Humans Might Be Able to See the Earth's Magnetic Field, Like Birds Do

Tuesday, June 21, 2011 - 15:00 in Biology & Nature

Can We See Magnetic Fields? jonycunha via Flickr Without realizing it, humans might be able to innately detect Earth's magnetic field, thanks to a compound found in our eyes. Or we may have been able to do so some time in the past. Plenty of animals are known to be able to perceive geomagnetism, using it to navigate and even to hunt their prey. Proteins called cryptochromes, which exist throughout the plant and animal kingdoms, lend several species this ability. The proteins are related to the circadian rhythms of animals and plants, and recent studies have shown it apparently enables light to serve as a geomagnetic locator. Electrons in cryptochrome molecules come in entangled pairs, and the Earth's magnetic field may cause one of the electrons to wobble. A chemical reaction in response to the wayward electron's altered spin lets birds see magnetic fields in color, according to a theory published...

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