Solar Wind Rips Up Martian Atmosphere
IHateEverybody writes "Scientists have found evidence that the solar wind is ripping off chunks of the Martian atmosphere, which could possibly explain why Mars has such a thin atmosphere today. The chunks are being ripped up along 'magnetic umbrellas,' which are bubbles of magnetic fields which rise from the ground and extend above the Martian atmosphere. This is surprising because scientists previously thought that these magnetic umbrellas protected the Martian atmosphere. Now it looks like exactly the opposite might be true."
Or do we just leave that as an extra credit exercise for the students?
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You're correct. Earth's protective magnetic field is generated by the molten iron core. When the planets were created, they all had the same molten core, but over time, they solidify. It takes longer in bigger planets because the core is bigger (duh). In Earth, the outer core remains molten while the inner core has solidified. Likewise, Venus, being a relatively big rocky planet also has an atmosphere that's protected by its magnetic field (hence the clouds on it surface). Mercury and Mars are smaller, their cores are likely less molten, so their magnetic fields are weaker and therefore they have no atmosphere. Eventually, Earth's core will also solidify so the atmosphere will get ripped away from here too.
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Putting a satellite around Mars.. hmmm.. maybe we should put two in orbit, and call them Phobos and Deimos. ;)
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Ha. Ha.
Phobos and Deimos have mass, relative to Mars, of jack and shit. Mars/Eris relative mass would at least be in the same (decimal) order of magnitude as Earth/Moon.
Geothermal energy doesn't reach nearly far enough into the planet to have any effect on the temperature of the core. Even the deepest hole on earth, which is in Russia, if I remember right, is something like 15 miles deep. While that sounds like a really deep hole, if the earth were and egg, 15 miles wouldn't even have broken through the shell yet. At that minuscule distance, no amount of extracted heat would have any effect on the core.
The core of the earth is likely never going to cool, even if we install geothermal energy in every house and building on the planet. Between friction heating (from tidal forces) and nuclear heating, the core has remained molten for 4.5 billion years or so, and will remain molten for at least a few billion more, which is far beyond an amount ever worth worrying about.