Geomagnetic Field Changes Last 100 kyears
Billards,
The other issue, which the core model can not explain is the periodicity of the geomagnetic field changes.
Attached is a review Paper: "Time Variance in Geomagnetic Intensity" by Jean-Pierre Valet. See page 4-24, figure 9, entitled "Field variations during the past 75 kyrs."
The Laschamp magnetic field excursion (Laschamp is the name given for the minimum geomagnetic field intensity) occurred roughly 41 kyr ago, at which time the geomagnetic field intensity dropped to roughly 20% of its current value. As shown in figure 9 a) the geomagnetic field gradually recovered from the Laschamp low point. The high point in the geomagnetic field strength in the last 75 kyr matches the Holocene interglacial period. Note these field changes are confirmed with data from volcanic flows.
http://ssn.dgf.uchile.cl/home/informe/2001RG000104b.pdf
The geomagnetic field change pattern is a very rapid drop, roughly every 40 kyr years, when the Earth is at minimum obliquity, with a gradual recovery and then another rapid drop when the Earth is again at its minimum obiquity. The cycle is not exactly 41 kyrs as the driver is a solar super Maunder minimum, that occurs roughly every 8000 years. (i.e The Earth can be at or close to minimum obliquity with no effect as the 8000 year super Maunder minimum has not occurred.)
Every 100 kyears a maximum in the geomagnetic field strength is reached that correlates with the planet's interglacial period.
The link between the planet's temperature and the geomagnetic field intensity is low level clouds. The mechanism that changes the amount of global cloud cover is the geomagnetic field's modulation of galactic cosmic rays (GCR). Intensity changes in GCR have been shown by satellite data and Earth shine data to change the amount of low level clouds. More low level clouds cools the planet, less low level clouds warms the planet.
One reason why the 41 kyr and 100 kyr periodicity in the geomagnetic field is controversial, is that geophysicists, have tuned out the temperature dependency of the geomagnetic field, in the ocean floor sediment data, as they do not understand why there should be any dependency of planetary temperature to geomagnetic field strength.
i.e. Why would the geomagnetic field be would be weaker when the planet is in a glacial phase and why would the geomagnetic field be stronger when the planet is in its interglacial phase. See thread, What cause Ice Ages.
Comments:
1) Studies of other sun like stars indicate that stars when in this super Maunder minimum, emmit flares that are roughly 30,000 times stronger than the flares that occur during the normal solar cycle.
2) The thread in the astrophysics section, Changes in the Solar Cycle, has some discussion of the solar cycle mechanism. The solar cycle gradually removes massive magnetic fields that are generated at the solar radiative zone to convection zone over lap. When the solar cycle is interrupted these fields build up and then are released in a single solar flare (super sunspot) rather than the 1000s of sun spots that are generated every solar cycle.
3) It appears that the radiative zone to convection zone overlap is interrupted by the large planets that move the sun's core which separates the two zones. That is the reason why the super Maunder minimum occurs periodically. (i.e. Orbital effects of the large planets on the sun is periodic.)