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               Polar 
                    Opposites
              
             
            
            Iceland's 
                    unusual volcanoes have magnetic fields that seem to defy the 
                    Earth. How?
 by 
                    Paul Doherty, with additional info from Robin Marks
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           The 
              earth is a magnet with north and south poles.
          
          
           An 
              electromagnet, to be specific. The Earth's magnetic field is created 
              by electric currents which flow in the rotating and convecting liquid 
              metal of the planet's outer core.
          
         
         
         
          We tend to think of the 
              magnetic North and South poles as stationary (Santa's house doesn't 
              move, in other words), but they're not. They drift over time, and 
              neither of them are located exactly at the geographic poles. One 
              magnetic pole is in Northern Canada, about 15 degrees of latitude 
              from the geographic North Pole. The other is of the coast of Antarctica.
         
         
          
         
         
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          | This 
                  mountain (shrouded in clouds) is called a moberg, because it 
                  erupted under ice. Lava on the top half matches the magnetism 
                  of Earth today. Lava from the lower half records reversed poles. |  
         
          Over time, the poles 
              drift enough to actually switch places, reversing each other. What 
              does that mean? Think of it this way: if you use a compass today, 
              the needle points toward magnetic north. If you used that same compass 
              700,000 years ago, it would point toward magnetic south. This reversal 
              of the poles gives scientists clues about how the earth has been 
              forming and changing over time.
         
         
         
          Especially in Iceland. 
              Under ice in the nearby ocean, ridges and mountains have been created 
              by volcanic activity over millions of years. When an eruption brings 
              lava to the surface, the molten rock cools with a magnetism that 
              matches that of the Earth at the time of the eruption. So if you're 
              standing on a rocky mountainside made in an eruption 700,000 years 
              ago, your compass will point to south. If you move up higher, to 
              newer rock deposits, your compass will point north again.
         
         
         
          
           You 
              can show yourself how a planet's magentic poles work. Try this!
          
         
         
         
          You can make a 3-D model 
              of magnetic fields by inserting a small, strong magnet into a sphere. 
              If you sprinkle used staples onto the sphere, you'll see the how 
              the field works, as the orientation of the staples will change with 
              "latitude."
         
         
         
          
           
             What 
              do I need? 
         
          You can buy a preassembled 
              earth globe with a magnet already inside from Arbor Scientific, 
              P.O. Box 2750, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 (1-800-367-6695) for about 
              $15 (in 2000). Or you can make you own:
         
         
         
          
           use a Sqeeshball, 
                a soft toy ball with an earth globe printed on it, available in 
                toy and trinket stores
          
         
          
           a Neodymium magnet 
                - you can make a 1 cm x 1 cm cylinder from two standard-sized 
                1 cm x 1/2 cm discs (only neodymium magnets are strong enough 
                for this. They're available from Dowling Miner, P.O. Box 1829, 
                Sonoma, CA 95476, 1-800-MAGNET1 or All Magnetics, 930 S. Placentia 
                Ave. Placentia, CA, 92670, 1-800-AMAGNET.)
           
          
           hot melt glue or silicone 
                seal
           
          
           utility knife or scissors
          
         
          
           compass
           
 
         
          
           
            Assembly:
           
          
         
         
         
          If you're assembling 
              your own magnetic earth, cut a slit in the Squeeshball, and insert 
              the magnet into the center. Point one of the flat ends of the magnet 
              toward the north pole of the earth. Reseal the ball with silicone 
              seal or hot melt glue.
         
         
         
          Explore the magnetic 
              field of the ball. If you place a used staple on the ball, the staple 
              will stick to the ball and line up with the ball's magnetic field. 
              Add more staples to the ball. Notice that the staples lie flat against 
              the ball along a circle, this is the "magnetic equator. " At the 
              "magnetic poles," the staples stand up vertically. Between the poles 
              and the equator the staples stand up at different angles with respect 
              to a plane tangent to the ball. The angle between the staple and 
              the tangent plane is known as the "magnetic inclination" or the 
              "dip of the magnetic field."
         
         
         
          Use a compass to explore 
              the magnetic field surrounding the sphere. The field stretches away 
              from the sphere; in the same way, the earthÕs magnetic field stretches 
              far out into space. The earthÕs field traps charged particles from 
              the sun making the Van Allen radiation belts.
         
         
         
          If the compass is held 
              far from the magnetic sphere it will align itself with the magnetic 
              field of the real earth rather than your earth model. Notice that 
              in North America the north pole of the magnaprobe (red) points north 
              and down.
         
         
         
          
           WhatÕs 
              Going On?
          
         
         
         
          The earth is a magnet 
              with magnetic north and south poles. Because it has only two poles, 
              two places where the staples stand up vertically, its magnetic field 
              is modeled by what is called a "dipole field."
         
         
         
          A sphere with a magnet 
              inside creates a magnetic dipole like that of the earth. The staples 
              will line up with this magnetic field. As the staples align, they 
              show field lines that run between the north and south poles, they 
              also show that the field over most of the sphere is not tangent 
              to its surface. Although the magnetic field of this experiment is 
              created by a permanent magnet, the earth is actually an electromagnet. 
              The earth's magnetic field is created by electric currents which 
              flow in the rotating and convecting liquid metal of the earthÕs 
              outer core.
         
         
         
          A compass lines up with 
              the earthÕs magnetic field, however, the pivot of the compass does 
              not allow it to rotate up or down so it only shows the horizontal 
              component of the field.
         
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