New research shows Earth’s core spins in opposite directions

September 20, 2013GEOLOGYAccording to new research from UK and Swiss scientists, the core of our planet is more complicated than we thought, with layers rotating in different directions, and it all may solve a mystery about the Earth’s magnetic field that’s persisted for over 300 years. The Earth’s core is separated into two different layers. At the centre is the solid inner core, which is surrounded by the liquid outer core — both made up of a mixture of nickel and iron. Scientists figured out the structure of the two layers decades ago, based on watching seismic waves from earthquakes passing through the planet, and they also discovered that it is circulations in the hot, liquid metal of the outer core that generate the Earth’s magnetic field. There are some things about the core that have remained a mystery, though. A study from 2005 revealed that, although the inner core rotates in the same direction as the surface, it actually rotates slightly faster than the surface. That strange result joins another curious finding, from back in 1692, when astronomer Edmond Halley (of Halley’s Comet fame) discovered that the Earth’s magnetic field ‘drifts’ towards the west by a few degrees every decade. A new study has finally offered an explanation for these two mysteries, tying everything together at last. It started with researchers not only confirming that the inner core rotates faster than the surface, but also finding that the outer core rotates in the opposite direction. To find out what’s going on, they used the Monte Rose supercomputer to run a simulation that was roughly 100 times more accurate than any previous model of the Earth’s core. The simulation revealed that it’s the Earth’s magnetic field that’s causing the layers of the core to spin like they do. It’s providing an extra little push to the inner core, driving the added spin towards the east, while at the same time an equal and opposite reaction to that push is causing the ‘backward’ spin of the outer core towards the west. The added bonus from their simulation is that it solved Halley’s mystery as well. Since the outer core slowly rotates towards the west, the circulations within the liquid metal also rotate in that direction, and the magnetic field ‘drifts’ along with them. The researchers are hoping that all of this will help scientists to better understand the behavior of the core, and thus the planet’s magnetic field. –Yahoo News
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4 Responses to New research shows Earth’s core spins in opposite directions

  1. olden1936 says:

    Cor Blimey! This all too deep for me!

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  2. bobby90247 says:

    So, we may yet find that the Earth does have some form of a “hollow” center…right!

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  3. Irene C says:

    I’m glad there are people who understand this but it is fascinating.

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  4. SunTHEsourceofeternity says:

    good that the earth constraction handle so much pressure,must been build weisly with so much of precision.didnt read the scientst theory ,,how our planet born,, but ive got my OWN theory SCIENTIFIC –exacly whole solar system birth from nothing / not like bing bang theory that universe was (birth) build,bacame or I.D.N from something-the explosion –THAT SOUNDS TO DIFFRENT TO BE RIGHT(like the theory that human evolve from monkey or came however they like but what with ather gatunki did not evolve(ex.lion evolve to ????)so maybe human is a gatunek itself and just shaped(?) and …? to the environment thru the years!?myTEoRI-but with their knowlege it think that itlist they are wright on from what its made of!

    KJ7

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