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Earth Science

Earth's Core Has Slowed So Much It's Moving Backward, Scientists Confirm (cnn.com) 48

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: Deep inside Earth is a solid metal ball that rotates independently of our spinning planet, like a top whirling around inside a bigger top, shrouded in mystery. This inner core has intrigued researchers since its discovery by Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann in 1936, and how it moves -- its rotation speed and direction -- has been at the center of a decades-long debate. A growing body of evidence suggests the core's spin has changed dramatically in recent years, but scientists have remained divided over what exactly is happening -- and what it means. Part of the trouble is that Earth's deep interior is impossible to observe or sample directly. Seismologists have gleaned information about the inner core's motion by examining how waves from large earthquakes that ping this area behave. Variations between waves of similar strengths that passed through the core at different times enabled scientists to measure changes in the inner core's position and calculate its spin.

"Differential rotation of the inner core was proposed as a phenomenon in the 1970s and '80s, but it wasn't until the '90s that seismological evidence was published," said Dr. Lauren Waszek, a senior lecturer of physical sciences at James Cook University in Australia. But researchers argued over how to interpret these findings, "primarily due to the challenge of making detailed observations of the inner core, due to its remoteness and limited available data," Waszek said. As a result, "studies which followed over the next years and decades disagree on the rate of rotation, and also its direction with respect to the mantle," she added. Some analyses even proposed that the core didn't rotate at all.

One promising model proposed in 2023 described an inner core that in the past had spun faster than Earth itself, but was now spinning slower. For a while, the scientists reported, the core's rotation matched Earth's spin. Then it slowed even more, until the core was moving backward relative to the fluid layers around it. At the time, some experts cautioned that more data was needed to bolster this conclusion, and now another team of scientists has delivered compelling new evidence for this hypothesis about the inner core's rotation rate. Research published June 12 in the journal Nature not only confirms the core slowdown, it supports the 2023 proposal that this core deceleration is part of a decades-long pattern of slowing down and speeding up. The new findings also confirm that the changes in rotational speed follow a 70-year cycle, said study coauthor Dr. John Vidale, Dean's Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Southern California's Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

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Earth's Core Has Slowed So Much It's Moving Backward, Scientists Confirm

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  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Friday July 05, 2024 @10:37PM (#64604441)

    You ain't reversing this train.

    • But we've already seen this movie:

      https://imdb.com/title/tt02988... [imdb.com]

      It was the one where DJ Qualls used phreaking skills to bribe a government official.

      • Yes, we have, and it was awful. And not the enjoyable awful.

        • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

          To each his own, it is not actually that bad from an acting, technical, etc... perspective. It won't win any Oscars, but I wouldn't call it awful. It is rather typical for a disaster movie, maybe a bit above average.

          Of course, it is not what this movie is known for. What it is known for is its terrible science, but it definitely falls into "so bad it's good" territory. There are entire websites dedicated to it, it is at the top of many lists, and people still watch it, sometimes repeatedly for this very rea

  • This explains a lot about Washington these days!

  • by jaa101 ( 627731 ) on Friday July 05, 2024 @11:11PM (#64604465)

    See this graph [navy.mil] showing how the earth's rotation has drifted relative to atomic clocks since 2000. The discontinuities are where leap seconds were inserted to keep civil time within a second of the rotation. Since 2020 the curve has turned generally upward; if UT1-UTC makes it far past +0.5 then a negative leap second will be needed for the first time ever. Bet we'll see some good software bugs that day.

    • It could affect day-length, but it probably won't be as big an effect as, say, a large earthquake near the equator (and, obviously, near the surface). When was that big "Boxing Day" quake? Sumatra, 2004? For an example.

      Yes the core is important. But as under 1% of the Earth by volume, and about 2% by mass, the core isn't that important. Plus, for questions of angular momentum, the distance from the rotation centre is also important - which boosts the importance of surface events compared to deep events.

      I

      • by jaa101 ( 627731 )

        This article [doi.org] says "since 1972, the angular velocity of the liquid core of Earth has been decreasing at a constant rate that has steadily increased the angular velocity of the rest of the Earth. Extrapolating the trends for the core and other relevant phenomena to predict future Earth orientation shows that UTC as now defined will require a negative discontinuity by 2029."

        Seems like the professional scientists see the core change as the main factor here. Earthquakes have some effect but some will slow the

        • Seems like the professional scientists see the core change as the main factor here.

          And the paper cited in TFS sees core changes as either having changed in trend, or possibly being cyclical (which is probably easier to explain than a secular change). Which adds up to two groups with differing ideas both observing a continuing experiment, and likely to both interpret the next several changes as support for their camp.

          In practical terms, from the PoV of astronomers and NTP administrators, consider this : a b

          • by jaa101 ( 627731 )

            a big earthquake could have happened 5 minutes ago which would force a negative leap-double-second on New Year's Day coming.

            "NO leap second will be introduced at the end of December 2024. [navy.mil]"

            Stop worrying so much about earthquakes. "The 2004 magnitude 9.1 Sumatran earthquake [...] shortened the length of day by 6.8 microseconds. [archive.org]" So that extreme event caused a change of just 2.5ms per year. Any earthquake capable of causing a 500ms change in under 6 months would be, by far, the biggest in history.

            • The TLAs and ETLAs say "NO leap second will be introduced at the end of December 2024."

              Earth says "Hold my beer. I hear hubris [wikipedia.org] , and we know what happens to people who display hubris!"
              (Traditionally, the gods drive hubristic humans mad first, then torment them to a miserable, horrible, shameful death (e.g. Jason of the Argo, Oedipus), followed by an eternity doing something horrible in Hades (Tantalus thirsting and hungering eternally ; Sisyphus rolling the rock). Gods could neither die nor go mad, so Pr

  • Are trying to fuck us now. Maybe all that radioactive waste we buried made it down there and turned them into super mutant geniuses.

  • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Saturday July 06, 2024 @03:51AM (#64604689)

    No, Earth's core is not spinning in the opposite direction. It's moving (slightly) slower than the crust.

    • by Carewolf ( 581105 ) on Saturday July 06, 2024 @05:54AM (#64604789) Homepage

      That is the same thing, just observed from a different frame of reference.

      • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Saturday July 06, 2024 @08:04AM (#64604905)

        You and I get that. Many people don't and were assuming the core is now spinning in the opposite direction to the crust.

      • That is the same thing, just observed from a different frame of reference.

        It's true, however It's also not how most people understand this statement - confirmed with all the BS in the media. The core doesn't move backwards it spins just slower than the crust but still rotating the same direction as the whole planet.

        I'd hope to avoid this troublesome trend of "click-bites" and misleading titles on /.

      • It is actually different. In terms of relative, linear velocity, it is correct that the nearest part of the core to a particular point on the surface, it is moving backwards, but then the furthest part of the core from that point is moving in the same direction. The aggregate motion of the core linearly relative to the any point on the surface is zero, so it is not even the core that can be said to be moving backwards. Moreover spinning is angular velocity, not linear, and it is not spinning backwards, it i

      • No one would refer to a NASCAR driver getting passed on the outside as "Moving Backward". This is a very poor use of the term. The new claim is that the rotational velocity of the core varies from 0.9977 to 1.0023 of the rotational velocity of the surface over a 70 year period. Scientists previously thought that the core was always a tiny bit faster than the surface. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • So does anyone know why this is happening? is it new? what caused it? will it go back or change?
      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Was reading it is a regular cycle, might be 80 year IIRC. Caused by electro-magnetic interactions, the core is a big generator.

        • ohh... I suspected it was something like that. I was actually thinking perhaps the core is not of uniform density causing a wobble or oscillation. There has to be an impetus of some sort.... and what happens next? I presume just go thru the cycle as you read. thank you.
        • That's what I read too, but having only had the necessary arrays of seisemometers in place to record data from informative earthquakes (the details are in the cited paper) for approaching 40 years, whether it's a cycle, or just a trend, then a different trend ... "need more data, need more records".

          What is storing - then releasing energy, and through what forces? Good questions!

          If only there weren't 4500km of solid rock between us and the core, it'd be an awful lot easier to see what is going on. The famo

    • Well, I am standing on this good and honest planet's surface and the core IS spinning backward. If it doesn't look like that for you then I'd suppose you get back to where you are watching from, Mr. Extraterrestorrist, and mind your own business.
  • Buried deep in that topic is information about the planet's formative history. Although nobody is anywhere near that level of precision.
    • Well, it's recent history. The last billion or two years.

      Like the rest of the planet, the core is cooling - slowly. As the primordial heat of assembly of the planet radiates away, and the fly-by-night radiogenic nuclides (U-235, U-238, K-40) decay away, the temperature is going down. Which is probably why the solid inner core has been growing for a billennium or two.

      But yeah - all that damned rock gets in the way. It's hard to study. Fascinating though.

      • Only a billion? I've seen mentions of work being done on the possibility of detecting the signal of the Theia impact in some layer or other. Maybe that was just someone developing a thought experiment, but it looked interesting.
        • I've seen people attributing the depleted, dense mantle seismically visible for a few hundred km above the core-mantle boundary to the "Moon-forming" impact. And I've seen others attributing the same structure (and it's buried in the noise internal structure) to continual accumulation since the initiation of subduction-driven plate tectonics. (That in itself is an on-going ink-war - when did plate tectonics start? With Theia? Or do the isotopic variations we see in the mid-mantle (sampled by diamond pipes)
          • Sounds familiar. Supposedly there could be "islands" of impactor material in the convective layers directly above the solid core. I never studied this stuff, so I just listen when other people talk.
            • Supposedly there could be "islands" of impactor material in the convective layers directly above the solid core.

              Supposedly, yes.

              But any vaguely sane-sounding estimates for volume-convected-per-year (for which, we can get some sane figures, from surface motions) has the mantle turning-over multiple times between then (Earth-formation+~100 Ma, with a fair error bar) and now ... so surely the impactor debris should have been mixed in several cycles ago. That's an argument used by the people who think the low

  • The days will get longer and we'll have to work more.

  • by 50000BTU_barbecue ( 588132 ) on Saturday July 06, 2024 @09:21AM (#64604985) Journal

    Our species' IQ?

  • Oh no! It's caused by man made climate change. LOL
  • I would love to know how it was/is determined that the core is solid metal and not liquid metal.

    • Surprisingly, it's in the paper linked to from TFS. I know it's Slashdot, and that's how things are meant to work in the sciences, not the entertainment media like Slashdot, but it is there.

      Unfortunately, the information is buried in the jargon. Like other sciences, you're expected to have a basic familiarity with the field - it's a paper, not a text book.

      In this case, the magic term is in the abstract :

      We analyse their inner-core-penetrating PKIKP waves

      The Serbo-Croat swearword actually describes a serie

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

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