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Which way to turn?

If you took a compass into space, how far above the Earth鈥檚 surface would you have to go before it stopped showing which way is north? Further into space it would presumably respond to the magnetic field of the sun or planets, but how could we interpret its reading?

鈥 The magnetic field of the Earth looks like a dipole (the shape formed by iron filings around a bar magnet), although the Earth鈥檚 is rotated about the field鈥檚 axis to form a three-dimensional shape. This extends to about 60,000 kilometres into space. On the ground we use a compass in two dimensions. In space you can use a 3D 鈥渃ompass鈥 to map out the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field, again giving an indication of north.

Beyond 60,000 kilometres into space, in the direction of the sun, we exit the Earth鈥檚 magnetosphere and pass into the solar wind, which also carries the sun鈥檚 magnetic field. During undisturbed solar periods the sun鈥檚 field is shaped like a spiral, thanks to the sun鈥檚 rotation, in the same way that a hosepipe whirled over your head emits a spiral of water.

Magnetic field measurements are made by interplanetary spacecraft to understand how the sun鈥檚 magnetic field and solar wind interact with the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field. For instance, auroral displays are generated by the solar and terrestrial magnetic fields interlinking to allow solar wind plasma to enter the atmosphere.

On the opposite side of the Earth from the sun, the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field is pulled into a long magnetic tail by its interaction with the solar wind, typically to 7 million kilometres or more. A compass in this geomagnetic tail would point along the tail, either towards or away from the Earth.

It is interesting to note that if we left the solar system 鈥 beyond the 鈥渉eliopause鈥 where the solar wind ceases to have an effect 鈥 and travelled into interstellar space (approximately 150 astronomical units from Earth), our compass would start to measure the galactic field. Here, our magnetic field measurements might point towards the constellation Pyxis, appropriately better known as the Compass.

Steve Milan, Leicester, UK

Topics: Last Word

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