Magnetogravity, or Magneto-gravity, is gravity that has been modified by magnetic forces. Gravity waves can be altered by radiative magnetic fields, primarily by low frequency electromagnetic interaction.
See also:
- Atmospheric stratification
- Alfven waves
- Edmund Taylor Whittaker
- Gravity
- Gravity waves
- Hannes Alfven
- Helioseismology
- List of speculative or fringe theories
- Magnetic fields
- Magnetohydrodynamics
- Solar atmosphere
- Sound waves
- Surface waves
- Wave equations
External links, references, and resources
- Burgess, C. P. , et. al., "Resonant origin for density fluctuations deep within the Sun: helioseismology and magneto-gravity waves". ArXiv.org
- Burgess, C. P., "Probing Solar Magneto-Gravity Waves using Solar Neutrinos, What Can Solar Neutrino Oscillations Tell Us About the Solar Interior?". (PPT format)
- Hinata, S., "Nonlinear interaction of magnetogravity waves with Alfven and sound waves". Deptment of Physics, Auburn University, USA.
- Kalkofen, W., "The Nature of the Waves in the Solar Chromosphere". Session 1 - Chromosphere, Corona, Flares. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
- Dellar, Paul, "Dispersive shallow water magnetohydrodynamics". (HTML) Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford. (Abstract -- PDF)
- Schwartz, R. A. and R. F. Stein, "Waves in the solar atmosphere. IV - Magneto-gravity and acoustic-gravity modes". Astrophysical Journal, vol. 200, Sept. 1, 1975.
- McAteer, R. T. James, "Long-period chromospheric oscillations in network bright points". The American Astronomical Society. The Astrophysical Journal, March 1, 2002.
- Inhester, B., "Nonlinear magnetogravity waves in a low-beta plasma". Journal of Geophysical Research (JGR). 1993.
- Adam, John A., "Steady magnetogravity flow". Quarterly Journal of Mechanics and Applied Mathematics, 1975.
- McIntosh, S. W., et. al., "An observational manifestation of magneto-gravity waves in internetwork regions of the chromosphere and transition region", Astrophysics Journal of Letters.
- "Earth's Magnetic Field 'Boosts Gravity'". New Scientist (Print Edition).