Tag Archives: magnetic

Collapse of Earth’s magnetic field may have fueled evolution of life 600 million years ago – Livescience.com

  1. Collapse of Earth’s magnetic field may have fueled evolution of life 600 million years ago Livescience.com
  2. Over 500 million years ago, weird complex creatures emerged on Earth. Scientists now think they know why CNN
  3. Life boomed on Earth half a billion years ago. You can thank magnets. The Washington Post
  4. A weaker magnetic field may have paved the way for marine life to go big Science News Magazine
  5. Near-collapse of the geomagnetic field may have contributed to atmospheric oxygenation and animal radiation in the Ediacaran Period | Communications Earth & Environment Nature.com

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An Ancient Collapse of Earth’s Magnetic Field Led to Multicellular Animals Emerging – Good News Network

  1. An Ancient Collapse of Earth’s Magnetic Field Led to Multicellular Animals Emerging Good News Network
  2. Over 500 million years ago, weird complex creatures emerged on Earth. Scientists now think they know why CNN
  3. Near-collapse of the geomagnetic field may have contributed to atmospheric oxygenation and animal radiation in the Ediacaran Period | Communications Earth & Environment Nature.com
  4. Life boomed on Earth half a billion years ago. You can thank magnets. The Washington Post
  5. Did a magnetic field collapse trigger the emergence of animals? University of Rochester

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Near collapse of Earth’s magnetic field 591 million years ago may have allowed complex life to thrive – CNN

  1. Near collapse of Earth’s magnetic field 591 million years ago may have allowed complex life to thrive CNN
  2. Life boomed on Earth half a billion years ago. You can thank magnets. The Washington Post
  3. Near-collapse of the geomagnetic field may have contributed to atmospheric oxygenation and animal radiation in the Ediacaran Period | Communications Earth & Environment Nature.com
  4. Life might have begun 540 million years ago due to glitch in Earth’s magnetic field: Study Business Today
  5. Did a magnetic field collapse trigger the emergence of animals? University of Rochester

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Earth’s magnetic field collapse boosted life 590 million years ago – Interesting Engineering

  1. Earth’s magnetic field collapse boosted life 590 million years ago Interesting Engineering
  2. Near-collapse of the geomagnetic field may have contributed to atmospheric oxygenation and animal radiation in the Ediacaran Period | Communications Earth & Environment Nature.com
  3. Earth’s Magnetic Field ‘Near-Collapse’ Boosted Evolution, Scientists Think Newsweek
  4. Life Blossomed When Earth’s Magnetic Field Nearly Collapsed 590 Million Years Ago ScienceAlert
  5. Earth lost its magnetic field 540 million years ago. Life began shortly after India Today

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Paper Claims Dying SpaceX Satellites Could Weaken Earth’s Magnetic Field – Futurism

  1. Paper Claims Dying SpaceX Satellites Could Weaken Earth’s Magnetic Field Futurism
  2. Debris from burning satellites could be affecting Earth’s magnetic field Space.com
  3. Controversial paper claims satellite ‘megaconstellations’ like SpaceX’s could weaken Earth’s magnetic field and cause ‘atmospheric stripping.’ Should we be worried? Livescience.com
  4. Dead satellites falling to Earth could weaken its magnetic field Metro.co.uk
  5. Controversial new paper suggests satellites falling to earth could weaken planet’s magnetic field, sounding al Daily Mail

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Debris from burning satellites could be affecting Earth’s magnetic field – Space.com

  1. Debris from burning satellites could be affecting Earth’s magnetic field Space.com
  2. Controversial paper claims satellite ‘megaconstellations’ like SpaceX’s could weaken Earth’s magnetic field and cause ‘atmospheric stripping.’ Should we be worried? Livescience.com
  3. Controversial new paper suggests satellites falling to earth could weaken planet’s magnetic field, sounding al Daily Mail
  4. Paper Claims Dying SpaceX Satellites Could Weaken Earth’s Magnetic Field Futurism
  5. Dead satellites falling to Earth could weaken its magnetic field Metro.co.uk

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Transcranial magnetic brain stimulation shows promise in treating seasonal depression – PsyPost

  1. Transcranial magnetic brain stimulation shows promise in treating seasonal depression PsyPost
  2. Spinal Stimulation Shows Promise As Depression Treatment Neuroscience News
  3. Effect of non-invasive spinal cord stimulation in unmedicated adults with major depressive disorder: a pilot randomized controlled trial and induced current flow pattern | Molecular Psychiatry Nature.com
  4. TMS for Depression: ‘A Pre-Eminent Intervention’ Psychiatric Times
  5. Spinal Cord Stimulation Appears to Alleviate Depression Symptoms The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry

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Ancient bricks baked when Nebuchadnezzar II was king absorbed a power surge in Earth’s magnetic field – CNN

  1. Ancient bricks baked when Nebuchadnezzar II was king absorbed a power surge in Earth’s magnetic field CNN
  2. Exploring geomagnetic variations in ancient Mesopotamia: Archaeomagnetic study of inscribed bricks from the 3rd–1st millennia BCE | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pnas.org
  3. How 3000-year-old Babylonian tablets help scientists unravel one of the weirdest mysteries in space Salon
  4. New Dating Technique Employs Ancient Mesopotamian Bricks archaeology.org
  5. Iron oxide baked into Mesopotamian bricks confirms ancient magnetic field anomaly Livescience.com

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We might finally know why Earth’s north magnetic pole is moving

When you think of the North Pole’s location, you probably imagine it is the centermost point at the top of our planet. However, the North Magnetic Pole has actually been moving gradually since away from the location it was first documented back in the 1830s. Now, scientists say we may finally understand why it’s moving.

A new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience suggests that the changes in the North Pole’s location are explained by the movement of molten material in Earth’s interior. This, they say, has caused a titanic shift in the planet’s magnetic field. Essentially, the molten iron at the core of our planet helps to determine where Earth’s magnetic field downs down.

A diagram showing how the Earth’s magnetic field points downward and also how it protects from solar radiation. Image source: koya979 / Adobe

It is this exact position that is affected by the movements of the planet’s core. And, as this position changes, so too does the North Pole’s location. Scientists say that the current direction of the pole’s movement is caused by a “blip in the pattern” of the flow inside of the Earth’s interior. This blip, they believe, occurred somewhere between 1970 and 1999.

Because the blip happened, the Canadian field of the North Pole itself has become elongated, losing its influence over the Earth’s magnetosphere. This has caused the North Pole’s location to move quickly towards a magnetic field located under Siberia. The researchers say that our northern magnetic pole is controlled by these two patches, or blobs.

And it’s these blobs that have kept the North Pole’s location in a constant state of tug of war. But, because the Canadian portion of this field has elongated and become weaker, the pole’s location has quickly found itself drawn to the field in Siberia. 

Of course, this doesn’t change the physical location of the North Pole, but it could have huge implications for the planet’s magnetic field, which is responsible for keeping the planet’s rotation in order, as well as for protecting against charged solar energy from solar flares and storms. This field is also important for navigation systems like GPS and even the compass.



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New technique reveals changing shapes of magnetic noise in space and time

Using specially designed diamonds with nitrogen-vacancy centers, researchers at Princeton University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a technique to measure noise in a material by studying correlations, and they can use this information to learn the spatial structure and time-varying nature of the noise. In this image, a diamond with near-surface nitrogen-vacancy centers is illuminated by green laser light from a microscope objective lens. Credit: David Kelly Crow

Electromagnetic noise poses a major problem for communications, prompting wireless carriers to invest heavily in technologies to overcome it. But for a team of scientists exploring the atomic realm, measuring tiny fluctuations in noise could hold the key to discovery.

“Noise is usually thought of as a nuisance, but physicists can learn many things by studying noise,” said Nathalie de Leon, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Princeton University. “By measuring the noise in a material, they can learn its composition, its temperature, how electrons flow and interact with one another, and how spins order to form magnets. It is generally difficult to measure anything about how the noise changes in space or time.”

Using specially designed diamonds, a team of researchers at Princeton and the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a technique to measure noise in a material by studying correlations, and they can use this information to learn the spatial structure and time-varying nature of the noise. This technique, which relies on tracking tiny fluctuations in magnetic fields, represents a stark improvement over previous methods that averaged many separate measurements.

De Leon is a leader in the fabrication and use of highly controlled diamond structures called nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers. These NV centers are modifications to a diamond’s lattice of carbon atoms in which a carbon is replaced by a nitrogen atom, and adjacent to it is an empty space, or vacancy, in the molecular structure. Diamonds with NV centers are one of the few tools that can measure changes in magnetic fields at the scale and speed needed for critical experiments in quantum technology and condensed matter physics.

While a single NV center allowed scientists to take detailed readings of magnetic fields, it was only when de Leon’s team worked out a method to harness multiple NV centers simultaneously that they were able to measure the spatial structure of noise in a material. This opens the door to understanding the properties of materials with bizarre quantum behaviors that until now have been analyzed only theoretically, said de Leon, the senior author of a paper describing the technique published online Dec. 22 in the journal Science.

“It’s a fundamentally new technique,” said de Leon. “It’s been clear from a theoretical perspective that it would be very powerful to be able to do this. The audience that I think is most excited about this work is condensed matter theorists, now that there’s this whole world of phenomena they might be able to characterize in a different way.”

One of these phenomena is a quantum spin liquid, a material first explored in theories nearly 50 years ago that has been difficult to characterize experimentally. In a quantum spin liquid, electrons are constantly in flux, in contrast to the solid-state stability that characterizes a typical magnetic material when cooled to a certain temperature.

“The challenging thing about a quantum spin liquid is that by definition there’s no static magnetic ordering, so you can’t just map out a magnetic field” the way you would with another type of material, said de Leon. “Until now there’s been essentially no way to directly measure these two-point magnetic field correlators, and what people have instead been doing is trying to find complicated proxies for that measurement.”

By simultaneously measuring magnetic fields at multiple points with diamond sensors, researchers can detect how electrons and their spins are moving across space and time in a material. In developing the new method, the team applied calibrated laser pulses to a diamond containing NV centers, and then detected two spikes of photon counts from a pair of NV centers—a readout of the electron spins at each center at the same point in time. Previous techniques would have taken an average of these measurements, discarding valuable information and making it impossible to distinguish the intrinsic noise of the diamond and its environment from the magnetic field signals generated by a material of interest.

“One of those two spikes is a signal we’re applying, the other is a spike from the local environment, and there’s no way to tell the difference,” said study coauthor Shimon Kolkowitz, an associate professor of physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “But when we look at the correlations, the one that is correlated is from the signal we’re applying and the other is not. And we can measure that, which is something people couldn’t measure before.”

Kolkowitz and de Leon met as Ph.D. students at Harvard University, and have been in touch frequently since then. Their research collaboration arose early in the COVID-19 pandemic, when laboratory research slowed, but long-distance collaboration became more attractive as most interactions took place over Zoom, said de Leon.

Jared Rovny, the study’s lead author and a postdoctoral research associate in de Leon’s group, led both the theoretical and experimental work on the new method. Contributions by Kolkowitz and his team were critical to designing the experiments and understanding the data, said de Leon. The paper’s coauthors also included Ahmed Abdalla and Laura Futamura, who conducted summer research with de Leon’s team in 2021 and 2022, respectively, as interns in the Quantum Undergraduate Research at IBM and Princeton (QURIP) program, which de Leon cofounded in 2019.

The article, “Nanoscale covariance magnetometry with diamond quantum sensors,” was published online Dec. 22 in Science.

More information:
Jared Rovny et al, Nanoscale covariance magnetometry with diamond quantum sensors, Science (2022). DOI: 10.1126/science.ade9858

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New technique reveals changing shapes of magnetic noise in space and time (2022, December 23)
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