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Lathrop Lab's Geodynamo Set for Overhaul - UMD Physics
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Lathrop Lab's Geodynamo Set for Overhaul
 Published: Friday, March 06 2020 09:53
In a hangar-sized laboratory off Paint Branch Drive, Dan Lathrop gives the signal, and what he often calls simply “the experiment” awakens. A huge, steel sphere with tubes and electrical wires snaking across its surface begins a stately, nearly silent rotation inside a towering cage-like structure.
Thats the experiment running at visitor speed, however. When only Lathrop, a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher and professor in physics, and his graduate students are present to gather data, they crank up its 350 horsepower electric motor to spin 80 times faster, until the 3-meter globe encasing 25,000 pounds of liquid sodium blurs out at four revolutions per second.
For safety reasons, in the 11 years since he first switched the experiment on, no lab guest has ever watched it run that fast. Lathrop hasnt either, exactly. “You cant see it at full speed,” he said.
If “the experiment” sounds pretty singular, thats because
theres nothing else like it on the planet. Lathrop, an expert in turbulent flows, envisioned the giant apparatus and several smaller predecessors as a way to simulate and perhaps even predict changes in the Earths magnetic field, which originates in its core and helps
Professor Dan Lathrop examines the 3-meter steel sphere he uses in simulations of the Earth's "geodynamo." Hidden inside the spinning outer sphere (diagram, below) molten sodium and an even quicker-whirling inner sphere represent the earth's liquid outer core and solid inner core, which create geomagnetism. (Photo by John T. Consoli; diagram by Kolin Behrens)
protect the surface from harmful solar radiation. While
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the machine has fascinated the geophysics community and generated useful results about planetary magnetic
fields, it has never quite fulfilled Lathrops hopes. So this year, supported by a recently renewed National
Science Foundation grant, he and his lab members will undertake a painstaking process to drain the flammable
sodium, dismantle the device, upgrade it and—if the plan works—create a better magnetic model of the Earth.
Our planet has a “geodynamo,” a self-generating, selfsustaining magnetic field created by flows in its molten outer core, a layer of mostly iron and nickel more than 3,000 kilometers beneath our feet. Swirling turbulence in the liquid metal, caused by convection and the planets rotation, gives rise to electrical currents and magnetic fields that feed on each other.
So far, Lathrops experiment needs external current to generate a magnetic field; soon he hopes that will no longer be necessary. Doctoral students Rubén Rojas and Artur Perevalov in physics, along with Heidi Myers in geology and Sarah Burnett in mathematics, have been researching ways to modify a hidden, inner sphere of the device—analogous to Earths solid inner core—by adding texture to create swirling, helical flows in the highly conductive liquid sodium, generating electrical currents.
Its never been tried before, so the results are hard to predict.
“I try not to be a foolish optimist, but you know, you arent going to build an experiment like this without a certain amount of optimism that there are interesting things to see,” Lathrop said.
The biggest potential prize would be an ability to predict the “weather” of Earths magnetic field, which is constantly in flux. Geologic evidence suggests the poles have reversed hundreds of times—most recently 780,000 years ago—and indeed, the North Pole has been moving from Canada toward Russia with increasing speed in recent years. During such a flip, much of the planets surface could have a weaker magnetic shield from solar radiation. (For a preview of what that could be like, look at Mars, which lacks a geodynamo.)
Even now, solar storms do create problems on Earth, damaging satellites and sensitive electronics, said Sara Gibson, a solar physicist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. For instance, if a massive 1859 solar storm that caused aurora as far south as the tropics hit today, it could fry communications and electrical grids worldwide.
“Dans work is really important, because its vital to understand the Earths magnetic field, which is coupling with whats coming from the sun, and creating these magnetic impacts,” Gibson said.
Lathrop doesnt promote his research with disaster scenarios. A pole reversal may not be in the offing at all, and would take more than 1,000 years. But what about scientific curiosity as well as simple prudence concerning a factor that allowed life to arise on earth?
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Lathrop Lab's Geodynamo Set for Overhaul - UMD Physics
“You think youd want a solid scientific base knowing, well, how does it work, and how did it get there?” he said.
“Wheres it at now? And wheres it going?”
Original story by Chris Carroll, Maryland Today
Watch the 3 meter experiment.
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