Thursday, December 11, 2025
News

Researchers explore how magnetism could help in explaining Earth's formation

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | November 3, 2022 4:29:00 PM IST
While there are numerous hypotheses regarding the formation of the Earth and the Moon, most of them include a massive collision.

They vary from a model where the impacting object strikes the newly formed Earth a glancing blow and then escapes, to one where the collision is so energetic that both the impactor and the Earth are vaporized.

Now scientists at the University of Leeds and the University of Chicago have analysed the dynamics of fluids and electrically conducting fluids and concluded that the Earth must have been magnetized either before the impact or as a result of it.

They claim this could help to narrow down the theories of the Earth-Moon formation and inform future research into what really happened.

Professor David Hughes, an applied mathematician in the School of Mathematics at the University of Leeds, said: "Our new idea is to point out that our theoretical understanding of the Earth's magnetic field today can actually tell us something about the very formation of the Earth-Moon system.

"At first glance, this seems somewhat surprising, and previous theories had not recognized this potentially important connection."

This new assessment is based on the resilience of Earth's magnetic field, which is maintained by a rotating and electrically conducting fluid in the outer core, known as a geodynamo.

Professor Fausto Cattaneo, an astrophysicist at the University of Chicago, said: "A peculiar property of the Earth's dynamo is that it can maintain a strong magnetic field but not amplify a weak one.

The scientists, therefore, concluded that if the Earth's field were to get switched off or even reduced to a very small level, it would not have the capability to kick in again.

"It is this remarkable feature that allows us to make deductions about the history of the early Earth; including, possibly, how the Moon was formed," added Professor Cattaneo.

Professor Hughes added: "And if that is true, then you have to think, where did the Earth's magnetic field come from in the first place? Our hypothesis is that it got to this peculiar state way back at the beginning, either pre-impact or as an immediate result of the impact. Either way, any realistic model of the formation of the Earth-Moon system must include magnetic field evolution." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
New data reveals one of the smallest ozo...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
President Murmu pays condolences to fami...
'I would love to be a Bengali in every p...
Gujarat CM inaugurates development proje...
Rahul Gandhi condoles loss of lives due ...
NDA MPs start arriving at Prime Minister...
Terror funding case: SC to hear bail ple...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Odisha Masters 2025: Top seeds Unna... 
Uttarakhand CM approves Rs 210 cror... 
Manoj Tiwari accuses opposition par... 
"Our focus is on Vietnam": Cuckoo P... 
India pivotal force in shaping resp... 
Uttarakhand Chief Electoral Officer... 
India's regulatory stance on AI set... 
"We will keep fighting, that is the...