
Magnetic dip, dip angle, or magnetic inclination is the angle made with the horizontal by
Earth's magnetic field lines. This angle varies at different points on Earth's surface. Positive values of inclination indicate that the magnetic field of Earth is pointing downward, into Earth, at the point of measurement, and negative values indicate that it is pointing upward. The dip angle is in principle the angle made by the needle of a vertically held compass, though in practice ordinary compass needles may be weighted against dip or may be unable to move freely in the correct plane. The value can be measured more reliably with a special instrument typically known as a
dip circle
Dip circles (also known as ''dip needles or inclination compasses'') are used to measure the angle between the horizon and the Earth's magnetic field (the Magnetic dip, dip angle). They were used in surveying, mining and prospecting as well as fo ...
.
Dip angle was discovered by the German engineer
Georg Hartmann in 1544. A method of measuring it with a dip circle was described by
Robert Norman in England in 1581.
Explanation
Magnetic dip results from the tendency of a magnet to align itself with lines of magnetic field. As Earth's magnetic field lines are not parallel to the surface, the north end of a compass needle will point upward in the
Southern Hemisphere (negative dip) or downward in the
Northern Hemisphere
The Northern Hemisphere is the half of Earth that is north of the equator. For other planets in the Solar System, north is defined by humans as being in the same celestial sphere, celestial hemisphere relative to the invariable plane of the Solar ...
(positive dip). The range of dip is from -90 degrees (at the
South Magnetic Pole) to +90 degrees (at the
North Magnetic Pole
The north magnetic pole, also known as the magnetic north pole, is a point on the surface of Earth's Northern Hemisphere at which the Earth's magnetic field, planet's magnetic field points vertically downward (in other words, if a magnetic comp ...
). Contour lines along which the dip measured at Earth's surface is equal are referred to as
isoclinic lines. The locus of the points having zero dip is called the ''magnetic equator'' or
aclinic line.
Calculation for a given latitude
The inclination
is defined locally for the magnetic field due to Earth's core, and has a positive value if the field points below the horizontal (i.e. into Earth). Here we show how to determine the value of
at a given latitude, following the treatment given by Fowler.
Outside Earth's core we consider Maxwell's equations in a vacuum,
and
where
and the subscript
denotes the core as the origin of these fields. The first means we can introduce the scalar potential
such that
, while the second means the potential satisfies the
Laplace equation
In mathematics and physics, Laplace's equation is a second-order partial differential equation named after Pierre-Simon Laplace, who first studied its properties in 1786. This is often written as
\nabla^2\! f = 0 or \Delta f = 0,
where \Delt ...
.
Solving to leading order gives the magnetic dipole potential
and hence the field