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(Files in red–history)
Index 1. Magnetosphere 1H. Gilbert, 1600 2. Magnetic Field 2H. Oersted, 1820 3. Aurora 3H. Birkeland 1895 3a. Loomis & Aurora 3b. Fritz & Aurora 3c. The Terrella |
In the 1830s a world-wide network of magnetic observatories was set up and it was then realized that disturbances of the compass needle, which were occasionally noticed, occured on a world wide pattern. They seemed to come from outside the Earth, and Alexander von Humboldt named them magnetic storms
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There followed more than a century of attempts to study and understand these elusive phenomena. Only after 1958, when the first scientific spacecraft were launched and when Explorers 1 and 3 discovered the radiation belt, did scientists fully appreciate the complexity of electric and magnetic phenomena that occur in the Earth's magnetic environment. In 1959 Thomas Gold of Cornell University proposed to name that environment "magnetosphere", and this name is still used.
Further Reading:
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Next Stop: #2. Magnetic Fields
Author and Curator: Dr. David P. Stern
Mail to Dr.Stern: education("at" symbol)phy6.org
Co-author: Dr. Mauricio Peredo
Spanish translation by J. Méndez