Your Brain Has the Ability to Detect Magnetic Fields
Birds' astonishing capacity to track the Earth's magnetic fields may explain how they are able to migrate, sometimes covering thousands of miles annually. The ability to feel magnetic fields is shared by a variety of other creatures, including flies and sharks. Cryptochrome-related proteins are connected to this capacity.
Cryptochromes are peculiar in that humans possess them as well. According to studies, some people's brains contain these proteins, which respond to changes in magnetic fields in a manner similar to how an animal that uses these proteins for navigation might. Therefore, it is possible that the human brain can detect changes in magnetic fields.
But the issue is that your brain doesn't know what to do with that knowledge. Despite the fact that research suggests your brain is capable of doing it, nothing is done with it. We are unable to identify any discernible influence on either conscious or unconscious behavior.