Magnetic whirlpools feed Earth's magnetosphere

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This image shows a three-dimensional cut-away view of the magnetic bubble surrounding Earth called magnetosphere. The curly features sketched on the boundary layer are the so-called Kelvin-Helmholtz vortices discovered by Cluster Hasegawa et al. 2004 ...
This image shows a three-dimensional cut-away view of the magnetic 'bubble' surrounding Earth, called magnetosphere. The curly features sketched on the boundary layer are the so-called 'Kelvin-Helmholtz' vortices discovered by Cluster [Hasegawa et al., 2004]. The vortices, or whirlpools, originate where two adjacent flows of electrically charged gas (plasma) travel with different speed. In this case, one of the flows is the heated gas inside the boundary layer of the magnetosphere, the other one is the solar wind just outside it. The white dashed arrow shows the trajectory followed by Cluster when the vortices where discovered. Credits: ESA/Hasegawa et al.

Giant whirlpools of electrically charged gas, some 40 000 kilometres across, have been witnessed above the Earth by a team of European and American scientists. Using data from ESA's Cluster quartet of spacecraft, the researchers have shown that these whirlpools inject electrified gas into the magnetic environment of the Earth.


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