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Dec. 3, 2003:Â
Earth is surrounded by a magnetic force field--a bubble in space called
"the magnetosphere" tens of thousands of miles wide. Although many
people don't know it exists, the magnetosphere is familiar. It's a far
flung part of the same planetary magnetic field that deflects compass
needles here on Earth's surface. And it's important. The magnetosphere
acts as a shield that protects us from solar storms.
According to new observations, however, from
NASA's IMAGE spacecraft and the joint NASA/European Space Agency
Cluster satellites, immense cracks sometimes develop in Earth's
magnetosphere and remain open for hours. This allows the solar wind to
gush through and power stormy space weather.
end quote from:
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2003/03dec_magneticcracks/
So, if you listen to the streaming audio through Itunes above it says that the California sized magnetic Shield Cracks at that time were somewhere in the polar Circle near the North Pole. So, slowly but surely I'm finding more and more research done on Magnetic Shield Cracks and their relationship to the Aurora Borealis and life on earth. If you find more research that is more up to date let me know so I can share it through my site with interested people around the world.
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