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Animal Magnetism: First Evidence That Magnetism Helps Animals Find Home

Animal Magnetism: First Evidence That Magnetism Helps Animals Find Home | Science News | Scoop.it
Salmon appear to seek the magnetic signature of their home river during their spawning migration.
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Earth's Inconstant Magnetic Field And The Drift Of The Magnetic North Pole

Earth's Inconstant Magnetic Field And The Drift Of The Magnetic North Pole | Science News | Scoop.it

Our planet's magnetic field is in a constant state of change, say researchers who are beginning to understand how it behaves and why.

 

Every few years, scientist Larry Newitt of the Geological Survey of Canada goes hunting. He grabs his gloves, parka, a fancy compass, hops on a plane and flies out over the Canadian arctic. Not much stirs among the scattered islands and sea ice, but Newitt's prey is there--always moving, shifting, elusive. His quarry is Earth's north magnetic pole. 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.

 

Sometimes the the whole magnetic field of Earth 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.


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald, ABroaderView
Robert T. Preston's curator insight, June 2, 2013 2:18 PM

The magnetic North Pole is ever on the move, and always has been.  See where it's been, where it's headed, and get a glimpse into why.

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[VIDEO] MIT student creates computer-controlled magic levitation.

What if materials could defy gravity, so that we could leave them suspended in mid-air? ZeroN is a physical and digital interaction element that floats and moves in space by computer-controlled magnetic levitation.


Articles about LEVITATION: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=levitation

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Magnetic cloak: Physicists create device invisible to magnetic fields

Magnetic cloak: Physicists create device invisible to magnetic fields | Science News | Scoop.it
European researchers said Thursday they have created a device invisible to a static magnetic field that could have practical military and medical applications.
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Mysterious electron acceleration explained

Mysterious electron acceleration explained | Science News | Scoop.it
A mysterious phenomenon detected by space probes has finally been explained, thanks to a massive computer simulation that was able to precisely align with details of spacecraft observations.
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Magnetic therapy becoming more popular for treating depression

Magnetic therapy becoming more popular for treating depression | Science News | Scoop.it
(Medical Xpress) -- A new magnetic therapy that treats major depression recently received a major boost when the government announced Medicare will cover the procedure in Illinois.


Articles about DEPRESSION: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?page=1&tag=depression


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Mesmerizing loops of magnetism on the Sun ... and a flare

[SET THIS TO HD!] More info about this video is on my blog (goes live Sunday at 13:00 UTC): http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2012/01/29/mesmeri...
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Researchers use magnets to cause programmed cancer cell deaths

Researchers use magnets to cause programmed cancer cell deaths | Science News | Scoop.it
A team of researchers in South Korea has developed a method to cause cell death in both living fish and lab bowel cancer cells (in vivo and in vitro) using a magnetic field. The application of the magnetic field, as described in their paper published in the journal Nature Materials, triggers a "death signal" that leads to programmed cell death.


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Hidden portals in Earth's magnetic field

Hidden portals in Earth's magnetic field | Science News | Scoop.it
A favorite theme of science fiction is 'the portal' -- an extraordinary opening in space or time that connects travelers to distant realms.  A good portal is a shortcut, a guide, a door into the unknown.
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[VIDEO] Smart sand & robot pebbles

Imagine that you have a big box of sand in which you bury a tiny model of a footstool. A few seconds later, you reach into the box and pull out a full-size footstool: The sand has assembled itself into a large-scale replica of the model. That may sound like a scene from a Harry Potter novel, but it's the vision animating a research project at the Distributed Robotics Laboratory (DRL) at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

Articles about robotics: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=robotics

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8 Ways Magnetic Levitation Could Shape the Future - How Maglev Technology Works

8 Ways Magnetic Levitation Could Shape the Future - How Maglev Technology Works | Science News | Scoop.it
Magnetic levitation (maglev) can create frictionless, efficient, far-out-sounding technologies. Here are some of the craziest uses that engineers and designers have dreamed up.
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Physicists 'record' magnetic breakthrough

Physicists 'record' magnetic breakthrough | Science News | Scoop.it
An international team of scientists has demonstrated a revolutionary new way of magnetic recording which will allow information to be processed hundreds of times faster than by current hard drive technology.
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Magnetic Movie

Magnetic Movie | Science News | Scoop.it

The secret lives of invisible magnetic fields are revealed as chaotic ever-changing geometries . All action takes place around NASA's Space Sciences Laboratories, UC Berkeley, to recordings of space scientists describing their discoveries . Actual VLF audio recordings control the evolution of the fields as they delve into our inaudible surroundings, revealing recurrent ‘whistlers' produced by fleeting electrons . Are we observing a series of scientific experiments, the universe in flux, or a documentary of a fictional world?.

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Video: DARPA Rubs a Flame With an Electric Wand to Extinguish It | Popular Science

Video: DARPA Rubs a Flame With an Electric Wand to Extinguish It | Popular Science | Science News | Scoop.it

A recently-concluded DARPA program sought to extinguish fires using unusual methods. No water or simple common chemicals for DARPA: instead, this is "a novel flame-suppression system based on destabilization of flame plasma with electromagnetic fields and acoustics techniques." Below, you will find a video of somebody rubbing a fire with some sort of rod, which puts the fire out.

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