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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
August
Earth's core rotates faster
than its crust, scientists say
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
8/25/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Xiaodong
Song, a professor of geology at Illinois, is corresponding
author of a paper to appear in the Aug. 26 issue of
the journal Science that proves Earth's core rotates
faster than its surface. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Scientists have ended a 9-year-old debate by proving that Earth’s
core rotates faster than its surface, by about 0.3 to 0.5 degree per
year.
“Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof,” said
Xiaodong Song, a professor of geology
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and corresponding
author of a paper to appear in the Aug. 26 issue of the journal Science.
“We believe we have that proof.”
Earth’s iron core consists of a solid inner core about 2,400 kilometers
in diameter and a fluid outer core about 7,000 kilometers in diameter.
The inner core plays an important role in the geodynamo that generates
Earth’s magnetic field, and an electromagnetic torque from the
geodynamo is thought to drive the inner core to rotate relative to the
mantle and crust.
The first observational evidence for differential rotation was presented
in 1996 by Song and Paul Richards, a seismologist at the Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory of Columbia University. For the past nine years, some
seismologists have suspected that flaws, or artifacts, in the data were
responsible for the purported movement.
By comparing historical seismic waves traversing Earth’s fluid
and solid cores, Song and his colleagues found compelling evidence for
differential rotation of the solid inner core. The researchers reported
observations of 17 sets of similar seismic waves – called waveform
doublets – from earthquakes occurring in the South Sandwich Islands
region off the coast of South America.
The doublets, which were recorded at up to 58 seismic stations in and
near Alaska with a time separation of up to 35 years, allowed the researchers
to detect temporal changes along the sampling paths.
“The similar seismic waves that passed through the inner core
show systematic changes in travel times and wave shapes when the two
events of the doublet are separated in time by several years,”
Song said. “The only plausible explanation is a motion of the
inner core.”
The most likely explanation for why the inner core is rotating at a
different speed, Song said, is electromagnetic coupling. “The
magnetic field generated in the outer core diffuses into the inner core,
where it generates an electric current. The interaction of that electric
current with the magnetic field causes the inner core to spin, like
the armature in an electric motor.”
The fluid outer core decouples the solid inner core’s movement
from the mantle. Because the fluid outer core is not very viscous, frictional
drag is small.
“Differential rotation is a fundamental dynamic process that goes
to the heart of the origin of our planet and how it has evolved,”
Song said. “There is still much to learn about the inner Earth.”
In addition to Song and Richards, co-authors are Illinois graduate students
Yingchun Li and Xinlei Sun and Columbia graduate student Jian Zhang
and research scientist Felix Waldhauser. The work was funded by the
U.S. National Science Foundation and the Natural Science Foundation
of China.
Editor’s note: To reach Xiaodong Song, call 217-333-1841; e-mail:
xsong@uiuc.edu.
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