Earth Inner Core
Oscillates
Scientists
identify a six-year cycle of super- and sub-rotation that affected the length
of a day based on their analysis of seismic data
From: University of Southern California
June 10, 2022 -- USC
scientists have found evidence that the Earth's inner core oscillates,
contradicting previously accepted models that suggested it consistently rotates
at a faster rate than the planet's surface.
Their study, published
today in Science Advances, shows that the inner core changed
direction in the six-year period from 1969-74, according to the analysis of
seismic data. The scientists say their model of inner core movement also
explains the variation in the length of day, which has been shown to oscillate
persistently for the past several decades.
"From our
findings, we can see the Earth's surface shifts compared to its inner core, as
people have asserted for 20 years," said John E. Vidale, co-author of the
study and Dean's Professor of Earth Sciences at USC Dornsife College of
Letters, Arts and Sciences. "However, our latest observations show that
the inner core spun slightly slower from 1969-71 and then moved the other
direction from 1971-74. We also note that the length of day grew and shrank as
would be predicted.
"The coincidence
of those two observations makes oscillation the likely interpretation."
Analysis of atomic
tests pinpoints rotation rate and direction
Our understanding of
the inner core has expanded dramatically in the past 30 years. The inner core
-- a hot, dense ball of solid iron the size of Pluto -- has been shown to move
and/or change over decades. It's also impossible to observe directly, meaning
researchers struggle through indirect measurements to explain the pattern,
speed and cause of the movement and changes.
Research published in
1996 was the first to propose the inner core rotates faster than the rest of
the planet -- also known as super-rotation -- at roughly 1 degree per year.
Subsequent findings from Vidale reinforced the idea that the inner core
super-rotates, albeit at a slower rate.
Utilizing data from the
Large Aperture Seismic Array (LASA), a U.S. Air Force facility in Montana,
researcher Wei Wang and Vidale found the inner core rotated slower than
previously predicted, approximately 0.1 degrees per year. The study analyzed
waves generated from Soviet underground nuclear bomb tests from 1971-74 in the
Arctic archipelago Novaya Zemlya using a novel beamforming technique developed
by Vidale.
The new findings
emerged when Wang and Vidale applied the same methodology to a pair of earlier
atomic tests beneath Amchitka Island at the tip of the Alaskan archipelago --
Milrow in 1969 and Cannikin in 1971. Measuring the compressional waves
resulting from the nuclear explosions, they discovered the inner core had
reversed direction, sub-rotating at least a tenth of a degree per year.
This latest study
marked the first time the well-known six-year oscillation had been indicated
through direct seismological observation.
"The idea the
inner core oscillates was a model that was out there, but the community has
been split on whether it was viable," Vidale says. "We went into this
expecting to see the same rotation direction and rate in the earlier pair of
atomic tests, but instead we saw the opposite. We were
Future research to dig
deeper into why inner core formed
quite surprised to find that it was moving in the other direction."
Vidale and Wang both
noted future research would depend on finding sufficiently precise observations
to compare against these results. By using seismological data from atomic tests
in previous studies, they have been able to pinpoint the exact location and
time of the very simple seismic event, says Wang. However, the Montana LASA
closed in 1978 and the era of U.S. underground atomic testing is over, meaning
that the researchers would need to rely on comparatively imprecise earthquake
data, even with recent advances in instrumentation.
The study does support
the speculation that the inner core oscillates based on variations in the
length of day -- plus or minus 0.2 seconds over six years -- and geomagnetic
fields, both of which match the theory in both amplitude and phase. Vidale says
the findings provide a compelling theory for many questions posed by the
research community.
"The inner core is
not fixed -- it's moving under our feet, and it seems to going back and forth a
couple of kilometers every six years," Vidale said. "One of the
questions we tried to answer is, does the inner core progressively move or is
it mostly locked compared to everything else in the long term? We're trying to
understand how the inner core formed and how it moves over time -- this is an
important step in better understanding this process."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/06/220610152919.htm
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