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South Atlantic Anomaly

Region where Earth's magnetic field is weakest relative to an idealised dipole

South Atlantic Anomaly

Summary

Region where Earth's magnetic field is weakest relative to an idealised dipole

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The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is an area where Earth's inner Van Allen radiation belt comes closest to Earth's surface, dipping down to an altitude of 200 km. This leads to an increased flux of energetic particles in this region and exposes orbiting satellites (including the ISS) to higher-than-usual levels of ionizing radiation.

The effect is caused by the non-concentricity of Earth with its magnetic dipole. The SAA is the near-Earth region where Earth's magnetic field is weakest relative to an idealized Earth-centered dipole field.

Definition

The area of the SAA is confined by the intensity of Earth's magnetic field at less than 32,000 nanotesla at sea level, which corresponds to the dipolar magnetic field at ionospheric altitudes. However, the field itself varies in intensity as a gradient.

Position and shape

A cross-sectional view of the Van Allen radiation belts, noting the point where the South Atlantic Anomaly occurs

The Van Allen radiation belts are symmetric about the Earth's magnetic axis, which is tilted with respect to the Earth's rotational axis by an angle of approximately 11°. The intersection between the magnetic and rotation axes of the Earth is located not at the Earth's center, but some 450 to away. Because of this asymmetry, the inner Van Allen belt is closest to the Earth's surface over the south Atlantic Ocean where it dips down to 200 km in altitude, and farthest from the Earth's surface over the north Pacific Ocean.

If Earth's magnetism is represented by a bar magnet of small size but strong intensity ("magnetic dipole"), the SAA variation can be illustrated by placing the magnet not in the plane of the Equator, but some small distance North, shifted more or less in the direction of Singapore. As a result, over northern South America and the south Atlantic, near Singapore's antipodal point, the magnetic field is relatively weak, resulting in a lower repulsion to trapped particles of the radiation belts there, and as a result these particles reach deeper into the upper atmosphere than they otherwise would.

The shape of the SAA changes over time. Since its initial discovery in 1958, the southern limits of the SAA have remained roughly constant while a long-term expansion has been measured to the northwest, the north, the northeast, and the east. Additionally, the shape and particle density of the SAA vary diurnally, with greatest particle density corresponding roughly to local noon. At an altitude of approximately 500 km, the SAA spans from −50° to 0° geographic latitude and from −90° to +40° longitude. The highest intensity portion of the SAA drifts to the west at a speed of about 0.3° per year, and is noticeable in the references listed below. The drift rate of the SAA is very close to the rotation differential between the Earth's core and its surface, estimated to be between 0.3° and 0.5° per year.

Current literature suggests that a slow weakening of the geomagnetic field is one of several causes for the changes in the borders of the SAA since its discovery. As the geomagnetic field continues to weaken, the inner Van Allen belt gets closer to the Earth, with a commensurate enlargement of the SAA at given altitudes.{{cite report|title=Swarm probes weakening of Earth's magnetic field|date=May 20, 2020 |url=https://www.esa.int/Applications/Observing_the_Earth/FutureEO/Swarm/Swarm_probes_weakening_of_Earth_s_magnetic_field

The South Atlantic Anomaly seems to be caused by a huge reservoir of very dense rock inside the Earth called the African large low-shear velocity province.

The position of the anomaly can be that of the maximum magnetic flux or that of the centroid of the flux, which is less sensitive to sampling noise and more representative of the feature as a whole. In January 2021, the centroid was located near and drifting about 0.23°S 0.34°W per year.

Intensity and effects

The location of the SAA is visible on the main screen at NASA's Mission Control Center in Houston.

The South Atlantic Anomaly is of great significance to astronomical satellites and other spacecraft that orbit the Earth at several hundred kilometers altitude; these orbits take satellites through the anomaly periodically, exposing them to several minutes of strong ionizing radiation, caused by the trapped protons in the inner Van Allen belt.

Measurements on Space Shuttle flight STS-94 have ascertained that absorbed dose rates from charged particles have extended from 112 to 175 μGy/day, with dose equivalent rates ranging from 264.3 to 413 μSv/day.

The International Space Station, orbiting with an inclination of 51.6°, requires extra shielding to deal with this problem. The Hubble Space Telescope does not take observations with its sensitive UV detectors while passing through the SAA. Passing through the anomaly caused false alarms on Skylab Apollo Telescope Mount's solar flare sensor. Astronauts are also affected by this region, which is said to be the cause of peculiar "shooting stars" (phosphenes) seen in the visual field of astronauts, an effect termed cosmic ray visual phenomena. Passing through the South Atlantic Anomaly is thought to be the reason for the failures of the Globalstar network's satellites in 2007.

The PAMELA experiment, while passing through the SAA, detected antiproton levels that were orders of magnitude higher than expected. This suggests the Van Allen belt confines antiparticles produced by the interaction of the Earth's upper atmosphere with cosmic rays.

NASA has reported that modern laptop computers have crashed when Space Shuttle flights passed through the anomaly.

In October 2012, the SpaceX CRS-1 Dragon spacecraft attached to the International Space Station experienced a transient problem as it passed through the anomaly.

The SAA is believed to have started a series of events leading to the destruction of the Hitomi, Japan's most powerful X-ray observatory. The anomaly transiently disabled a direction-finding mechanism, causing the satellite to rely solely on gyroscopes that were not working properly, after which it spun out of control, losing its solar panels in the process.

References

References

  1. (2025). "Core field changes from eleven years of ''Swarm'' satellite observations". Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors.
  2. (April 2016). "The South Atlantic Anomaly: The Key for a Possible Geomagnetic Reversal". Frontiers in Earth Science.
  3. Rao, G. S.. (2010). "Global Navigation Satellite Systems: With Essentials of Satellite Communications". Tata McGraw-Hill.
  4. (December 2015). "Forty-Year 'Drift' and Change of the SAA". NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center.
  5. Crotts, Arlin. (2014). "The New Moon: Water, Exploration, and Future Habitation". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  6. "FAQ: "The Great Magnet, the Earth"". NASA.
  7. Broad, William J.. (5 June 1990). "'Dip' on Earth is Big Trouble in Space". [[The New York Times]].
  8. (4 October 1996). "The South Atlantic Anomaly". NASA.
  9. (15 March 2022). "Stalagmite paleomagnetic record of a quiet mid-to-late Holocene field activity in central South America". [[Nature Communications]].
  10. "Scientists Are Getting Kinda Anxious About a Pothole in Space".
  11. (January 2021). "CubeSat Observation of the Radiation Field of the South Atlantic Anomaly". Remote Sensing.
  12. (1999-06-01). "Effects of trapped proton flux anisotropy on dose rates in low Earth orbit". Radiation Measurements.
  13. (July 18, 1996). "Hubble Achieves Milestone: 100,000th Exposure". [[Space Telescope Science Institute]].
  14. Elder, Donald C.. (1998). "From Engineering Science to Big Science: The NACA and NASA Collier Trophy Research Project Winners". NASA.
  15. "What is the South Atlantic Anomaly?". Ask the Astronomer.
  16. (March 2007). "Space Intelligence News". Ascend.
  17. (August 2011). "The Discovery of Geomagnetically Trapped Cosmic-Ray Antiprotons". The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
  18. Siceloff, Steven. (June 28, 2010). "Shuttle Computers Navigate Record of Reliability". NASA.
  19. Bergin, Chris. (October 19, 2012). "Dragon enjoying ISS stay, despite minor issues". NASA Spaceflight.
  20. Moon, Mariella. (April 29, 2016). "Japan's most powerful X-ray satellite is dead". [[Engadget]].
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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