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Or just nothing happens

ideas?
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Not that I'm really afraid because IF somethings happen it's so big no-one will escape such a disaster

Moderators: winston, another_commander, Cody
A total collapse in 3 years is virtually impossible. And yes, it would mean a doomsday. Too much business infrastructure would be impacted. And hey, some of us like some (not all) of their products.Cmdr Wyvern wrote:That's the date (I hope) Micro$haft files a Chapter 11.
Doomsday? Maybe for the paid $hills and troll$, not to mention all the $ecurity vendor$ and viru$ coders that depend on all the glaring flaws in window$ $oftware.
For the rest of us, it would be a rapture.
It does?Randy wrote:The end of the world has been predicted so many times and so many times the date has come and gone and the world is still here. But it sells books and television spots and makes charlatans rich.
This is basically correct, but the reasons are not unknown. The earth's iron core has some pretty massive electrical charges rotating inside. That produces a magnetic field. This is what makes a compass move. It orients onto the earth's magnetic field lines.For reasons unknown, Earths magnetic field has been weakening for the last 2000 years. Some 500 years ago, the rate of decrease became much more rapid. Another acceleration took place about 100 years ago, to the point that in the last century alone there has been a 50% decrease in field strength. In the last 20 years or so, it has also become erratic, to the point that aeronautical maps of the world have had to be revised globally in order for the autopilot systems to work.
Perhaps less than 1% of any climate researcher you might ask would agree with "It is entirely possible that the human contribution to global warming is negligible". The Bush administration wanted it to be so so that they wouldn't have to react to it and helped studies and people along who would dance to their tune - but that had political reasons, not scientific ones.Then there is the Suns' behaviour to consider. While the magnetic field of Earth is getting weaker, the suns' has increased by 230% since 1901. Solar output has increased by 50% in the same timeframe. We are not alone in our global warming situation, global warming is also being observed in at least 5 other planets in the Solar System. It is entirely possible that the human contribution to global warming is negligible.
If it were as you say, we would pass through the galactic field of lowest field strength in all 62 million years. That would mean, no effect. On us, at all.... the Solar System gradually rotates around the Galactic Rim, it regularly passes through the thickest part of the Galactic Plane, (or Disc) from one side to the other in a 62 million year cycle. The galaxy itself has a magnetic field, and the disc is the divider between the North and South poles. For some complex reasons I suspect there is a good chance that passing through the disc will cause the Earth's magnetic field to collapse to zero before flipping poles. If the field collapses, the Earth could effectively become a giant microwave oven for some unknown (hopefully brief) period of time.