Answer: Nothing.
That answer might surprise you, but the fact that the field occasionally
reverses is simply a property of the continuous, on-going behavior of
the Earth's dynamo. There is no ‘cause’ per se. With respect to the
physics of the process itself, some lessons can be learned from the laboratory.
It is possible, for example, to design a machine, an electrical-magnetic-mechanical
dynamo consisting of spinning metal disks and coils of wire which, when
supplied with mechanical energy, sustains its own magnetic field. Depending
on the details of the apparatus, the magnetic field can be steady, with
no time dependence at all, or it can reverse periodically, like the Sun’s
magnetic field does every eleven years, or it can reverse randomly, bouncing
back and forth in an orbit around two preferred states (opposite polarities)
like the Earth’s magnetic field does. It is also possible to write
down the mathematical equations that describe the behavior of this laboratory
system – the equations describe what is popularly known as ‘chaos’,
and, even though the laboratory system is relatively simple, its equations
have some similarity to those describing the dynamics of the Earth’s
core. In summary, then, nature allows for different kinds of dynamos,
some of which just simply have the property that they undergo occasional
random reversals. The Earth' core happens to be one of those dynamo types. |