Is it possible to exploit the magnetic field of Earth to obtain electricity?
Asked by:
Everardo Rascon
Answer
In 1996, NASA experimented with such a thing. It used a tethered satellite (the tether containing metal and being 12.5 miles long), moving through the magnetosphere. It worked under the same principle as a dynamo, where a moving wire in a magnetic field would create electricity. One part of the circuit was the tether itself, where the other was the ionosphere, the distant, ionized region of our atmosphere. This effect is not without cost, however, as the magnetic field opposes the motion of the system, thus lessening its kinetic energy and degrading its orbit. The tether exploited about 1 ampere at 3500 volts of electricity.
See more about this experiment at:
Tethered Satellite System (TSS-1R) by NASA
Answered by:
Justin Clifford, High School Student, Alpine, Utah
'If one wishes to obtain a definite answer from Nature one must attack the question from a more general and less selfish point of view.'