{"id":56017,"date":"2019-02-05T18:37:57","date_gmt":"2019-02-05T13:07:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnlive.com\/?p=56017"},"modified":"2019-02-05T18:53:34","modified_gmt":"2019-02-05T13:23:34","slug":"magnetic-north-pole-moving-55-km-year-scientists-update-world-magnetic-model","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/apnlive.com\/science\/magnetic-north-pole-moving-55-km-year-scientists-update-world-magnetic-model\/","title":{"rendered":"Magnetic North Pole moving 55 km a year, scientists update world magnetic model"},"content":{"rendered":"

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]On Monday, scientists released an update of where true north really was.<\/p>\n

Such updates are nothing new and usually happen every five years, but this time it came nearly a year ahead of schedule because the Earth’s north magnetic pole is shifting fast \u2013 about 55 km a year \u2013 in the last few decades rendering past estimates no longer accurate enough for precise navigation.<\/p>\n

The magnetic north pole crossed the international date line in 2017, and is leaving the Canadian Arctic on its way to Siberia. Its movement has become really fast \u2013 about five times its previous rate \u2013 and no one can explain why.<\/p>\n

The constant shift is a problem for compasses in smartphones and some consumer electronics. Airplanes and boats also rely on magnetic north, usually as backup navigation, said University of Colorado geophysicist Arnaud Chulliat, lead author of the newly issued World Magnetic Model.<\/p>\n

GPS isn’t affected because it’s satellite-based.<\/p>\n

Magnetic north is one of three \u201cnorth poles\u201d on our globe. First, there’s true north<\/strong>, which is the northern end of the axis on which the Earth rotates.<\/p>\n

But our planet’s protective magnetic bubble, or magnetosphere, isn’t perfectly aligned with this spin, explained National Geographic (NG). Instead, the dynamo of Earth’s core creates a magnetic field that is slightly tilted from the planet’s rotational axis. The northern end of this planet-size bar magnet is what’s known as geomagnetic north<\/strong> \u2014 a point sitting off the northwest coast of Greenland that’s changed position little over the last century.<\/p>\n

Then there’s magnetic north<\/strong>, what your compass locates, which is defined as the point at which magnetic field lines point vertically down. Unlike geomagnetic north, this position is more susceptible to the surges and flows in the swirl of liquid iron in the core, said NG. These currents tug on the magnetic field, sending magnetic north hopping across the globe.<\/p>\n

The military depends on where magnetic north is for navigation and parachute drops, while NASA, the Federal Aviation Administration, and the US Forest Service also use it.<\/p>\n

Airport runway names are based on their direction toward magnetic north and their names change when the poles move. For example, the airport in Fairbanks, Alaska, renamed a runway 1L-19R to 2L-20R in 2009.<\/p>\n

The US and the United Kingdom tend to update the location of the magnetic north pole every five years in December, but this update came early because of the pole’s faster movement.<\/p>\n

Since 1831 when it was first measured in the Canadian Arctic, the magnetic north pole has moved about 2300 kilometers toward Siberia. Its speed jumped from about 11 km per year to 55 km per year since 2000.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/p>\n

The reason is turbulence in Earth’s liquid outer core about 2897 km below the surface. There is a hot liquid ocean of iron and nickel in the planet’s core and its motion generates an electric field, said University of Maryland geophysicist Daniel Lathrop, who wasn’t part of the team monitoring the magnetic north pole.<\/p>\n

The magnetic south pole is moving far slower than the north.<\/p>\n

In general Earth’s magnetic field is getting weaker, leading scientists to say that it will eventually flip, where north and south pole changes polarity, like a bar magnet flipping over. It has happened numerous times in Earth’s past, but not in the last 780,000 years.<\/p>\n

\u201cIt’s not a question of if it’s going to reverse, the question is when it’s going to reverse,\u201d Lathrop said. When it reverses, it won’t be like a coin flip, but take 1,000 or more years, experts said.<\/p>\n

Lathrop sees a flip coming sooner rather than later because of the weakened magnetic field and an area over the South Atlantic has already reversed beneath Earth’s surface.<\/p>\n

It is only in recent years, scientists noticed, that magnetic north’s movement has shifted into high gear, sending it galloping across the Northern Hemisphere \u2014 and no one can entirely explain why.<\/p>\n

The changes have been so large that scientists began working on an emergency update for the World Magnetic Model, the mathematical system that lays the foundations for navigation, from cell phones and ships to commercial airlines. But then the US government shut down, placing the model’s official release on hold, as Nature News first reported earlier this year.<\/p>\n

Finally, the World Magnetic Model update was officially released on Monday, and magnetic north can again be precisely located for people around the world.<\/p>\n

The World Magnetic Model<\/strong><\/p>\n

To account for the periodic shift of magnetic north, the World Magnetic Model was developed by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the British Geological Survey (BGS) \u201cso they would all be on the same map, essentially,\u201d says Ciaran Beggan, a geophysicist with the BGS.<\/p>\n

The model is updated every five years, with the last update in 2015. Between each update, scientists check the model’s accuracy against data from ground magnetic observatories and the European Space Agency’s Swarm mission\u2014a trio of magnetic-field mapping satellites that zip around Earth 15 to 16 times each day. Until now, this seemed sufficient to keep up with magnetic north’s march toward Siberia.<\/p>\n

In the mid 1900s, the north magnetic pole was lumbering along at less than a hundred feet each day, adding up to less than 11km of difference each year. But in the ’90s, this started to change and by the early 2000s, it had speeded up five times to some 55 km each year.<\/p>\n

\u201cThings are acting very strangely at high latitude,\u201d says Livermore, who notes that this increase seemed to coincide with a strengthening jet in the planet’s liquid outer core. Though the events could be linked, it’s not yet possible to say for sure.<\/p>\n

By early 2018, scientists realized that the model would soon exceed the acceptable limits for magnetic-based navigation. Something had to be done before the model’s next regular update, slated for 2020.<\/p>\n

To correct the model, NOAA and BGS scientists tweaked it using three years’ worth of recent data. This updated version was pre-released online in October 2018.<\/p>\n

The government shutdown delayed the comprehensive public release of the information, which includes online calculators, software, and a technical note describing the changes. In principal, everyone who uses magnetic navigation could benefit from this update, says Arnaud Chulliat, a geomagnetist at the University of Colorado in Boulder and a NOAA affiliate who worked on the update.<\/p>\n

Whether this change affect will you <\/strong><\/p>\n

The model has found its way into many of our modern mapping systems, including Google and Apple, Beggan adds. But the difference is minor for most civilian purposes, and the changes are mainly limited to latitudes above 55 degrees.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe average user is not going to be overly affected by this unless they happened to be trekking around the high Arctic,\u201d Beggan says.<\/p>\n

Animals that use Earth\u2019s magnetic field for navigation \u2014 including birds, salmon, and sea turtles \u2014 could get lost during their routine journeys but, eventually, they will sort this out and, all other things being equal, life will go on, the NG report said.<\/p>\n

An overall weakening of the magnetic field isn’t good for people and especially satellites and astronauts. The magnetic field shields Earth from some dangerous radiation, Lathrop said.<\/p>\n

When the poles do reverse, Earth\u2019s magnetic field could get weaker \u2014 but its strength is already quite variable, so that\u2019s not necessarily unusual, and there\u2019s no indication it will vanish entirely, according to NASA. It never has.<\/p>\n

One total bonus of having a weaker magnetic field is that auroras will be visible from much lower latitudes, so the nighttime skies will be even more epic.<\/p>\n

If the magnetic field gets substantially weaker and stays that way for an appreciable amount of time Earth will be less protected from the high-energy particles flying around in space. This means that everything on the planet will be exposed to higher levels of radiation, which over time could produce an increase in diseases like cancer, as well as harm delicate spacecraft and power grids on Earth.<\/p>\n

These are consequences we can prepare for. For now, said the NG report, we\u2019re doing a decent job of introducing carcinogenic toxins to the environment and otherwise altering the ways in which ecosystems normally function, so there are bigger things to worry about in the short term.<\/p>\n

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