sage said:
why does Earth's magnetic field flip polarity at regular intervals?does it have any effect on the biosphere. are we in the midst of a flip as a recent programme in discovery channel suggested?thak you.
I saw a mind bending program about this on television three or four months ago. I don't know if it was the same you saw. They presented the history of the flips as far as anyone understands them, and have, indeed, determined that we are on the verge of the next one, based on the history of variations in the local magnetic field that they have, which covers something like the last 300 years. Most of this is from the ship logs of people like Captain Cook who sailed the globe and kept strict records of the variations.
The same kinds of local variations that preceeded big flips in the ancient rock measurements seem to be taking place now: There is a huge spot in the south Atlantic ocean where the Earth's magnetic field is very much weaker than normal. They know from the historical records this wasn't there in Cooks day: it is quite recent.
The "flip" is actually not a sudden reversal. It takes a few hundred years. That is fast in geological terms but will be quite disorienting and dangerous for the generations who come after us and have to live through it. Not only will North and South not be where they are now, there will probably be eight constantly shifting North-South magnetic poles. (Nothing to do with the axis of spin, mind you.)
The main danger is that we will no longer have the protection from cosmic rays we have now. The way it is now, cosmic rays hit the Earth's magnetic field and are shunted up and down to the poles, and away from all the population centers. Without this protection from cosmic rays it will be very dangerous to spend much time out in the sun at all. Incidents of cancer, they said, will skyrocket. The world will have to turn to living on a night shift for people to go about their business.
All this has happened before, according to the magnetic records they have found in ancient rock masses. It seems to happen every seventy-five to one hundred thousand years. There are people working very hard to figure out as many details as possible: how long, exactly, does the "flip" take? 500, 1000, 1500 years? In addition, there are lots and lots of researchers working on figuring out just how the Earth generates it's magnetic field in the first place. Unlocking the secret of that mechanism will contribute a great deal to predicting the course of the magnetic flip, and how to prepare.
Although they are sure the flip has started, they said they didn't believe anyone alive today would live long enough for it to affect their lives.
I am more inclined to think I saw this on KPBS than on the Discovery Channel, but I don't remember which exactly.