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Space Science

The Swarm Constellation Will Look Inside the Earth 21

Roland Piquepaille writes "Among six Earth Explorer candidate missions, the European Space Agency (ESA) has chosen a 'Swarm' of satellites to look inside the Earth and to do the best survey ever of the Earth's geomagnetic field. The mission, scheduled for launch in 2009, will consist of three satellites released by a single rocket. Two will fly side-by-side 450 km above us while the third one will cruise at an altitude of 530 km. In "ESA to probe Earth's magnetic field," the Register also looks at this future mission which will lead to a better analysis of the Sun's influence in our solar system. More details and illustrations are available in this overview."
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The Swarm Constellation Will Look Inside the Earth

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    has slashdot's magnetic polarization pushed all the comment posters away from this story?
  • 2009? (Score:1, Funny)

    by pu'u_bear ( 137654 )
    I just hope there is still a magnetic field by then...
  • by Discoflamingo13 ( 90009 ) on Friday June 04, 2004 @11:21AM (#9335035) Homepage Journal
    it would be nice to see a system with the ability to update a magnetic variation map of the world faster than NOAA (which happens about every 5 years). Most avionics navigation systems are dependent on these maps for accurate magnetic heading information, and few companies have the resources to make updates between NOAA passes. Depending on its accuracy, it could pay for itself very quickly, if it could make such maps.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 04, 2004 @11:50AM (#9335387)
      I'm a geophysist, not a pilot. We normally use IGRF [bgs.ac.uk]. It has the history of the magnetic field as well as future predictions. It's very accurate and is updates at every five years. That sounds the same as what you are talking about, but you can make a new map every year that's much more accurate than last years, even without a new model. The drift of the field isn't random.

      Pilots only need a very gross measurement of magnetic field. They really only care about the field coming from the earth's core. We measure the field coming from the core and the rocks then remove the core's field. The field from the rocks is much smaller, but can tell you a lot.

      • by Discoflamingo13 ( 90009 ) on Friday June 04, 2004 @01:15PM (#9336396) Homepage Journal
        Magnetic headings are usually the first fallback during severe weather conditions, and avionics companies want the maps of the variations to be as accurate as possible. For verification purposes, most companies won't rely on predictions (regardless of how accurate they most certainly are) - they want to see hard measurements based on the most current data. This is largely because these decision are made by businesses, and not science firms - but it doesn't make your point any less valid.
  • ... Crichton's book Prey, which had a similar discussion of swarming optics. Then the little buggers all turned on the humans and death ensued. That could never happen [kurzweilai.net], right?
  • Oh No! (Score:5, Funny)

    by wan-fu ( 746576 ) on Friday June 04, 2004 @02:08PM (#9337100)
    But in the midst of probing the geomagnetic field, the satellites will accidentally cause our Earth's core to stop spinning. This will undoubtedly cause mass chaos in the world. As a result, we will require the services of a geophysicists and a gung-ho team of scientific explorers who will risk their necks by attempting to detonate a nuclear device in order to jump start the core and get it spinning again. Wow, this would be a great plot for a movie... wait... nevermind.
  • by garyebickford ( 222422 ) <gar37bic@@@gmail...com> on Saturday June 05, 2004 @12:49PM (#9344680)
    Some scientists think the Earth's magnetic field is preparing to flip again, which it does every so often. Apparently when this occurs, it is preceded by a period of local variations - mini-poles showing up all over the planet. This system could be invaluable in tracking this process.

    Also, according to this article [space.com] and others, the field has decreased 10% over the last 150 years. This has left some satellites vulnerable to damaging radiation.

    Other links:
    Sun's rays to roast Earth as poles flip" [guardian.co.uk]
    The Sun Does a Flip [nasa.gov]
    Quick flip of Earth's magnetic field revealed [newscientist.com]

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