Australian Sky & Telescope - April 2018

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18 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE April 2018


CHAOTIC REVERSAL: GARY GLATZMAIER & PAUL ROBERTS; JUPITER: NASA / ESA / A. SIMON; FACING PAGE: NASA-GODDARD SPACE SCIENTIFIC VI

SUALIZATION STUDIO

no measurable global field at all. The Moon and Mars lack
a global field, but their rocks have locked in patches of
ancient crustal magnetism. The most pronounced fields on
Mars appear in a series of magnetic stripes of alternating
polarity in the southern hemisphere. The rocks in these linear
features preserve a record of a dipolar field that experienced
reversals before it shut down eons ago.
Geophysicists wonder why Mercury’s magnetic field is not
stronger, and why Venus can’t whip up a magnetic field at
all. Mercury has a huge iron-rich core that’s at least partially
molten, and Venus has almost the same size, mass and bulk
density as Earth. In one or both cases, the lower mantle
might be acting as an impenetrable lid — inhibiting heat from
escaping from the core, stifling vigorous convection and thus
preventing a dynamo from revving up.
Plate tectonics might be the critical factor that explains
why Earth has a magnetic field and these other worlds do not.

In a process known as subduction, which occurs where crustal
plates collide, slabs of cold oceanic crust sink all the way
down to the core-mantle boundary, making it easy for heat
to escape the core through the lower mantle. This cooling
mechanism drives the churning convective motions in the
outer core that stirs up Earth’s dynamo.
Another recent idea suggests that Venus lacks a global field
because its core has distinct compositional layers, like an
onion, that prevent the kind of wholesale convection that’s
taking place inside Earth.
The lack of present-day magnetism within the Moon and
Mars is less mysterious. Both worlds once had fields, perhaps
substantial ones, but they’re both so small that their interiors
would have cooled off rather quickly. Once the liquid in their
cores froze, any dynamo action would have ceased.

Magnetic fields and life
Earth and its inhabitants have been lucky. Our planet’s
magnetic influence extends deep into space, providing
an invisible force field that at least partially shields our
atmosphere from the ravages of the solar wind and cosmic
radiation.
By shielding a planet’s atmosphere, a strong global
magnetic field can also play a critical role in keeping
liquid water stable on the surface for the billions of
years needed for primitive life to evolve into more
complex forms. It’s easy to draw the conclusion
that having a respectable magnetic field for
billions of years was essential to preserving
Earth’s atmosphere and nurturing the evolution
of complex life.
Anyone making this argument can point to Mars.
The Red Planet has lacked a global magnetic field for
most of its history, with dire consequences for the Martian
atmosphere. NASA’s MAVEN orbiter has documented how

W CHAOTIC
REVERSAL These three
snapshots show the
contorted state of the
dipolar magnetic field in
Earth’s liquid outer core
during three stages in
a computer-simulated
field reversal. Yellow
denotes outward-
directed (with north
polarity) field lines; blue
denotes inward-directed
(south) lines.

The giant planets
Earth’s magnetic field pales in comparison to those
of Jupiter and Saturn. In particular, Jupiter’s mighty
dynamo generates a magnetic field that’s roughly
20,000 times more powerful than ours. Its
magnetosphere extends deep into space, with
the oomph to deflect the solar wind 3 million
km before it reaches the planet. Jupiter’s
magnetic tail extends all the way to the orbit
of Saturn. NASA’s Juno spacecraft recently
found that Jupiter’s field, like Earth’s, changes
significantly from one location to another. This
local variability suggests that the dynamo region is
closer to the planet’s cloudtops than previously thought.

500 years
before midpoint

500 years
after midpoint

Midpoint

FIELD FLIP AHEAD?
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