
Can you clarify your first question?If there was another planet like earth out there how would its electromagnetic field effect the signals that our instruments use for find them. Would they end up at its north pole.
[*]"would the magnetic field of another planet affect our ability to discover the planet?",Can you clarify your first question?
I think you mean magnetic field, rather than electromagnetic. But did you mean:
Or something else?
- "would the magnetic field of another planet affect our ability to discover the planet?", or
- "would the magnetic field of another planet affect our instruments in the same way they are affected on Earth?"
Thanks.
[*]"would the magnetic field of another planet affect our ability to discover the planet?",
[*]"would the magnetic field of another planet affect our ability to discover the planet?",
No, at least not directly. You mentioned signals but I'm not 100% sure what you mean by the word "signal". If you're talking about light waves then the answer is 'not at all'. In classical Electro-Magnetic physics, light can pass right through a magnetic field without being changed at all.
Now, if you're signal is a stream of charged particles then yes, a big magnetic field could be a problem.
Anyway, the current method of looking for planets is to search for stars that are pulled into an egg-like shape by the gravity of a massive orbiting planet.
So looking for a planet is sort of like looking for a small black hole
.So looking for a planet is sort of like looking for a small black hole
Planets are generally too small to change the shape of the primary.