been around for 4.5 billion years. Assuming that the rotation rate has been constant during all of this time, the Sun could have spun over 60 billion times. This isn’t the case when it comes to galaxies though. Take the Milky Way: our Galaxy rotates once every few hundred million years, which means there has only been time for it to make a few hundred rotations. So, while a dynamo is important for our Galaxy, there are other additional processes that are making an impact and which still need to be understood.

In 2017, a team led by scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany published work showing that galaxy observatio­ns can be used to investigat­e magnetic fields when the Universe was much younger too. Their study of a galaxy that is nearly five billion lightyears away allows us to look back into the early Universe to study the history and evolution of magnetic fields, providing insight into a question that astronomer­s have long wanted to answer: how long have magnetic fields existed for?

Magnetic fields are magnificen­t and common across the cosmos. From planets and stars, to galaxies and beyond. Along with gravity, magnetism is responsibl­e for shaping and controllin­g what we observe. So, next time you look up – no matter what you’re looking at – remember the invisible force that is helping shape our Universe.

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 ??  ?? Earth’s magnetic field protects us from the solar wind, which energises particles in our atmosphere and produces the aurora
Earth’s magnetic field protects us from the solar wind, which energises particles in our atmosphere and produces the aurora
 ??  ?? Flux ropes, magnetic fields arching between sunspots, can be revealed by the glowing, charged gas tracing their paths
Flux ropes, magnetic fields arching between sunspots, can be revealed by the glowing, charged gas tracing their paths
 ??  ?? The spinning of Earth’s hot, molten interior keeps its magnetic field strong, whereas Mars’s cool, solid core makes its magnetic field much weaker
The spinning of Earth’s hot, molten interior keeps its magnetic field strong, whereas Mars’s cool, solid core makes its magnetic field much weaker
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 ??  ?? A pulsar’s beams sweep across space because the axis of its magnetic poles isn’t aligned with its axis of rotation
A pulsar’s beams sweep across space because the axis of its magnetic poles isn’t aligned with its axis of rotation
 ??  ?? The Milky Way has its own magnetic field but the Galaxy’s spin isn’t solely responsibl­e for it
The Milky Way has its own magnetic field but the Galaxy’s spin isn’t solely responsibl­e for it

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