Is the sun magnetic?

The Sun is a magnetic star. The thermonuclear furnace in its 15-million-degree core heats and churns the electrically conducting plasma in the outer third of the Sun in much the same way as a stove heats and churns boiling water.
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Why is the Sun magnetic?

The sun is made of plasma, a gas-like state of matter in which electrons and ions have separated, creating a super-hot mix of charged particles. When charged particles move, they naturally create magnetic fields, which in turn have an additional effect on how the particles move.
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Does the Sun have magnets?

The sun's magnetic field has two poles, like a bar magnet. The poles flip at the peak of the solar activity cycle, every 11 years. A solar wind composed of charged particles carries the magnetic field away from the sun's surface and through the solar system.
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What is the magnetic pull of the Sun?

The Sun has a very large and very complex magnetic field. The magnetic field at an average place on the Sun is around 1 Gauss, about twice as strong as the average field on the surface of Earth (around 0.5 Gauss).
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Is the moon magnetic?

The Moon lacks a magnetic field today, and models of its core suggest that it was probably too small and lacked the convective force to have ever produced a continuously strong magnetic field. In order for a core to have a strong convective churn, it needs to dissipate a lot of heat.
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Understanding the Magnetic Sun



Is the Earth a magnet?

The crust of the Earth has some permanent magnetization, and the Earth's core generates its own magnetic field, sustaining the main part of the field we measure at the surface. So we could say that the Earth is, therefore, a "magnet."
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How often is sun magnetic?

The sun's magnetic field changes polarity approximately every 11 years. It happens at the peak of each solar cycle as the sun's inner magnetic dynamo re-organizes itself. The coming reversal will mark the midpoint of Solar Cycle 24.
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Is the Sun negatively or positively charged?

According to this post and references there, the charge of the Sun is positive, the magnitude is estimated as 77 Coulombs, or about 1 electron per million tons of matter.
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What will happen to the Sun in 6.5 billion years?

When it starts to die, the Sun will expand into a red giant star, becoming so large that it will engulf Mercury and Venus, and possibly Earth as well. Scientists predict the Sun is a little less than halfway through its lifetime and will last another 5 billion years or so before it becomes a white dwarf.
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Why does the Sun not attract the Earth?

Like the string, the Sun's gravity pulls on the planets, but the planets have enough sideways motion to keep them in their orbits. The Sun is more than 300,000 times heavier than Earth, distance of the Earth to Sun is about 1.50 x ¹⁰¹¹ m, and the force of attraction between the Sun and Earth is about F = 3.52 x ¹⁰²² N.
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Does the Sun's magnetic field affect us?

Answer: No. The only influence that the Sun's magnetic field has on the Earth is through the energy released by solar flares and coronal mass ejections. These events are caused by changes in the Sun's magnetic field structure.
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Are All stars magnetic?

The sun and other late-type stars have the ability to generate and maintain strong localized magnetic field regions on and above the stellar surface. Recent observational results strongly suggest that a much higher range of upper-main-sequence spectral types have appreciable surface magnetic fields.
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How do the Suns poles flip?

Unlike the Earth however, the Sun's global dipole magnetic field flips or reverses polarity every 11 years around the maximum phase of each 11 year solar cycle. During the reversal, the polarity of the solar polar fields in both hemispheres reverses or changes to the opposite polarity.
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Does the Sun rotate?

The Sun rotates on its axis once in about 27 days. This rotation was first detected by observing the motion of sunspots. The Sun's rotation axis is tilted by about 7.25 degrees from the axis of the Earth's orbit so we see more of the Sun's north pole in September of each year and more of its south pole in March.
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What keeps the Sun shining?

The Sun shines by turning hydrogen into helium in its core. This process is called nuclear fusion. Fusion happens when lighter elements are forced together to become heavier elements. When this happens, a tremendous amount of energy is created.
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What is the charge of the universe?

It is impossible to conclusively measure the overall electric charge of the universe since the universe is infinite. However, the laws of physics, extrapolations of local measurements, and simple reasoning seem to all tell us that the overall electric charge of the universe is exactly zero.
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Is the Sun electrical?

The Sun is at a more positive electrical potential (voltage) than is the space plasma surrounding it - probably in the order of 10 billion volts. The Sun is powered, not from within itself, but from outside, by the electric (Birkeland) currents that flow in our arm of our galaxy as they do in all galaxies.
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What happens every 11 years on the Sun?

The Sun's magnetic field goes through a cycle, called the solar cycle. Every 11 years or so, the Sun's magnetic field completely flips. This means that the Sun's north and south poles switch places. Then it takes about another 11 years for the Sun's north and south poles to flip back again.
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When did the Sun last flip?

When did the magnetic poles flip in Solar Cycle 24? Both poles have now flipped. The north pole changed its polarity from positive to negative and the south pole changed from negative to positive. Scientists believe the north pole finished the change in June 2012 and the south pole change happened in July 2013.
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Does the Sun have a pole?

Like Earth, the Sun has a North Pole, a South Pole, and an equator. The poles of the Sun are different in several ways from the areas near the Sun's equator. The Sun has a magnetic field with North and South Magnetic Poles. About every 11 years, the Sun's magnetic poles flip - North becomes South and vice versa.
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Do humans have a magnetic field?

The human body naturally has both magnetic and electrical fields. Right down to the tiny cells in our bodies, every part of our body has their own field.
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Where is the world's strongest magnet?

The magnet created by the researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico clocks in at 100 Tesla━a magnetic force that is 2 million times stronger than Earth's magnetic field.
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