On the "Magnetic polar shifts cause massive global super storms" story

Image from NOVA - which did a TV special on this issue - click for details

I’ve been avoiding this story (Magnetic polar shifts cause massive global super storms) for awhile, hoping it would simply die, but people keep asking me about it, and I see it appearing on other blogs, so I suppose I’ll have to address it. Mainly what I want to do is present facts about it and let readers make up their own minds.

There has been a lot of worry and hype on this subject. Part of it is fueled by the silly “2012” thing. Some it has been fueled by people who had been primed for “space storms” in solar cycle 24, such as in this Fox News video:

Many people still haven’t got the memo that solar cycle 24 is now forecast by NASA (after a number of forecast reductions) to be about as quiet as the Dalton Minimum, with a peak sunspot count of 59 in their latest forecast. They hear that the protective Earth’s magnetic field may flip/deplete from one source, remember the hype over the upcoming solar cycle, and worry that we are going to get toasted. I assure you, we will, when the sun turns into a red giant a couple billion years from now, but let’s not worry about that.

An artist's depiction of the Sun entering its red giant phase viewed from Earth. All life on Earth is extinct at this phase.

In the meantime, yes, at some point the Earth’s magnetic field will flip. Compasses will point south instead of North. According to the best science we have this happens frequently on Earth (in the scale of geologic time). And, as we know, the sun’s magnetic field appears to reverse its polarity on the advent of each new solar cycle, about every 11 years. The sun doesn’t wink out or get stormy when this happens, nor can we as humans detect any earthly change when this occurs. It’s essentially imperceptible to us.

As for earth, it’s magnetic field also flips, but not nearly as often. About every 200,000-250,000 years. The last one occurred 780,000 years ago, so the period is not constant. This is to be expected in a chaotic system. Below, see the magnetic record timeline as derived from rocks:

More on the magnetic timeline here. Looking at the long term record, magnetic field reversals are rather common. So, as far as Earth goes, it is “business as usual”. It probably would say: “Nothing to see here, move along.” if asked. I’ll point out that life continued through all of this. And, as far as I know, no scientist has linked extinctions to reversals. The Wikipedia article has this to say:

Because the magnetic field has never been observed to reverse by humans with instrumentation, and the mechanism of field generation is not well understood, it is difficult to say what the characteristics of the magnetic field might be leading up to such a reversal.

Some speculate that a greatly diminished magnetic field during a reversal period will expose the surface of the Earth to a substantial and potentially damaging increase in cosmic radiation. However, Homo erectus and their ancestors certainly survived many previous reversals, though they did not depend on computer systems that could be damaged by large coronal mass ejections.

There is no uncontested evidence that a magnetic field reversal has ever caused any biological extinctions. A possible explanation is that the solar wind may induce a sufficient magnetic field in the Earth’s ionosphere to shield the surface from energetic particles even in the absence of the Earth’s normal magnetic field. Another possible explanation is that magnetic field actually does not vanish completely, with many poles forming chaotically in different places during reversal, until it stabilizes again.

There’s a NASA story on the wandering magnetic North pole from 2003 that is instructive, I’m repeating part of it below:

===============================================================

Scientists have long known that the magnetic pole moves. James Ross located the pole for the first time in 1831 after an exhausting arctic journey during which his ship got stuck in the ice for four years. No one returned until the next century. In 1904, Roald Amundsen found the pole again and discovered that it had moved–at least 50 km since the days of Ross.

The pole kept going during the 20th century, north at an average speed of 10 km per year, lately accelerating “to 40 km per year,” says Newitt. At this rate it will exit North America and reach Siberia in a few decades.

Keeping track of the north magnetic pole is Newitt’s job. “We usually go out and check its location once every few years,” he says. “We’ll have to make more trips now that it is moving so quickly.”

Earth’s magnetic field is changing in other ways, too: Compass needles in Africa, for instance, are drifting about 1 degree per decade. And globally the magnetic field has weakened 10% since the 19th century. When this was mentioned by researchers at a recent meeting of the American Geophysical Union, many newspapers carried the story. A typical headline: “Is Earth’s magnetic field collapsing?”

Probably not. As remarkable as these changes sound, “they’re mild compared to what Earth’s magnetic field has done in the past,” says University of California professor Gary Glatzmaier.

see captionSometimes the field completely flips. The north and the south poles swap places. Such reversals, recorded in the magnetism of ancient rocks, are unpredictable. They come at irregular intervals averaging about 300,000 years; the last one was 780,000 years ago. Are we overdue for another? No one knows.

Left: Magnetic stripes around mid-ocean ridges reveal the history of Earth’s magnetic field for millions of years. The study of Earth’s past magnetism is called paleomagnetism. Image credit: USGS. [more]

According to Glatzmaier, the ongoing 10% decline doesn’t mean that a reversal is imminent. “The field is increasing or decreasing all the time,” he says. “We know this from studies of the paleomagnetic record.” Earth’s present-day magnetic field is, in fact, much stronger than normal. The dipole moment, a measure of the intensity of the magnetic field, is now 8 × 1022 amps × m2. That’s twice the million-year average of 4× 1022 amps × m2.

To understand what’s happening, says Glatzmaier, we have to take a trip … to the center of the Earth where the magnetic field is produced.

At the heart of our planet lies a solid iron ball, about as hot as the surface of the sun. Researchers call it “the inner core.” It’s really a world within a world. The inner core is 70% as wide as the moon. It spins at its own rate, as much as 0.2° of longitude per year faster than the Earth above it, and it has its own ocean: a very deep layer of liquid iron known as “the outer core.”

see captionRight: a schematic diagram of Earth’s interior. The outer core is the source of the geomagnetic field.

Earth’s magnetic field comes from this ocean of iron, which is an electrically conducting fluid in constant motion. Sitting atop the hot inner core, the liquid outer core seethes and roils like water in a pan on a hot stove. The outer core also has “hurricanes”–whirlpools powered by the Coriolis forces of Earth’s rotation. These complex motions generate our planet’s magnetism through a process called the dynamo effect.

Using the equations of magnetohydrodynamics, a branch of physics dealing with conducting fluids and magnetic fields, Glatzmaier and colleague Paul Roberts have created a supercomputer model of Earth’s interior. Their software heats the inner core, stirs the metallic ocean above it, then calculates the resulting magnetic field. They run their code for hundreds of thousands of simulated years and watch what happens.

What they see mimics the real Earth: The magnetic field waxes and wanes, poles drift and, occasionally, flip. Change is normal, they’ve learned. And no wonder. The source of the field, the outer core, is itself seething, swirling, turbulent. “It’s chaotic down there,” notes Glatzmaier. The changes we detect on our planet’s surface are a sign of that inner chaos.

They’ve also learned what happens during a magnetic flip. Reversals take a few thousand years to complete, and during that time–contrary to popular belief–the magnetic field does not vanish. “It just gets more complicated,” says Glatzmaier. Magnetic lines of force near Earth’s surface become twisted and tangled, and magnetic poles pop up in unaccustomed places. A south magnetic pole might emerge over Africa, for instance, or a north pole over Tahiti. Weird. But it’s still a planetary magnetic field, and it still protects us from space radiation and solar storms.

see caption

Above: Supercomputer models of Earth’s magnetic field. On the left is a normal dipolar magnetic field, typical of the long years between polarity reversals. On the right is the sort of complicated magnetic field Earth has during the upheaval of a reversal. [more]

===========================================================

They didn’t seem very worried about it at NASA then. They were more worried about solar cycle 24 producing a lot of solar flares at the time, which would disrupt a lot of our new technology.

When a big CME heads toward earth, it can cause havoc, whether our magnetic field is strong or not. For example, in 1859, long before our worries about Earth’s magnetic field started, there was the Carrington event:

At 11:18 AM on the cloudless morning of Thursday, September 1, 1859, 33-year-old Richard Carrington—widely acknowledged to be one of England’s foremost solar astronomers—was in his well-appointed private observatory. Just as usual on every sunny day, his telescope was projecting an 11-inch-wide image of the sun on a screen, and Carrington skillfully drew the sunspots he saw.

Right: Sunspots sketched by Richard Carrington on Sept. 1, 1859. Copyright: Royal Astronomical Society: more.

On that morning, he was capturing the likeness of an enormous group of sunspots. Suddenly, before his eyes, two brilliant beads of blinding white light appeared over the sunspots, intensified rapidly, and became kidney-shaped. Realizing that he was witnessing something unprecedented and “being somewhat flurried by the surprise,” Carrington later wrote, “I hastily ran to call someone to witness the exhibition with me. On returning within 60 seconds, I was mortified to find that it was already much changed and enfeebled.” He and his witness watched the white spots contract to mere pinpoints and disappear.

It was 11:23 AM. Only five minutes had passed.

Just before dawn the next day, skies all over planet Earth erupted in red, green, and purple auroras so brilliant that newspapers could be read as easily as in daylight. Indeed, stunning auroras pulsated even at near tropical latitudes over Cuba, the Bahamas, Jamaica, El Salvador, and Hawaii.

Even more disconcerting, telegraph systems worldwide went haywire. Spark discharges shocked telegraph operators and set the telegraph paper on fire. Even when telegraphers disconnected the batteries powering the lines, aurora-induced electric currents in the wires still allowed messages to be transmitted.

“What Carrington saw was a white-light solar flare—a magnetic explosion on the sun,” explains David Hathaway, solar physics team lead at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

Notice, no mention in any of the historical reports of superstorm style bad weather, just unusual low latitude auroras and wacky telegraphs. Such an event will happen again in Earth’s history, we can be sure of it. From Wiki: “Ice cores contain thin nitrate-rich layers that can be used to reconstruct a history of past events before reliable observations. These show evidence that events of this magnitude — as measured by high-energy proton radiation, not geomagnetic effect — occur approximately once per 500 years, with events at least one-fifth as large occurring several times per century. Less severe storms have occurred in 1921 and 1960, when widespread radio disruption was reported”

Sure, it would be worse today if Earth’s magnetic field was weaker, but comparatively, the terrestrial magnetic field is a wimp and get’s pushed around by the sun anyway:

Now compare that story to what our buddy Caca Kaku has been saying:

But for now, the reality of solar cycle 24 is far less worrisome:

Adding to some of the media hype worry, the north magnetic pole is on the move. In fact, as Luboš Motl has recently pointed out, it has been accelerating in its movement. According to this 2009 NatGeo story, it is now on the move by about 40 miles per year towards Siberia:

Blue lines show Earth's northern magnetic field and the magnetic north pole in an artist's rendering.
Blue lines show Earth's northern magnetic field and the magnetic north pole in an artist's rendering. Picture courtesy Stefan Maus, NOAA NGDC

There was the recent story about runways at Tampa International Airport having to be renumbered because the compass heading has changed. It also added to the worry and hype about the Earth’s magnetic field. Well, it is a story that is likely to be repeated in the years to come, as the pole drifts even more. At some point the FAA may just decide it isn’t worth trying to keep up with, and make runway numbers reflect GPS headings (based on true north) instead.

And that’s not the only effect. Soon, many USHCN and GHCN ASOS station in the USA will be out of alignment with magnetic north. Yes that’s right, they are aligned perpendicular to magnetic north, like this US Historical Climate Network climate monitoring station in Minneapolis, MN:

As far as I can tell, that’s about the only significant “climate disruption” we are going to see.

There’s of course the possibility that a weaker magnetic field might provide for some increased thunderstorm development, such as this linkage between Forbush decreases and thunderstorm electricity, but there doesn’t appear to be any strong linkage to synoptic scale storm formation that we know of. The issue of the sun modulating cosmic ray passage to Earth which is a different issue altogether.

Now compare what has been presented above to the article in Helium that everyone is concerned about:

(Magnetic polar shifts cause massive global super storms)

On the heels of the lashing the British Isles sustained, monster storms began to pummel North America. The latest superstorm—as of this writing—is a monster over the U.S. that stretched across 2,000 miles affecting more than 150 million people.

Yet even as that storm wreaked havoc across the Western, Southern, Midwestern and Northeastern states, another superstorm broke out in the Pacific and closed in on Australia.

The southern continent had already dealt with the disaster of historic superstorm flooding from rains that dropped as much as several feet in a matter of hours. Tens of thousands of homes were damaged or destroyed. After the deluge bull sharks were spotted swimming between houses in what was once the quiet town of Goodna.

Shocked authorities now numbly concede that some of the water may never dissipate and have wearily resigned themselves to the possibility that region will now contain a small inland sea.

But then only a handful of weeks later another superstorm—the mega-monster cyclone Yasi—struck northeastern Australia. The damage it left in its wake is being called by rescue workers a war zone.

Do you recognize the writing style? Let’s look at a similar example.

We have recently been told that these storms were caused by “man-made global warming”, let’s listen to Al Gore:

As it turns out, the scientific community has been addressing this particular question for some time now and they say that increased heavy snowfalls are completely consistent with what they have been predicting as a consequence of man-made global warming:

“In fact, scientists have been warning for at least two decades that global warming could make snowstorms more severe. Snow has two simple ingredients: cold and moisture. Warmer air collects moisture like a sponge until it hits a patch of cold air. When temperatures dip below freezing, a lot of moisture creates a lot of snow.”

“A rise in global temperature can create all sorts of havoc, ranging from hotter dry spells to colder winters, along with increasingly violent storms, flooding, forest fires and loss of endangered species.”

There’s a catastrophe prediction on every street corner it seems:

Image: treehugger.com - click for story

Me, I’m not worried about the magnetic field flipping any more than I am about the sun turning into a red giant. It’s out of my hands. The best you can do is to adopt the old Boy Scout motto: Be prepared.

For what, I’m not sure, so I don’t worry too much. Nature so far has allowed life to go along on this planet, mostly unabated for millions of years. Sure, we could get squished like a bug tomorrow by an asteroid, but can we do anything about that if we know today?

Bobby McFerrin had it right:

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John Campbell
February 8, 2011 6:16 am

Another Carrington event concerns me far far more than the AGW hypothesis.

J.Hansford
February 8, 2011 6:25 am

SUPERSTORMS!!!!…… You guys do what you want. Me? I’m going outside right now to sacrifice a goat to Gaia……;-)

Feet2theFire
February 8, 2011 7:44 am

Anthony, great explanations, educating almost all of us. (And thx for the put-down of the upcoming 2012 non-event as well as “the magnetic field dropping to zero” b.s.)
The bottom line seems to be that we have only so much evidence, not enough to understand it but some intelligent guesses. It does not appear there is enough evidence yet to come up with the correct understanding.
(11:20 am) – Very good additional perspective. I like your explanation of how the precession is tied in.
I would suggest that a strong enough CME could completely re-program the entire geomagnetic field, and that this may be the mechanism for the reversals. If so, no matter what the terrestrial field is doing in between has nothing to do with reversals and is just the precession of the moment.
(…thinking out loud…) Effects of such a mega-Carrington Event CME might:
1. Be unaligned with the Sun’s field
2. Be extremely injurious to life during its passage
3. EMP the entire planet, taking out all our electrical devices
4. Torque the Earth’s interior, with some possible effect on the rotational axis
5. Accelerate or retard some of Earth’s interior processes, causing increased volcanic activity, some of it related to 3.
6. Increase global warming (/sarc on this one only)
7. Send us back to the stone age
While there is nothing in uniformitarianism that allows for such a level of CME, one thing is universally true, in my understanding of things:
Any historical extreme cannot be assumed to be the greatest possible extreme; whatever we’ve seen will be exceeded – the only question is by how much.
Ergo, questions to ask are: How big can a CME be? What would be the effects of a 2X Carrington Event? 4X? 10X? 50X? 100X?

Feet2theFire
February 8, 2011 8:03 am

@Leif Svalgaard 4:44 am:

Every complicated question has a simple answer which is wrong.

Great truth, Leif!
In my engineering experience, the simple answer is the one you start from, while being open to all the complications. Those complications WILL come, and they will add complexity to the answer. Unfortunately, simple answers make for good sound bites, which attract “sloppy thinkers” onto the bandwagon.
Thus is a CAGW or a Precautionary Principle born or “Better to fight them there than here” or “Better dead than Red” or the demonization of selected “enemies.” In the case of CAGW, the demon is CO2, and “Better dead than Red” becomes “Industrial activity is killing the planet, so we have to destroy it to save our world.”
The simplest of all answers people are fed is, “But what if those warning us are right?” It is impossible to rebut, whether it is warnings about terrorism or global warming. The only rebuttal is to live through the “brain-dead population” period and come out the other side. (Except that the “danger” will have by then been written into the history books as a real danger, one that was averted by timely warnings and effective action.”)
I give credit to WUWT for so staunchly defending scientific realism in the face of the simple (wrong) answers. I’d give CA equal credit, but I really see Steve M as not having an agenda other than getting the stats right. (No slur intended on Steve…) Anthony is fighting the good fight.
Of course, our own simple answer – “CAGW is sloppy science” – might in itself be wrong. If so, I sure can’t see it. It leads us to look into the complexity of the subject(s), so even though the overall answer “sloppy science” LOOKS simple, it includes many levels of complexity within it.

Brian H
February 8, 2011 8:54 am

Ray says:
February 7, 2011 at 12:05 pm
Don’t get lost in the woods during pole reversal. I guess this would not affect the GPS system though.

No problem. The moss still grows more on the (geological/solar) north sides of tree trunks, and rocks, regardless of magnetism, especially in areas with mixed sunlight and shade. (From my Boy Scout training, lo these many decades past. ) Reason: moss outcompetes other organisms in low-light areas.

February 8, 2011 8:58 am

Feet2theFire says:
February 8, 2011 at 7:44 am
I would suggest that a strong enough CME could completely re-program the entire geomagnetic field, and that this may be the mechanism for the reversals.
Even strongest magnetic storms are 500-1000 times weaker than the Earth’s field.
Magnetic field is generated by combination of the Earth’s rotation and thermal convection. I think that as hot stuff is moving upwards, Coriolis force creates vortex (not unlike a hurricane vortex), temperature gradient changes due to the cooling, and vortex moves about following highest gradient, as cooler stuff sinks down.
You can clearly see this in Chris Finlays movie.
http://www.epm.geophys.ethz.ch/~cfinlay/gufm1/BfS.gif
Observe the Arctic area, it clearly shows that in the last 400 years there is no ‘moving north pole’ just up and down between the Hudson bay and Siberia. Currently Siberia is the strongest of two.

Brian H
February 8, 2011 9:00 am

JJ says:
February 7, 2011 at 12:11 pm
Somebody needs to plot the relationship between global electric generating capacity and increasing magnetic pole instability. As the planet has become increasingly electrified, the speed of magnetic pole movement has increased.
And now we have all of these electric cars, not only carrying around enormous magnets and using electricity, but moving all over the place at high speed. It cannot be a coincidence that now the magnetic pole is moving all over the place, too.

Uh, yes it can. Quite easily. In the simplest case, if there’s equal chances of the poles moving fast or slow, our burst of electric car development has exactly 50:50 odds of having happened in a ‘fast’ period.
😀
/humor

Laurie Bowen
February 8, 2011 10:09 am

KR said February 7, 2011 at 8:53 pm
‘We have absolutely no record of such global warming anywhere in our temperature records.’
KR, Just a question of clarification of your above statement. Does that mean that there has been no such global warming in our climate history? As for me, I am of the opinion that it is one of the problems with ice core analysis. . . . If there is warming, the ice would melt, leaving no evidence in that area of what becomes the core.

Laurie Bowen
February 8, 2011 10:55 am

Laurie Bowen says:
February 8, 2011 at 10:09 am
Just realized this above comment was posted on the wrong discussion . . . that’s why it makes no sense . . . I will put it where it belongs . . .

son of mulder
February 8, 2011 1:14 pm

The problem can be solved if everyone in the southern hemisphere plugs in their kettles at Midday GMT on Feb 10th, make a cup of tea and stirs in an anti-clockwise direction and everyone in the northern hemisphere jumps in the air at the same time then the magnetic pole will return to normal behaviour and the planet will be saved.
NB this is only a hypothesis but I can’t find anyone who has been able to disprove it. The paramagnetic flux generated by the kettles interacts with the gravity wave from the jump and that interacts with the gravity vortices created by stirred tea that then dissipate the bad magnetic energy. when we are here in 2013 then I want my Nobel Prize.

twanger 6
February 8, 2011 2:05 pm

I loved the dense information,and the excursions into maths beyond me(incidentally
is there a field of maths that connects ‘strange attractors’ and the stochastics of this article?) ;so much more disappointing that you had to make such a disparaging and ridiculing comment on some one’s name -Mr.Kaku.
I am debating about my bloggie vote as a result.

February 8, 2011 2:30 pm

vukcevic says:
February 8, 2011 at 8:58 am
there is no ‘moving north pole’ just up and down between the Hudson bay and Siberia. Currently Siberia is the strongest of two.
Those do not qualify as magnetic poles.
Read these two links
http://www.leif.org/EOS/2003EO50008.pdf
http://www.huttoncommentaries.com/article.php?category=3&article=54
and report back in your own words what you learned.

Ralph
February 8, 2011 3:30 pm

All I can say is I am very glad someone invented satnav before the poles went crazy. Until very recently, aeroplanes and ships were fully dependent on magnetic navigation. Can you imagine the chaos, if we did not have Satnav!
But there may be some chaos still, in the natural world. Many birds, for instance, will get lost as the poles go crazy.
.

drewski
February 8, 2011 5:00 pm

What in the world was an Al Gore quote doing in an article on magnetism? Gratuitous Gore bashing appears to be is the only leg climate denialis have left to stand on.

RACookPE1978
Editor
February 8, 2011 5:33 pm

drewski says:
February 8, 2011 at 5:00 pm (Edit)

What in the world was an Al Gore quote doing in an article on magnetism? Gratuitous Gore bashing appears to be is the only leg climate denialis have left to stand on.

Funny you should say that.
See, Gore used the recent storms to claim that “hotter climates” (we are now – at the actual end of January COLDER than the previous 30 years’ of data!) increased the amouhnt of water in the atmosphere, thus increasing the amount of snow that would fall. Gore was the one injecting himself into recent claims of catastrophic problems – that CANNOT have happened as described, much have actually happened as theorized.
Gore was then, and is now, the one who has no leg to stand upon.
The thread posting describes and debunks the numerous failures of catastrophic problems predicted by the changing climate AND the changing magnetic fields. Thus, failed extreme climate predictions from a man who receives his millions directly from his exaggerated propaganda about climate dangers are a relevant reference under all circumstances.
Now, do you apologize for your insults – and misspelling – of “denialists” as a pejorative by trying to link skeptics to the tragic loss of so many innocents in the 1930’s and 40’s?

February 9, 2011 1:26 am

Leif Svalgaard says: February 8, 2011 at 2:30 pm
and report back in your own words what you learned.
What I have learned is: to accept the ever changing reality.
NASA 2000
Jackson 2010
Vukcevic 2011
I am just going a step forward on the Jackson’s model, instead of the cylindrical vortex I am a suggesting a conical vortex. It makes more sense in a rotating sphere. Conical vortices are classical events in all fluids, but I have not come across cylindrical one before. (the depth of the events in the Earth’s interior can be left to the seismology experts).
Jackson’s model has two problems:
– SA anomaly .
In the V’s- model has simple solution: the vector sum of two weaker fields from the North and stronger from the South add to the low intensity as currently observed.
– Reversal .
In the V’s- model has simple solution: magnetic vortices two or more just drift around the globe (as the paleo records show) eventually swapping places.
No catastrophic events either in the Earth’s magnetosphere or more importantly in the Earth’s biosphere.
To conclude: the geomagnetic catastrophism and fear spreading is unfounded !

February 9, 2011 7:17 am

vukcevic says:
February 9, 2011 at 1:26 am
“and report back in your own words what you learned.”
What I have learned is: to accept the ever changing reality

I see that you haven’t learned anything. Perhaps it was hoping for too much…

February 9, 2011 7:48 am

Hey doc
Some are behind the time
Some keep with the time
Some are ahead of time
See you.

February 9, 2011 8:08 am

vukcevic says:
February 9, 2011 at 1:26 am
What I have learned is: to accept the ever changing reality
Then accept this reality. The center of the oval shown here:
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/pmap/gif/pmapN.gif
Is where the Earth’s northern magnetic pole is.

February 9, 2011 9:12 am

vukcevic says:
February 9, 2011 at 7:48 am
Some are ahead of time
Some know something about this
Some do not know anything about this

February 9, 2011 9:54 am

Leif Svalgaard says: February 9, 2011 at 8:08 am
Then accept this reality. The center of the oval shown here:
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/pmap/gif/pmapN.gif
Is where the Earth’s northern magnetic pole is.

Nope.
Field is shape of a doughnut, and what you see is that aurora is following horizontal H component, along the rim of the doughnut.
Links to consult:
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/pmap/gif/pmapN.gif
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/pmap/gif/pmapS.gif
The US/UK World Magnetic Model for 2010-2015
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/WMM/data/WMM2010/WMM2010_Report.pdf
page 63 for the North and page 70 for the South Hemisphere.
You are wasting my time. I am busy with this
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/PDO-ENSO.htm

February 9, 2011 10:13 am

Pole is where total field F is strongest:
North: page 64
South: page 71
The US/UK World Magnetic Model for 2010-2015
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/WMM/data/WMM2010/WMM2010_Report.pdf

Michele
February 9, 2011 10:34 am

Hi,misha vukcevic
Magnetic excursions – Solar Dynamo – Ice – volcanoes
http://img253.imageshack.us/img253/5246/10071410.jpg
http://daltonsminima.altervista.org/?p=12200
http://daltonsminima.altervista.org/?p=12219
What do you think ?

Michele
February 9, 2011 10:36 am

I have a comment in moderation for Mr.vukcevic !
Can you unlock ?
Thank you !

February 9, 2011 10:58 am

vukcevic says:
February 9, 2011 at 9:54 am
Field is shape of a doughnut, and what you see is that aurora is following horizontal H component, along the rim of the doughnut.
Shows how little you know about this. The aurora are guided by the magnetic dipole of the Earth. Take some time out of your busy schedule to read Campbell’s explanation of this.
You are wasting my time. I am busy with this
We are waiting with baited breath for the next revelation.