Planetary Science
Planetary Dynamo
How planets generate magnetic fields — convection in conducting fluid + rotation
A planetary dynamo is the process by which a planet generates its magnetic field — through convection in an electrically conducting fluid (typically molten iron in core) combined with the planet's rotation. Earth's dynamo: convection in liquid outer core, driven by heat from inner core solidification, produces ~25 µT field at surface. Jupiter has strongest planetary field (4 G; 20× Earth). Mars and Venus lack global field today. Tide-locked exoplanets (no rotation): may not have dynamos. Magnetic field protects atmosphere from solar wind.
- Earth's surface field~25-65 µT (microteslas)
- Earth's coreMolten iron + solid inner core
- Jupiter's field4 G surface (20× Earth)
- MarsNo global field today (lost ~4 Gyr ago)
- VenusNo global field (rotates very slowly)
- MechanismConvection in conducting fluid + rotation (Coriolis)
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Why planetary dynamos matter
- Atmospheric protection. Magnetic field shields atmosphere.
- Habitability. Important for long-term habitable.
- Comparative planetology. Mars vs Earth vs Venus.
- Planet formation. Sets thermal evolution.
- Solar system structure. Different planets have different dynamos.
- Auroras. Field-related phenomena.
- Exoplanet habitability. Magnetic field criteria.
Common misconceptions
- All rocky planets have dynamos. Mars and Venus don't (today).
- Magnetic field requires solid iron. Molten conducting fluid.
- Field is stable. Can reverse and weaken over time.
- Field aligned with rotation axis. Earth's tilted; Uranus's very tilted.
- Slow rotation prevents dynamo. Mostly — but Mercury has slow rotation + dynamo.
- Dynamos only on Earth-like planets. Gas giants have powerful ones.
Frequently asked questions
How does a planetary dynamo work?
Three ingredients required. (1) Electrically conducting fluid (molten iron, salty water, hydrogen — depends on planet). (2) Convection — fluid motion driven by heat differences. (3) Rotation — Coriolis force organizes flow. Combined: induces electric currents, produces magnetic field. Self-sustaining once started.
What's Earth's dynamo?
Liquid outer core ~2200 km thick. Iron + nickel + light elements. Density 10-12 g/cm³. Temperature ~5000 K. Heat from: solidifying inner core releasing latent heat, radioactive decay, primordial heat. Convection driven by temperature gradient. Coriolis force from Earth's rotation organizes columnar flows. Result: dipolar field with reversal every ~few hundred thousand years.
Why doesn't Mars have a magnetic field?
Mars used to have dynamo. Lost it ~4 Gyr ago. Reasons: smaller planet → faster cooling → core solidified or lost convection. Without molten conducting layer + convection: no dynamo. Crustal magnetism remains in some places (frozen-in fields from past dynamo). Loss of field allowed solar wind to strip atmosphere.
Why doesn't Venus have magnetic field?
Venus rotates very slowly (243-day period; one day longer than year). Slow rotation → weak Coriolis force → unable to organize convection into dynamo flow. Plus: very hot interior may have solidified core differently. Venus has weak induced field from solar wind, no global field.
What about gas giants?
Jupiter and Saturn: dynamos in metallic hydrogen layer (compressed H₂ becomes metallic at extreme pressure). Massive, fast-rotating. Strong fields: Jupiter 4 G, Saturn ~0.2 G. Uranus and Neptune: dynamos in icy mantle of water/ammonia/methane mixture. Tilted, offset fields — different from typical dipoles.
How does the field affect atmospheres?
Magnetic field deflects solar wind; protects atmosphere from being stripped. Earth: field maintains atmosphere over Gyr. Mars: lost field, lost most atmosphere. Important factor for habitability — strong field helps retain atmosphere over long times. Some say critical for life.
What's the future of Earth's dynamo?
Current state: stable. Inner core grows ~1 mm/year. Will solidify completely in ~Gyr. After: no convection in core → no dynamo → field decays. Earth then unprotected from solar wind. Atmosphere may erode (if no replenishment). Long-term concern; not immediate.