Bizarro Monk wrote:Dear Mr Outlaw. Aren't we due for a full magnet pole switch soon.
Nobody really knows. Geological records indicate Earth has semi-regular pole flips every 300,000 to 400,000 years or so, and we haven't had one in 780,000 years, so supposedly over due, but then another ice age is supposedly due also, so much of the science seems speculative, there are no certainties.
Bizarro Monk wrote: This may be the beginning of that process. I would have thought that the fields and points of the poles has more to do with the core of the earth, the alignment of the iron atoms as the flow of the core changes than any effect from a solar storm. I am just a monk and know very little about this world as I focus on the life after this one.
A reasonable ussumption and probably correct most of the time, but knowledge of the machinations is still uncertain.
Its true reports of the outer core have supposedly been behaving erratically in recent years, but report of the core having reversed spin direction have been debunked.
What is known for sure is that solar winds from coronal mass ejections [CME] temporarilly reduce the strength of our magnetosphere and that our sun has recently had a magnetic pole flip indicating it is nearing a solar maximum.
On occasion solar flares from CMEs reach out so far into the solar system, the sun's and Earth's magnetic fields link up allowing a direct transfer of energy from the sun to Earth. The visible result being Northern Lights and Southern Aurora.
Magnetic poles tend to be in constant drift of roughly 10 miles per year, but recently drift has accelerated to 40 miles per year.
Bizarro (=DT?) if you have an tech info or postulations regarding the cause of mag pole drift acceleration, I'd be interested to see it.
EDIT ADDITION - just noticed the scientific american blog post above ... thanks.