First Measurement of Magnetic Field In Earth's Core 34
An anonymous reader writes "A University of California, Berkeley, geophysicist has made the first-ever measurement of the strength of the magnetic field inside Earth's core, 1,800 miles underground. The magnetic field strength is 25 Gauss, or 50 times stronger than the magnetic field at the surface that makes compass needles align north-south. Though this number is in the middle of the range geophysicists predict, it puts constraints on the identity of the heat sources in the core that keep the internal dynamo running to maintain this magnetic field."
The final sentence (Score:2)
"I still find it remarkable that we can look to distant quasars to get insights into the deep interior of our planet," Buffett said.
I don't think we need more reasons to study space, but here's one anyway. Studying quasars billions of light years away helps us understand the Earth's magnetic field - what more support do we need for the value and interrelatedness of any and all scientific research?
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Of course, now that we've measured it, the field strength has changed...
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"Scientists use quasars like a drunk uses a lamppost: for support rather than illumination."
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Neato (Score:5, Informative)
He used the precession effect on Earth's core caused by the moon to calculate how much the magnetic induction deviated the calculated value of precession from the measured value. Basically, the field imparts a force that counteracts the precession of the inner core that is measurable. It's pretty clever how he was able to calculate the strength of the magnetic field the way he did:
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It's behind a paywall, but here is the actual paper that wasn't identified in the link. [nature.com]
The way the submitted stories seem to overwhelmingly favor paywalls, and when I see that a thoughtful person usually finds and posts a relevant link with no such restrictions, I can't help but wonder if Slashdot has some kind of "kickback" arrangement with several paywall sites. I wonder the same thing when I see multiple submissions for a particular story and the one that makes it to the main page tends to be someone's ad-laden blog. I have no idea if that's all a coincidence or not and have seen no evid
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For scientific journals, almost all of them are behind paywalls, especially the high-profile ones. So unless the scientists put the articles on arXiv (which not all do; also some journals may not allow that) or choose one of the few
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The way the submitted stories seem to overwhelmingly favor paywalls, and when I see that a thoughtful person usually finds and posts a relevant link with no such restrictions, I can't help but wonder if Slashdot has some kind of "kickback" arrangement with several paywall sites.
I doubt it, but such a system is certainly technically possible. My perception of slashdot is more one of incompetence than malice.
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The way the submitted stories seem to overwhelmingly favor paywalls, and when I see that a thoughtful person usually finds and posts a relevant link with no such restrictions, I can't help but wonder if Slashdot has some kind of "kickback" arrangement with several paywall sites.
I love how this theory popped up in a story where the opposite happened: The submitted story's link is to a free news article, while a thoughtful user provided the paywall-blocked original paper. /. stories usually, though not alwa
So, is our goose cooked? (Score:3, Interesting)
Did they find out when the magnetic dynamo will cool down, running out of steam, leaving the Earth naked to the overly-spicy energy of space; baking our DNA into wispy little snippets of death-inducing mutations; sending all us land-dwelling mammals into a deep, eternal nap; with our limbs and genitals joining a new journey as worm nutrients?
Or, are they still working on that question?
Re:So, is our goose cooked? (Score:5, Insightful)
In a thousand years or so, fossil fuels will be gone. In a hundred thousand years the biosphere will be totally run down by human exploitation, unless we manage it end to end as a farm. In a billion years (or so) the suns output will have changed to move the habitable zone away from the Earth. In five billion years the sun will become a red giant and we will all be toast.
I don't know when we will lose the magnetic field but if it happens anywhere after a thousand years from now we should be able to build our own. If we can't then we are not much of an intelligent species and we will be heading for extinction anyway.
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and we will all be toast.
Toast, pâté de foie gras. You're making me hungry.
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No worries. By then, I doubt we'll be the species, anyway.
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In a thousand years or so, fossil fuels will be gone. In a hundred thousand years the biosphere will be totally run down by human exploitation, unless we manage it end to end as a farm. In a billion years (or so) the suns output will have changed to move the habitable zone away from the Earth. In five billion years the sun will become a red giant and we will all be toast.
I don't know when we will lose the magnetic field but if it happens anywhere after a thousand years from now we should be able to build our own. If we can't then we are not much of an intelligent species and we will be heading for extinction anyway.
If the human race manages to survive another thousand years without vaporizing ourselves or pissing off some extraterrestrial race first.
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That's the kind of thinking the dinosaurs used.
Re:Measurement? What measurement? (Score:5, Insightful)
Can you name any measurement that isn't indirect in some way? To measure a magnetic field, you're actually observing something that the field affects such as a Hall effect magnetometer which measures the voltage potential induced by a magnetic field in a conductor or a SQUID magnetometer which measures a current accross a josephson junction
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and worse than that, you're doing it with your eyes! when's the last time you had your vision checked? seen any good optical illusions recently? eyes are terribly unreliable things....
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Can you name any measurement that isn't indirect in some way?
"Indirect" can be thought to mean "by observing other natural phenomena", opposed by "direct" meaning "observing only phenomena happening with specifically built measurement device".
Directness starts at the point where everything is specifically constructed for the measurement, and wouldn't be happening without the measurement device or measurement operation.
Like, measuring amount of light by using an artificial sensor that gives out well defined signal would be a direct measurement. The signal from the sen
Fucking Magnets (Score:1)
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Does it explain how they work?
No, but Richard Feynman does [youtube.com].
Reporters attempted to contact David Innes (Score:2)
...for comment, but he was unavailable.