Planetary Magnetism Science

Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft flies by Mars, illustrating magnetic field vectors.
Levels
  • advanced
NGSS
  • ps2
  • ps3
  • ess3
Requirements
  • low_tech
  • low_cost
CreditAmerican Association of Physics Teachers
Language
  • english

This hands-on, guided-inquiry activity helps students to understand the features of Earth’s and a Mars-like planet’s planetary magnetic fields using augmented reality and a smartphone sensor to model 3-D magnetic fields around models of Earth and Planet X. Students will visualize the magnetic fields around a planet model with a planetary dipole field (representing Earth) and a Planet X with a disordered planetary field comprised of localized regions of magnetization in the crust (which is the situation on Mars). They will compare these magnetic fields and explain how field vectors vary based upon location on the surface of the planet. This activity is appropriate for high school and university introductory physics and astronomy courses.

This activity is just one of the many resources for educators and students included in the Planetary Magnetism Digi Kit. A Digi Kit is a web-based interactive lab that blends physics, geometry, and astronomy as students build and use physical models to explore phenomena. Digi Kit resources include a core lesson plan, videos, simulations, tutorials, and readings.

This Digi Kit was developed to promote understanding of planetary magnetic fields and how to interpret magnetic field vectors. The keystone of this Kit is the Guided-Inquiry Lab by the NASA Space Science Education Consortium, which tasks students to build physical models to mimic an Earth-like magnetic field and a Planet X (similar to Mars) which has only the remnants of a long-defunct magnetic field. A smartphone sensor app is then introduced to map field vectors on each of the highly different model "planets". The digital resources linked in this Digi Kit provide robust background on the magnetic fields of planets in our own solar system, interactive activities to investigate Mars' strange crustal magnetism, and news about how astrophysicists hope to tease out magnetic field data from exoplanets. A key takeaway is that without a magnetic field, it's doubtful that life could be sustained on a planetary surface. Even if we develop technology to transport humans to Mars, the red planet would have to be greatly transformed. This resource addresses explicit content standards related to Earth's magnetic field and why it is essential to human life (Earth's magnetic field deflects ionizing radiation from the solar wind and high energy cosmic particles such as protons and heavy ions from outside our system). Watch the pre-lecture video to learn more about implementing the activity. Access this Digi Kit at: https://www.compadre.org/books/?ID=68