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Earth's core runs ahead of crust

Analog

Lifer
The team compared seismic waves being produced by pairs of earthquakes occurring at the same location on the planet, but at different times.

Waves from these nearly identical quakes passed through the Earth's core, they explain in Science magazine.

The results show that the inner core is rotating faster than the rest of the planet by about 0.009 seconds per year.

Earth has a solid inner core made of iron and nickel that is about 2,400km in diameter and a fluid outer core about 7,000km in diameter.

The inner core plays an important role in the dynamo that generates Earth's magnetic field. An electromagnetic torque from this dynamo is thought to drive the inner core to rotate relative to the mantle and crust.

Xiaodong Song, of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Paul Richards, of Columbia University, argued that the inner core was spinning faster than the rest of the planet in 1996. But their findings were greeted with widespread scepticism.

Slow turn

The new findings, however, provide more persuasive evidence, the authors say.

Song, Richards and colleagues studied waves generated by small earthquakes in the southern Atlantic Ocean that passed through the core to a seismograph in Alaska where they were measured.

The researchers hunted for quakes with nearly identical patterns of peaks and troughs on a seismograph reading. For the wave shapes to match, the quakes must have taken place less than a kilometre apart.

They found that when earthquakes struck in nearly the same place years or decades apart, seismic waves generated by the later quakes arrived in Alaska a little sooner than they had the time before.

The only way this could be explained was if the inner core was spinning slightly faster than the rest of the planet.

"We're saying that the inner core rotates just slightly faster. So in one day, it has rotated once plus a little bit more - in other words, it rotates just a little bit more each day than the crust and the mantle," co-author Paul Richards, of the Lamont-Doherty Observatory, told the BBC News website.

This so-called "superrotation" of the inner core is of the order of 0.3 degrees to 0.5 degrees each year. This means that in 900 years, the inner core would gain one full rotation on the rest of the planet. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4184358.stm
 
Originally posted by: mwmorph
this affects me how?
It doesen't.

It's just science learning more about our planet. Obviously it has been like this probably ever since the Earth coalesced and then cooled enough to form a crust.
 
wonder fi this has to do with the amgnetic field dissapearing and then switching polarity every few hundred thousand years.

I dont think i use the right terms, but we're overdue for an ice age and that magnetic pole dissapear and switch thing(0-30K years is timeframe for switch to happen or something).
anyways, im happy i wont live all that long cause all of you are ogin to freeze and then die of cancer.
 
Originally posted by: mwmorph
wonder fi this has to do with the amgnetic field dissapearing and then switching polarity every few hundred thousand years.
Hmm, I don't think so, only because we already know the mechanisms involved in that IIRC.

We've computer modeled it at least, so I would assume...
 
Originally posted by: mwmorph
wonder fi this has to do with the amgnetic field dissapearing and then switching polarity every few hundred thousand years.

I dont think i use the right terms, but we're overdue for an ice age and that magnetic pole dissapear and switch thing(0-30K years is timeframe for switch to happen or something).
anyways, im happy i wont live all that long cause all of you are ogin to freeze and then die of cancer.
The pole shift is not generally a catastrophic event.

The worst that happens is the magnetic field disappears for a few tens to perhaps a few hundred years, exposing the Earth and the generations living at the time to a higher than normal dose of solar radiation.

IIRC.
 
Let's pray to God the government doesn't have a secret laser pointed at it that could possibly shoot it and stop the core from spinning. Because then we'd have to develop the technology and team to travel to the center within three months to set off a chain of friggin' nukes to save our asses! 😱
 
Originally posted by: MisterJackson
Let's pray to God the government doesn't have a secret laser pointed at it that could possibly shoot it and stop the core from spinning. Because then we'd have to develop the technology and team to travel to the center within three months to set off a chain of friggin' nukes to save our asses! 😱

No, we'd send gerbils down there to run in those little wheels and generate power to keepe the core moving. Duh. 😛
 
Originally posted by: MisterJackson
Let's pray to God the government doesn't have a secret laser pointed at it that could possibly shoot it and stop the core from spinning. Because then we'd have to develop the technology and team to travel to the center within three months to set off a chain of friggin' nukes to save our asses! 😱

That sounds like a great premise for a movie. You should sell that to a Hollywood exec.
 
So what does the private property rights crowd have to say about this? I mean...crap, that's MY piece of the core sliding under my neighbor's lot, dang it.
 
Originally posted by: MisterJackson
Let's pray to God the government doesn't have a secret laser pointed at it that could possibly shoot it and stop the core from spinning. Because then we'd have to develop the technology and team to travel to the center within three months to set off a chain of friggin' nukes to save our asses! 😱

Holt sh1t you saw that movie too? I thought I was the only one.


.......on my top 10 worst movies list...

and back on track, thats some very cool stuff, it would be quite spectacular to actully see the core.

Course, someone would probably think it'd look better chromed.
 
if they already knew this about the sun, i don't see why it's such a big deal about discovering the same thing about the Earth,
and why was it discovered so late in the game
 
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