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This is well known to everyone that clouds carry electric charges and cumulonimbus clouds contain huge amount of electricity. It is also known from Maxwell's equations that moving particles induce magnetic field around them. I am sorry if I am missing any concept here but I have a question,

Should there also be a magnetic field around cumulonimbus clouds due to the presence and motion of charged particles in them?

Edit:

I want to know about field studies reporting the intensity of the magnetic field in different cloud systems. I am interested in knowing about cold clouds as the interaction of solid hydrometeors could be prominent in them. I also want to know if the intensity is sufficient enough to have an interaction with magnetic field of earth. I see recent modeling studies are being performed on electric fields, but the mention of magnetic field is still missing in them.

Agni
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    http://www.atms.unca.edu/cgodfrey/courses/atms455/ppt/warm.pdf Electric fields can induce drop coalescence. If the electric field were to increase then the distance of separation still would not inhibit coalescence. –  Feb 04 '19 at 13:04
  • @gansub thanks! I didn't had much idea about the electric field in warm clouds. It seems that the strength of electric field is not very strong in these clouds so a significant effect is not expected except inside a thunderstorm. Well, I was curious for a cold cloud where the collision of solid hydrometeors takes place. I wanted to know about the strength of electric field in them. Moreover, the flow of electric current in clouds might be discontinuous, so I wondered if there could be any chance of getting magnetic fields only due to the presence of charged particles. – Agni Feb 05 '19 at 03:30
  • Though I got few studies where the strength of the electric field was calculated using the NWP models but my question about the magnetic field is still unanswered. The observations are also very rare on this, so I am unsure if whatever I am thinking is reasonable or there should be any supporting argument against it. – Agni Feb 05 '19 at 03:36
  • I attempted to do a research but due to the lack of observational data, I couldn't continue it. I don't know if it is really worth researching. – Agni Feb 05 '19 at 06:04
  • I don't know much about, but I've heard thunderstorms or at least the lighning within them can deflect a compass needle. I googled it and found this https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249865186_Investigations_of_magnetic_field_disturbances_at_an_air_force_base_compass_calibration_hardstand and this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-directional_beacon look for thunderstorm effect. – Camilo Rada Feb 07 '19 at 01:03
  • Charged particles in motion produce magnetic fields. That's a fundamental law of physics. The end. I don't see where the question is. – AtmosphericPrisonEscape Feb 07 '19 at 11:18
  • I want to know if the strength is sufficient enough to have any significant effect (mainly for cold clouds) . Can it interact with the magnetic poles reversal of earth? Modeling is very obvious, I still wonder why nobody works on it. – Agni Feb 07 '19 at 12:27
  • @Agni: Well, adjust your answer maybe to what you are actually interested in. The answer to the question as it stands is: "Yes." Hint: Googling reveals answers, and yes, people are/were working on that. But the effect is only transient and necessarily negligible compared to the a fraction of a planetary mass in motion that is creating its own fields. – AtmosphericPrisonEscape Feb 07 '19 at 12:35

1 Answers1

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The short answer to your question is yes all charge particles (positive or negative), independent (like electron, proton) or attached to other materials like cloud droplets, molecules, atoms, etc. when in motion produce magnetic field.

  1. If two charged particles of same charge are moving in opposite direction then they cancel out each other's magnetic field. Hence, the random motion of droplets in cloud cause net zero magnetic field away from the cloud. One can understand this by analogy to a pair of electric wires used in powering homes which does not produce appreciable magnetic field at distance when the two wires of pair are close to each other because electrons are moving in opposite directions in the two wires.

  2. In organized motion of charged particles that is when there is net movement of charge in a preferential direction, for example a cloud with charged droplets moving under influence of wind one can have net magnetic field. However, here too, if the cloud as whole contains both positive and negative charges in equal numbers will not produce appreciable magnetic field at a long distance because magnetic field produced by negative charges will be opposite in direction with respect to magnetic field produced by positive charge moving in same direction. If there is net positive or negative charge on cloud then the magnitude of magnetic field will depend on wind speed, which for atmospheric range of wind speeds will produce very small magnetic field.

  3. The appreciable magnitude of magnetic field is produced during lighting since large amount of charge moves along a particular path with high velocity but such movements are momentary and as soon as the lighting strike is over, the magnetic field produced starts dying. If a compass needle is having significant inertia then before the needle can move under influence of newly produced magnetic field, the magnetic field will vanish and hence ordinary compasses are unlikely to show effect of lightning strikes.

Further Reading:

  1. Fundamentals of Lightning by Vladimir A. Rakov, Cambridge Univesity Press, ISBN 978-1-107-07223-7, 2016
Harish
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    Thanks for answering. Could you please mention any source corresponding to your answer? I would like to know if these things are reported in field studies as well. – Agni Feb 07 '19 at 12:19
  • First two points are basic physics. Details, typical numbers and methods of measuring magnetic field from lightning strikes can be found in "Fundamentals of Lightning" by Vladimir A. Rakov – Harish Feb 11 '19 at 12:47