The solar wind mentioned above is a
stream of ionized gases that blows outward from the Sun at about 400 km/second
and that varies in intensity with the amount of surface activity on the Sun.
The Earth's magnetic field shields it from much of the solar wind. When the
solar wind encounters Earth's magnetic field it is deflected like water around
the bow of a ship (adjacent image).
The imaginary surface at which the solar wind is first deflected is called the bow shock. The corresponding region of space sitting behind the bow shock and surrounding the Earth is termed the magnetosphere; it represents a region of space dominated by the Earth's magnetic field in the sense that it largely prevents the solar wind from entering. However, some high energy charged particles from the solar wind leak into the magnetosphere and are the source of the charged particles trapped in the Van Allen belts.