Thursday, 11 May 2017

electrostatics - What is the net charge of the Earth?


This question arose in a seminar today about the solar wind...


This is my vagueish understanding of the problem - please correct if you see errors!


The 'classical' picture of atmospheric electricity is that the Earth as a whole is neutral, but that thunderstorms maintain a voltage of around +300kV at the electrosphere with respect to the Earth's surface, with a current of around 1 kA slowly discharging around 500 kC of total charge separation. The solar wind is supposed to neutralise any net charge that might be there between the Earth as a whole and the solar wind.


However, positive and negative charges in the solar wind are differently trapped in the van Allen belts, from which they can then descend to the Earth's atmosphere, which implies that a net charge can be developed due to this differential leakage. This begs the question of whether there are any estimates of the total net charge. I've hunted in the literature but have found little useful material other than Dolezalek's 1988 paper: http://www.springerlink.com/content/u057683112l148x5/


Can anyone offer an explanation, or point me to some more relevant papers?




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