wellwisher
Well-Known Member
I read an article yesterday in MSN news yesterday about the core of the earth. It appears to have stop spinning faster than the surface.
Earth's inner core may have stopped spinning – but what does that mean?
About 20 years ago a team of scientists, using seismic techniques and live and historical data from earthquakes all over the earth, discovered the core of the earth was spinning faster than the surface of the earth. It was calculated that the core lapped the earth, once about every 500 years. This is slow but still orders of magnitude faster than the movement within plate tectonics. There may be a connection.
This was an amazing discovery, since the iron core accounts for 30% of the mass of the earth. We are talking about a huge metal ball, inside the earth, having more angular velocity than the mantle and crust, which combined accounts for remaining 70% of the total mass.
More recently, this new article; above, says scientists have now discovered that the core no longer appears to be spinning relative to the surface. If you consider its huge mass and inertia, the question is where is the energy going, since stopping that huge amount of inertia, will need either a loss of forward thrust and/or a huge resistive force. The bottomline is the energy balance of the inner earth has changed drastically; kinetic to heat or magnetic to kinetic. Can this affect climate? Will the extra heat, warm the oceans and cause CO2 to be released.
I have been complaining for years how Climate science is stuck in the science past, and is not up to the task in terms of the many latest inner earth discoveries. Scientists seem to think this change in the core is not unique, but is part of a natural cycle and that the future rotation of the core may even spin the other way . Will that cause crustal surface stresses.
My theory is water is continuous from the atmosphere to the core of the earth. This theory is based, in part how water increases the entropy of earth materials as temperature and pressure increase; solubility increases. It also has to do with the phase data of water, at extreme pressure and temperature. This data shows distinct phase boundaries that align with the layers of the earth at their assumed temperature and pressures. The extreme conditions of the earth's core, water becomes a solid metallic phase.
The phase boundary between the outer core and core would be based on a phase change of water from ionic to metallic water. The hydrogen protons of the water corrodes the metal iron core and releases energy and electrons, to the ionic water phase, at the phase boundary. The slowing of the spin would mean there is a lull in the flow of exotic water and hydrogen to the metallic core. Green houses gases may be the least of our new worries. Will days get longer if the earth's core spins the opposite way?
Earth's inner core may have stopped spinning – but what does that mean?
About 20 years ago a team of scientists, using seismic techniques and live and historical data from earthquakes all over the earth, discovered the core of the earth was spinning faster than the surface of the earth. It was calculated that the core lapped the earth, once about every 500 years. This is slow but still orders of magnitude faster than the movement within plate tectonics. There may be a connection.
This was an amazing discovery, since the iron core accounts for 30% of the mass of the earth. We are talking about a huge metal ball, inside the earth, having more angular velocity than the mantle and crust, which combined accounts for remaining 70% of the total mass.
More recently, this new article; above, says scientists have now discovered that the core no longer appears to be spinning relative to the surface. If you consider its huge mass and inertia, the question is where is the energy going, since stopping that huge amount of inertia, will need either a loss of forward thrust and/or a huge resistive force. The bottomline is the energy balance of the inner earth has changed drastically; kinetic to heat or magnetic to kinetic. Can this affect climate? Will the extra heat, warm the oceans and cause CO2 to be released.
I have been complaining for years how Climate science is stuck in the science past, and is not up to the task in terms of the many latest inner earth discoveries. Scientists seem to think this change in the core is not unique, but is part of a natural cycle and that the future rotation of the core may even spin the other way . Will that cause crustal surface stresses.
My theory is water is continuous from the atmosphere to the core of the earth. This theory is based, in part how water increases the entropy of earth materials as temperature and pressure increase; solubility increases. It also has to do with the phase data of water, at extreme pressure and temperature. This data shows distinct phase boundaries that align with the layers of the earth at their assumed temperature and pressures. The extreme conditions of the earth's core, water becomes a solid metallic phase.
The phase boundary between the outer core and core would be based on a phase change of water from ionic to metallic water. The hydrogen protons of the water corrodes the metal iron core and releases energy and electrons, to the ionic water phase, at the phase boundary. The slowing of the spin would mean there is a lull in the flow of exotic water and hydrogen to the metallic core. Green houses gases may be the least of our new worries. Will days get longer if the earth's core spins the opposite way?