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I watched the Voyage to the bottom of the sea again. In the movie the van allen belt is on fire. Is this possible? Also how can there be belts around the eath when the earth is suppose to be spinning like a top?

2006-06-26 09:11:13 · 5 answers · asked by Judy (starynite) 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

5 answers

The radiation belts are regions of high-energy particles, mainly protons and electrons, held captive by the magnetic influence of the Earth. They have two main sources. A small but very intense "inner belt" (some call it "The Van Allen Belt" because it was discovered in 1958 by James Van Allen of the University of Iowa) is trapped within 4000 miles or or so of the Earth's surface. It consists mainly a high-energy protons (10-50 MeV) and is a by-product of the cosmic radiation, a thin drizzle of very fast protons and nuclei which apparently fill all our galaxy.

" In addition there exist electrons and protons (and also oxygen particles from the upper atmosphere) given moderate energies (say 1-100 keV; 1 MeV = 1000 keV) by processes inside the domain of the Earth's magnetic field. Some of these electrons produce the polar aurora ("northern lights") when they hit the upper atmosphere, but many get trapped, and among those, protons and positive particles have most of the energy .

"I looked up a typical satellite passing the radiation belts (elliptic orbit, 200 miles to 20000 miles) and the radiation dosage per year is about 2500 rem, assuming one is shielded by 1 gr/cm-square of aluminum (about 1/8" thick plate) almost all of it while passing the inner belt. But there is no danger. The way the particles move in the magnetic field prevents them from hitting the atmosphere, and even if they are scattered so their orbit does intersect the ground, the atmosphere absorbs them long before they get very far. Even the space station would be safe, because the orbits usually stop above it--any particles dipping deeper down are lost much faster than they can be replenished.

2006-06-26 11:04:22 · answer #1 · answered by hkyboy96 5 · 1 0

Why do you think the earth s spin has anything to do with the possibility of existence of radiation belts?

If anything, the earth s spin IS related to its magnetic field, which IS related to the radiation belts... Can you rephrase your question?

Thanks!

2015-07-09 16:53:58 · answer #2 · answered by Alan F 3 · 0 0

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2016-12-19 22:48:24 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The belts are round, genius!

But no, radiation cannot go on fire.

2006-06-26 10:01:59 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

of course, anything you see in a movie is possible.

the earth is spinning, it is not supposed to be spinning

2006-06-26 09:19:40 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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