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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: magnetic field + protect astronauts + moon  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)

Earth's Core, Magnetic Field Changing Fast, Study Says
National Geographic, DC -
Rapid changes in the churning movement of Earth's liquid outer core are weakening the magnetic field in some regions of the planet's surface, ...

ABC News
Magnetic Field Device May Zap Away Migraines
ABC News - Jun 26, 2008
The researchers, who presented their results today at the American Headache Society meeting in Boston, hypothesized that the magnetic field pulses could ...

Unconfirmed Sources (satire)
Cnet's Molly Wood Fine After Demagnetizing Close Call
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Wood who had been seeking treatment for her magnetic field at the San Francisco Regional Medical Center spent several tense minutes in an ultra polarized ...
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Knoxville News Sentinel, TN -
"The arrows in the image indicate the direction of the magnetic field, and the colors of the arrows indicate the magnitude of the magnetic field," Endeve ...
Here comes colour
spectroscopyNOW.com (subscription), UK -
They created a customized magnetic field for each tag by making it from particular materials and tweaking the geometry, perhaps by widening the gap between ...
Device puts steering at the tip of the tongue
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A headset with magnetic field sensors detects the magnetic tracer on the tongue and transmits wireless signals to a portable computer, which can be carried ...

Scientific American
Satellites Pinpoint Earth's Auroral Radio Chatter
Scientific American -
By JR Minkel A study of radio chirps and whistles blasting from Earth's magnetic field?sounding a bit like the famous Star Wars droid R2-D2?may help ...
Cluster Listens To The Sounds Of Earth
Science Daily (press release) - Jun 28, 2008
For each of the AKR bursts they analysed, the astronomers pinpointed its point of origin to regions in Earth?s magnetic field just a few tens of kilometres ...
Conceptual target for Munderra Iron Ore Project, Nth Qld
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - Jun 29, 2008
InterMet Resources Limited (ASX: ITT) is pleased to advise that the results of major field mapping and ground magnetic surveys on its northern Queensland ...ASX:IOH - ASX:ITT
Two-band superconductivity in LaFeAsO 0.89 F 0.11 at very high ...
Nature.com (subscription), UK - Jun 12, 2008
Indeed, first measurements of the upper critical magnetic field B c2 (T) have yielded a slope = dB c2 /dT 2 T K -1 near T c , for both La- and Sm-based ...
Magnetic order close to superconductivity in the iron-based ... Nature.com (subscription)
all 2 news articles »
Source: Google News

[PDF] Radiation Protection for Human Missions to the Moon and Mars -
LC Simonsen, JE Nealy - NASA TP-3079, 1991 - ntrs.nasa.gov
... netic field, the astronauts will be constantly bom- ... protect the astronauts
will depend on the time and duration of the mission. ...

[PDF] Shielding Space Explorers From Cosmic Rays -
EN Parker - Space Weather, 2005 - engineering.dartmouth.edu
... Spacecraft walls have helped to protect astronauts orbiting Earth and making quick
trips to the Moon, but for ... it with a strong magnetic field; both magnetic ...

Opportunities for nutritional amelioration of radiation-induced cellular damage -
ND Turner, LA Braby, J Ford, JR Lupton - Nutrition, 2002 - Elsevier
... of an airless planet or moon (without a magnetic field), the dose rate ... For this reason,
radiation protection limits are different for astronauts than for ...

Radiation exposure and Mission Strategies for Interplanetary Manned Missions (REMSIM) -
C Cougnet, NB Crosby, S Eckersley, C Foullon, V … - Earth, Moon, and Planets, 2004 - Springer
... The protection of astronauts from cosmic radiation is ... aspect for Aurora missions:
without the protection of Earth?s magnetic field, inhabited spacecraft ...

Radiation analysis for manned missions to the Jupiter system -
G De Angelis, MS Clowdsley, JE Nealy, RK Tripathi, … - Advances in Space Research, 2004 - Elsevier
... in the deep space for both astronauts and equipment ... The radiation protection is now
one of the ... which transports outward the solar magnetic field ( Badhwar and O ...

Recent advances in fluxgate magnetometry
D Gordon, R Brown - Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on, 1972 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... Triaxial fluxgates placed on the lunar surface by Apollo astronauts are providing
information on the moon?s magnetic field (Dyal et al. [HI, 1970) (see Fig. ...

Solar energetic particles: Is there time to hide? -
D Reames - Radiation Measurements, 1999 - Elsevier
... where astronauts can go to seek protection in times ... and timely warning for the
astronauts to seek ... few particles accelerated on open magnetic field lines stream ...


WF Libby - US Patent 3,465,153, 1969 - Google Patents
... not have the benefit of a sufficiently large magnetic field or a sur -rounding
atmosphere to protect it and ... of emer- gency develops for the astronauts 40 in ...

The Living with a Star (LWS) Sentinels Mission -
RP Lin - SPIE Proc, 2005 - agu.org
... to fly astronauts to the Moon and Mars is both very exciting and, at the same time,
daunting. Any flight away from the protection of the Earth's magnetic field ...

Earth-Moon-Mars Radiation Environment Module (EMMREM)
N Schwadron, C Goodrich, H Spence, L Townsend, F … - Aerospace Conference, 2007 IEEE, 2007 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... solar wind plasma, and magnetic field measurements obtained ... MH Kim, Materials for
Shielding Astronauts from the ... Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements ...

Source: Google Scholar

Earth's magnetic field could help protect astronauts working on the moon

It has been 35 years since humans last walked on the moon, but there has been much recent discussion about returning, either for exploration or to stage a mission to Mars. However, there are concerns about potential radiation danger for astronauts during long missions on the lunar surface.

A significant part of that danger results from solar storms, which can shoot particles from the sun to Earth at nearly the speed of light and can heat oxygen in the Earth's ionosphere and send it in a hazardous stream toward the moon.

Earth is largely protected by its magnetic field, or magnetosphere, but new University of Washington research shows that some parts of the moon also are protected by the magnetosphere for seven days during the 28-day orbit around Earth.

"We found that there were areas of the moon that would be completely protected by the magnetosphere and other areas that are not protected at all," said Erika Harnett, a UW assistant research professor of Earth and space sciences.

Solar energetic particles, which are generated during solar storms, carry enough energy to disrupt communications on Earth or even kill satellites in Earth orbit. During those same storms, particles from Earth's ionosphere, primarily oxygen, also can become significantly energized. Though they are not as powerful as solar energetic particles, they still pose a significant threat to astronauts working on the moon, or even en route to Mars.

Using computers to model properties of the magnetosphere, Harnett found that while solar storms can increase the danger from ionosphere particles hitting the moon they also trigger conditions in the magnetosphere that deflect many hazardous solar particles.

Particles with high enough energy can pass directly through a human without much damage, Harnett said, but particles packing slightly less oomph, though unfelt by a human, can lodge in a person. Typically it's not just one particle but many, and the accompanying radiation can damage cells, she said.

Some of the research is detailed in a poster being presented at the American Geophysical Union annual meeting in San Francisco, while other aspects are in a paper published last month in the online edition of Geophysical Research Letters. Robert Winglee, a UW Earth and space sciences professor, is co-author of the work, which was funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA.

In the longest missions of NASA's Apollo Program, astronauts spent just a few days on the moon. The last mission, Apollo 17, was launched Dec. 7, 1972, landed on the moon on Dec. 11 and arrived back on Earth on Dec. 19.

"During Apollo, people were not on the moon for very long so there wasn't the concern about the radiation hazard to humans as there is with longer missions," Harnett said.

Today there is much greater understanding of the danger posed by solar energetic particles, particularly because of the adverse effects they can have on satellite communications during periods of intense solar flare activity.

"The problem is that we can't predict when this activity is going to take place so we can't warn astronauts to take shelter, so they could be vulnerable when the moon is outside the magnetosphere," Harnett said. "The particles travel near the speed of light, so when we see them generated on the sun's surface they will arrive in a few minutes and there is little time to react."

The new research could help determine when it is safe for astronauts to work far from a lunar base, she said. But she added that models used in the work suggest that energetic oxygen from Earth's ionosphere also poses a danger, even though it is less energetic than solar particles.

"It wouldn't kill someone instantly, but it definitely could increase the radiation exposure for an astronaut on the moon," Harnett said.

However, she noted that the danger from energetic oxygen could be overstated because the models do not take into account the positive electrical charge on the daylight side of the moon that likely would significantly slow the oxygen stream.

###

For more information, contact Harnett at (206) 543-0212 or eharnett@ess.washington.edu, or Winglee at (206) 685-8160 or winglee@ess.washington.edu

REPORTERS NOTE: Erika Harnett's American Geophysical Union poster presentation will be at 8 a.m. Friday, Dec. 14, in Moscone Center South Exhibition Hall B, San Francisco.

 
 
 
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