These are the sort of theoretical questions that are important to me for ~mumblemumblereasons~, but which are a little tricky to find answers for, because they're not the sort of thing we concern ourselves with. But I am hoping perhaps some of you have the sort of knowledge and enjoyment of speculation that might let you weigh in and help me out.
1. If Earth had no magnetic field, could smaller objects on the ground still display magnetism? In other words, is the magnetism of objects, such as magnetic minerals or magnets themselves, tied to the planet's magnetism, or is there an inherent magnetism within the object itself that would work independent of any larger magnetic field? I believe the answer is yes, but I'm hoping someone can confirm that for me.
They certainly could, a magnet floating in outer space is still a magnet, Earth just happens to have a massive molten core of magnetic materials.
2. In addition, if Earth suddenly lost its magnetic field, would our electronics be affected?
I can't imagine any scenario for this to occur that wouldn't be absurdly catastrophic. It is caused by the motion of molten iron the outer core spinning and the amount of that iron out-masses the oceans considerably. As long as it is molten and moving there will be a field. However our electronics generally work just fine on places without significant fields like the moon or mars, and not very many of them function in any way that should be effected.
3. If you were in a place that was completely flat, by which I mean a plane, not even on a curved surface such as the Earth, what limits would be placed on how far you could see? If there was nothing in your way, no buildings or anything, would you be able to see something big, say an Olympus Mons sized mountain, that was a thousand miles away? More? Or would dust, atmosphere, pollution, or whatever else combine to blur the sight of distant objects?
That depends on the atmosphere, or atmoplane, exclusively. On earth one can see 1.2 miles times the square root of the feet in height, roughly, or 12 miles at a 100 feet and 120 miles at 10,000 feet. At these heights the atmosphere is thinner and you can see through more of it, but of course the reason is the curvature. Several hundred miles at least though, through air, but not millions, and you'd have limited effective resolution.
4. Are there things that we take for granted that would change if we lived on a planet that didn't rotate? For example, without a planetary coriolis effect, the movement of clouds and air pressure would be different, giving us different weather patterns. I know that it's fairly improbable that a planet wouldn't rotate to some degree, but this is theoretical.
Absolutely, on an orbital ring, such as an Oneill Cylinder, Banks Orbital, or Niven Ringworld for instance the horizon does not exist, as the world curves up, and the weather would be very different. On the moon you can see a very long way and crisply, from the lack of air, alternatively the world slopes away quickly from the curvature, you would have no difficulty seeing an object disappear over the horizon. Weather patterns are seriously effected by everything from planet spin rate to the moon and of course the sun and the magnetic field of the world. To your specific suggestion, a non-rotating world, these are probably quite common, like our own moon. A tidally locked world, one that always has day on one side and night on the other, would have very different weather, possibly a breeze always blowing out from the same sun-side point. However it seems probably, as I think we've discussed on the board before, that a tidally locked world would blow all of it's moisture to its darkside to be frozen in massive glaciers and be a desert on the sun side, so probably no clouds.
My thanks in advance if you can shed any light for me. Though really, you ought to see a dermatologist. Shedding light can't be natural.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
This message last edited by Isaac on 14/02/2013 at 05:25:22 PM
I have some strange questions.
14/02/2013 04:45:04 PM
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Some strange answers
14/02/2013 05:14:36 PM
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Re: Some strange answers
14/02/2013 06:16:59 PM
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More strange answers
14/02/2013 08:28:39 PM
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A tidally locked world would be horrifying. I'm pretty sure you'd get more than a breeze. *NM*
14/02/2013 07:07:41 PM
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I never run the numbers but I wouldn't expect it to gust
14/02/2013 08:51:21 PM
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I remember a series of books about a planet that was almost tidal locked
14/02/2013 11:45:43 PM
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Re: I remember a series of books about a planet that was almost tidal locked
15/02/2013 12:17:43 AM
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I haven't read it, but that sounds like what I've heard of West of January.
15/02/2013 08:20:57 PM
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You might find this xkcd blog entry interesting, if you have not yet seen it:
15/02/2013 04:09:05 PM
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