Earth more Sun-exposed with rapid magnetic field reversals

Image credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre, Flickr
Image credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre, Flickr
A study on past reversals of Earth's magnetic field has found that a rapid shift occurred within two centuries - such an event in future would increase our exposure to the Sun's radiation that may cause trillions of dollars in power and communications systems damage. The international research team found that magnetic field reversals - whereby the South Pole became the North Pole and vice versa - could happen much more rapidly than the thousands of years previously thought. Professor Andrew Roberts from ANU said the magnetic field's strength decreased by about 90 per cent when a field reversal occurred, making the Earth much more vulnerable to the Sun's radiation. "Earth's magnetic field, which has existed for at least 3.45 billion years, provides a shield from the direct impact of solar radiation," said Professor Roberts from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences who was part of the study led by Distinguished Professor Chuan-Chou Shen at the National Taiwan University and lead author Dr Yu-Min Chou of the Southern University of Science and Technology in China. "Even with Earth's strong magnetic field today, we're still susceptible to solar storms that can damage our electricity-based society." A field reversal would have much more of an effect than the solar storm that hit Earth in 1859. A similar magnitude solar storm today would cause major damage to power grids and communications systems worth trillions of dollars. "Hopefully such an event is a long way in the future and we can develop technologies to avoid huge damage, where possible, from such events," Professor Roberts said.
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