davenn said:
exactly, the magnetic field as like a huge shield deflecting much of the solar wind/CME's
I know it's described this way a lot, but it just seems like a weird description to me.
The magnetic field bends the trajectories of the particles perpendicular to the field lines. I.e., if the charged particle is moving towards a magnetic field that is oriented up/down, then it gets deflected to either the left or right depending upon the charge and direction of the magnetic field. If the particles are moving slowly enough, this results in them looping around the magnetic field lines, which ultimately causes them to impact the poles (this is the process I was thinking about).
Now, if the magnetic field were uniform, and the charged particles weren't captured by it, then this deflection would have no impact on the flux of charged particles. It would just change the direction they come from.
So I think it's more like the Earth's magnetic field acts like a lens. In one way of thinking about it, this "lens" makes the Earth look smaller to the charged particles, in that fewer trajectories impact the Earth.
I wasn't able to find a source describing the Earth's magnetic field as a lens, but did find this article regarding the solar system's magnetic field as it pertains to high-energy cosmic rays coming from outside the solar system:
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1005.4668.pdf
An interesting feature there is that the magnetic field for the solar system apparently disperses cosmic rays of one charge, while focusing cosmic rays of the opposite charge. If this effect is the same for the Earth's magnetic field, then I'm pretty sure what happens is that protons from the solar wind are dispersed, while electrons are focused. But electrons, having vastly smaller masses, may be captured much more efficiently than the protons. Their effects would be smaller too, however, so that they probably would get redirected to the poles. If this is correct, this would give the Earth a slight negative electric charge (it can't build up too much because a negative electric charge will push away electrons). I recall from astrophysics classes way back when that the stellar winds cause stars to be slightly charged through a similar process (protons and electrons are emitted with different efficiencies by the wind).