Leaks Found In Earth's Protective Shield
http://beforeitsnews.com/space/2012/11/scientists-earths-protective-shield-failing-2448946.html
http://www.oregonherald.com/news/show-story.cfm?id=426347
Charged particles in the solar wind can interrupt GPS signals and power systems, as well as create dazzling auroras. http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/226-aurora-images-from-space.html
The magnetosphere is the planet's first line of defense against the solar wind. Scientists knew that this plasma stream occasionally breached the magnetosphere near the equator, where the Earth's magnetic field is roughly parallel to the magnetic field in the solar wind. http://www.space.com/18058-moon-water-solar-wind.html The new study, published Aug. 29 in the Journal of Geophysical Research, found that these breaks can happen under a wider range of conditions.
"That suggests there is a 'sieve-like' property of the magnetopause the outer edge of the magnetosphere in allowing the solar wind to continuously flow into the magnetosphere," Goldstein said.
Plasma swirls break magnetic field
The European Space Agency's Cluster mission, a set of four satellites that fly in close formation through the Earth's magnetic field, gathered the data that show how the solar wind can get through. Equipped with state-of-the-art instruments for measuring electric and magnetic fields, the Cluster satellites fly in and out of the magnetosphere and document the microscopic magnetic interactions between the Earth and the sun.
From 2006 Cluster observations, scientists found that huge swirls of plasma along the magnetopause could help the solar wind penetrate the magnetosphere when the terrestrial and solar wind magnetic fields were aligned. Those swirls of plasma are known as Kelvin-Helmholtz waves, and they can be 24,850 miles (40,000 kilometers) in diameter.
As Kelvin-Helmholtz waves slide past the magnetopause, they can create giant vortices, similar to how wind blowing across the ocean causes waves. The huge waves can spontaneously break and reconnect magnetic field lines, creating openings that let the solar wind slip through.
'Not a perfect magnetic bubble'
The new findings suggest that these magnetic field line breaks can also occur where the terrestrial and solar wind magnetic fields are perpendicular, at high latitudes near the poles.
The alignments of the solar wind magnetic field and Earth's magnetic field are key factors. A perpendicular alignment makes the boundary between the two fields less stable and likely generates more Kelvin-Helmholtz waves and more magnetic field breaches. Video: Sun's Energy Shocks Earth's Magnetic Field http://www.space.com/17922-aurora-sun-s-shimmering-energy-shocks-earth-s-magnetic-field-video.html
"We found that when the solar wind magnetic field is westward or eastward, magnetopause boundary layers at higher latitude become most subject to Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities, regions quite distant from previous observations of these waves," Kyoung-Joo Hwang, a researcher at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center who led the study, said in a statement.
"In fact, it's very hard to imagine a situation where solar wind plasma could not leak into the magnetosphere, since it is not a perfect magnetic bubble," Hwang said.
How Earth's Magnetic Field Would Look from Space
http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/1329-earth-magnetosphere-magnetic-field.html
Earth's Magnetic Field Made Quick Flip-Flop
http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/3679-earth-magnetic-field-reversal.html
Earth's Magnetosphere Behaves Like a Sieve
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/10/121024101654.htm