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On Wed, 17 Oct 2007 11:34:16 -0600, "Bill" wrote:
The source of the field rotates with the earth. The field itself is decoupled from the source once it leaves the source. Sorry, but you are the only one who thinks that the earths magnetic field doesn;t rotate with it. Mason Peck of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, US, has received a grant to study the idea, which is based on the fact that magnetic fields exert forces on electrically charged objects. He says a satellite could charge itself up in one of two ways – either by firing a beam of charged particles into space, or simply by allowing a radioactive isotope to emit charged particles. The charged satellite would then be gently pushed by Earth's rotating magnetic field, enabling it to change orbit and even escape to interplanetary space Took all of two minutes with a search engine and 'earths rotating magnetic field'. Got quite a few hits for something that doesn't exist. Casady |
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