Your explanation is incomplete — you ignore totally the massive
amounts of electromagnetic energy entering into and out of the earth - system via Birkeland currents at the polar regions, and which are measured routinely in millions of amperes.
Not exact matches
The
energy loss function represents the level
of interaction between the material and
electromagnetic waves, and is expressed in terms
of the change in the
amount of energy lost from electrons and the change in momentum due to corresponding scattering events occurring in the material.
Our bodies and cells have electrical
energy, and especially with the high prevalence
of Electromagnetic waves, Wi - Fi and mobile phone waves, many
of us have a high
amount of positive electrons built up in our bodies.