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Interesting Engineering

US firm to scale laser-based nuclear fusion ‘breakthrough’ with new partnership Military Archives - Interesting Engineering World’s first non-nuclear lead-cooled reactor to generate electricity begins installation US scientists devise new process to turn sewage sludge into 99% pure natural gas US firm unveils submarine-hunting drone with 9,200-mile-range, 35 mph top speed Military Archives - Interesting Engineering Supercomputer finds lithium-titanium tweak to boost sodium-ion batteries for grids Lockheed Martin demonstrates vertical launch missile system for mobile drone defense China’s 1116 MWe Taipingling Unit 1 reactor goes online, set to generate 9bn kWh yearly ChatGPT Images 2.0 update combines reasoning, research, and design with 2K output US Navy tests plug-and-play laser system on USS Bush carrier, downs drones at sea China’s CATL reveals 621-mile EV battery, under-7-minute charging to challenge BYD US uses world’s first exascale supercomputer to model supernovae, fusion reactors AI and Robotics Archives - Interesting Engineering First-in-human study confirms safety of graphene-based brain interface Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot greets runners, poses for photos at Boston Marathon Interlocking materials offer high strength and flexibility for robotics, infrastructure US redeploys 100,000-ton nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Red Sea after repairs US scientists unveil concept for ‘world’s first neutrino laser’ to unlock breakthroughs New military tech can maintain communication in contested electronic warfare environments Got a dark personality? Psychologists can help you choose your career wisely Humidity boosts performance of 3D-printed nanogenerator instead of degrading it China demonstrates microwave beam that recharges drones in flight, continues power delivery Scientists run compact free-electron laser for eight hours, cracks FEL stability problem China’s PLA considers to use minelaying underwater drones to enforce Taiwan blockade: Report 1-ton sharks may struggle for survival in waters exceeding 62.6°F, study suggests US firm’s thorium nuclear fuel bundles move to manufacturing for commercial reactors Tesla hits 0% charge in remote Chilean desert as YouTuber uses hood-mounted solar Humanoid robot surpasses human world record in Beijing half-marathon, clocking 50:26 mins New method extracts maximum work from unknown quantum states using symmetry tricks US scientists’ new method can measure rare-earth elements in plants without destroying them 1,800-year-old feces reveal disease and hygiene linked to Roman Empire in 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Earth’s magnetic core changed course deep beneath Pacific Ocean, data reveals
Atharva Gosavi · 2026-05-25 · via Interesting Engineering

A recent study has revealed an unexpected shift that happened beneath the Pacific Ocean in 2010. Using decades of satellite and ground-based magnetic field data, researchers tracked a dramatic shift in the movement of the iron-rich fluid located roughly 2,200 km beneath Earth’s surface.

The study suggests that Earth’s deep interior could be more dynamic and unpredictable than previously believed. Researchers say the discovery could improve understanding of how Earth’s magnetic field evolves and how processes deep inside the planet may be interconnected.

The flow reversal

Earth’s magnetic field is generated by the movement of electrically conducting molten iron inside the liquid outer core. Scientists have long believed that the core’s large-scale flow patterns remained relatively stable over decades, generally moving westward.

However, the study found that a large region of molten iron beneath the equatorial Pacific suddenly reversed direction in 2010, shifting from westward to strong eastward movement.

Researchers reconstructed the change using satellite and ground observations collected between 1997 and 2025, including data from European Space Agency missions Swarm and CryoSat, as well as Germany’s CHAMP and Denmark’s Ørsted satellites.

“The large-scale flow reversal beneath the Pacific raises new questions about the behavior of Earth’s deep interior. Scientists now want to understand whether the reversal represents a short-lived fluctuation, part of a repeating oscillation, or a new stable equilibrium for core circulation,” said Frederik Dahl Madsen, a lead author on the study.

Satellites helped scientists peer deep inside Earth

Launched in 2013, the Swarm satellite constellation carries highly sensitive magnetometers designed to map Earth’s magnetic field with exceptional precision.

By operating in coordinated orbits, the satellites can isolate magnetic signals generated deep inside Earth from interference caused by oceans, the crust, ionosphere, and magnetosphere.

These measurements enabled scientists to identify sudden changes linked to the Pacific reversal and a geomagnetic disturbance known as the 2017 geomagnetic jerk. Researchers also detected wave-like accelerations and rapidly changing flow structures hidden within earlier datasets.

, “Although Swarm was launched after the dramatic reversal event of 2010, it has provided high-precision data that tell us about Earth’s inner core in the period that followed,” said ESA Swarm Mission Manager Anja Stromme.

Understanding Earth’s magnetic shield

Although these processes occur far below Earth’s surface and pose no direct threat to life or climate, they play a critical role in protecting the planet. Earth’s magnetic field shields the atmosphere and technological systems from harmful charged particles emitted by the sun.

Scientists say studying changes in the core could improve understanding of navigation systems, spacecraft operations, and near-Earth space weather.

ESA Swarm Mission Scientist Elisabetta Iorfida noted, “This study shows that regional changes can emerge rapidly within just a decade.

“The findings may also help scientists investigate possible interactions between Earth’s outer core, inner core, lower mantle and, therefore, give more insights into core-mantle boundary, which is a critical region for the deep Earth dynamics,” she said.

The study was published in the Journal of Studies of Earth’s Deep Interior.

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Atharva is a full-time content writer with a post-graduate degree in media & amp; entertainment and a graduate degree in electronics & telecommunications. He has written in the sports and technology domains respectively. In his leisure time, Atharva loves learning about digital marketing and watching soccer matches. His main goal behind joining Interesting Engineering is to learn more about how the recent technological advancements are helping human beings on both societal and individual levels in their daily lives.