Sun Flips Its Polarity 15
grasshopper69 writes: "This CNN article talks about how the sun has recently reversed its polarity, which apparently is an occurence every 11 years. This flipping indicates a time of 'solar max' during which the sun will incur more frequent sun spots and eruptions, causing solar flares, which could mean trouble for planet Earth." No one is sure why Earthly magnetic flips are so less regular, either, but all those migrating birds on the sun must be used to it already.
migrating birds? (Score:1)
And it would be pretty embaressing if our sun turned white with snow every christmas.
migrating birds on the sun (Score:1)
Re:Ice Ages cause the Earth to flip. (Score:1)
Never heard that one before. All the explanations I've read mention convection in the core, and coriolis force, but nothing about Ice Ages.
Can you give us a source?
Re:There is an early warning system. (Score:1)
Solar Flares = Auroras! (Score:1)
shutdown +5 (Score:1)
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Re:Solar/Terran magnetic activity (Score:1)
Re:"Sun Flips Its Polarity" (Score:1)
Solar/Terran magnetic activity (Score:1)
Also, since the earth experiences this phenomenon as well, I am having some difficulty in imagining what would happen? Maybe all the cataclysmic parts of the Book of Revelations are a product of such a Terran polar reversal?
Re:There is an early warning system. (Score:1)
So... (Score:2)
Re:migrating birds? (Score:2)
Then again, it would be a rare breed of bird that could put up with the multi-million degree temperatures anyway. If you had a chicken that lived in a place like that, how would you cook it? What good would a 400 degree stove do? Cool it off? Good thing I'mn a vegetarian, and need not deal with such culninary dangers... :)
(I'm still stunned that I got a first post. First time for everything...)
There is an early warning system. (Score:2)
Kind of impressive that we now have a space weather early warning system.
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Clarity does not require the absence of impurities,
Ice Ages cause the Earth to flip. (Score:3)
Ice Ages, and thaws, affect the distribution of mass upon the surface of the plannet just enough to affect the spin rate. Changes in the spin rate disrupt the coriolis induced iron magma currents in the core, which are the primary cause of earth's large magnetic field, and the field collapses into chaos.
When these currents stabilize, having adjusted to the new spin rate, the field becomes coherent again. The polarity of the field when it reaserts is a toss up.
So, when people talk about the earth 'flipping' its polarity, they often overlook that about 1/2 the time, the polarity after a reasert is the same as it was before the field collapsed.
-- Crutcher --
#include <disclaimer.h>
"Sun Flips Its Polarity" (Score:4)