(Redirected from Outer core)
Earth cutaway from core to exosphere. Not to scale.
The interior of the
Earth, similar to the other
terrestrial planets, is
chemically divided into layers. The Earth has an outer
silicate solid
crust, a highly viscous
mantle, a liquid outer core that is much less viscous than the mantle, and a solid
inner core. Many of the rocks now making up the Earth's crust formed less than 100 million (1) years ago; however the oldest known mineral grains are 4.4 billion (4.4) years old, indicating that the Earth has had a solid crust for at least that long.
[1]
Much of what is known about the interior of the Earth has been inferred. The force exerted by Earth's gravity is one measurement of its mass. After measuring the volume of the planet, its density can be calculated. Astronomers also have performed similar planetary measurements. Calculation of the mass and volume of the surface rocks and bodies of water allow estimation of the mass, volume and density of surface rocks. The mass which is not in the atmosphere, oceans, and surface rocks must be in deeper layers.
Structure
The structure of the Earth is separated into two categories: chemically differentiated layers and layers reflecting the strengths and density of the materials. Chemically, the Earth can be divided into the crust, mantle, outer core, and inner core. By material strength, the layering of the earth is categorized as lithosphere, asthenosphere, upper mantle, lower mantle, outer core, and the inner core. The geologic component layers of the Earth
[2] are at the following depths below the surface:
The layering of the Earth has been inferred indirectly using the time of travel of refracted and reflected seismic waves created by earthquakes. The core does not allow shear waves to pass through it, while the speed of travel (seismic velocity) is different in the other layers. The changes in the seismic velocity between the different layers causes refraction owing to
Snell's law. Reflections are caused by a large increase in seismic velocity and are similar to light reflecting from a mirror.
Core
The average density of Earth is 5515
kg/
m3, making it the densest planet in the Solar system. Since the average density of surface material is only around 3000 kg/m
3, we must conclude that denser materials exist within Earth's core. Further evidence for the high density core comes from the study of
seismology. In its earliest stages, about 4.5 billion (4.5) years ago, melting would have caused denser substances to sink toward the center in a process called
planetary differentiation (see also the
iron catastrophe), while less-dense materials would have migrated to the
crust. As a result, the core is largely composed of iron (80%), along with
nickel and one or more light elements, whereas other dense elements, such as
lead and
uranium, either are too rare to be significant or tend to bind to lighter elements and thus remain in the crust (see
felsic materials). The matter that is the Earth is connected in fundamental ways to the matter of certain chondrite meteorites, and to the matter of the outer portion of the Sun
[3] [4]. There is good reason to believe that the Earth is, in the main, like a chondrite meteorite. Beginning as early as 1940, scientists, including Francis Birch, built geophysics upon the premise that the Earth is like ordinary chondrites, the most common type of meteorite observed impacting Earth, while totally ignoring another, albeit less abundant type, called enstatite chondrites. The principal difference between the two meteorite types is that enstatite chondrites formed under circumstances of extremely limited available oxygen, leading to certain normally oxyphile elements existing either partially or wholly in the alloy portion that corresponds to the core of the Earth.
Seismic measurements show that the core is divided into two parts, a solid inner core with a
radius of ~1220 km and a liquid outer core extending beyond it to a radius of ~3400 km. The solid inner core was discovered in 1936 by
Inge Lehmann and is generally believed to be composed primarily of iron and some nickel. Some have argued that the inner core may be in the form of a single iron
crystal.
[5][6] The liquid outer core surrounds the inner core and is believed to be composed of iron mixed with nickel and trace amounts of lighter elements. Recent speculation suggests that the innermost part of the core is enriched in
gold,
platinum and other iron-loving (
siderophile) elements.
[7]
It is generally believed that convection in the outer core, combined with stirring caused by the Earth's rotation (see:
Coriolis effect), gives rise to the
Earth's magnetic field through a process described by the
dynamo theory. The solid inner core is too hot to hold a permanent magnetic field (see
Curie temperature) but probably acts to stabilise the magnetic field generated by the liquid outer core.
Recent evidence has suggested that the inner core of Earth may rotate slightly faster than the rest of the planet.
[8] In August
2005 a team of
geophysicists announced in the journal ''
Science'' that, according to their estimates, Earth's inner core rotates approximately 0.3 to 0.5 degrees per year relative to the rotation of the surface.
[9][10]
The current scientific explanation for the Earth's temperature gradient is a combination of the heat left over from the planet's initial formation, the decay of radioactive elements, and the freezing of the inner core. Other theories include the
georeactor theory.
Mantle
Main articles: Mantle (geology)
Earth's mantle extends to a depth of 2890 km, making it the largest layer of the Earth. The
pressure, at the bottom of the mantle, is ~140 G
Pa (1.4 M
atm). The mantle is composed of
silicate rocks that are rich in iron and magnesium relative to the overlying crust. Although solid, the high temperatures within the mantle cause the silicate material to be sufficiently
ductile that it can flow on very long timescales.
Convection of the mantle is expressed at the surface through the motions of
tectonic plates. The
melting point and
viscosity of a substance depends on the pressure it is under. As there is intense and increasing pressure as one travels deeper into the mantle, the lower part of the mantle flows less easily than does the upper mantle (chemical changes within the mantle may also be important). The viscosity of the mantle ranges between 10
21 and 10
24 Pa·s, depending on depth.
[11] In comparison, the viscosity of water is approximately 10
-3 Pa·s and
that of pitch 10
7 Pa·s. Thus, the mantle flows very slowly.
Crust
Main articles: Crust (geology)
The crust ranges from 5 to 70 km in depth. The thin parts are
oceanic crust composed of dense (
mafic) iron magnesium
silicate rocks and underlie the ocean basins. The thicker crust is
continental crust, which is less dense and composed of (
felsic)
sodium potassium
aluminium silicate rocks. The crust-mantle boundary occurs as two physically different events. First, there is a discontinuity in the
seismic velocity, which is known as the
Mohorovičić discontinuity or Moho. The cause of the Moho is thought to be a change in rock composition from rocks containing
plagioclase feldspar (above) to rocks that contain no feldspars (below). Second, there is a
chemical discontinuity between
ultramafic cumulates and tectonized
harzburgites, which has been observed from deep parts of the oceanic crust that have been
obducted into the continental crust and preserved as
ophiolite sequences.
Historical development and alternative conceptions
In
1692 Edmund Halley (in a paper printed in ''Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society of London'') put forth the idea of
Earth consisting of a hollow shell about 500 miles thick, with two inner concentric shells around an innermost core, corresponding to the diameters of the planets Venus, Mars, and Mercury respectively.
[12] Halley's construct was a method of accounting for the (flawed) values of the relative density of the Earth and the Moon that had been given by Sir Isaac Newton, in ''Principia'' (1687).“Sir Isaac Newton has demonstrated the Moon to be more solid than our Earth, as 9 to 5" Halley remarked; "why may we not then suppose four ninths of our globe to be cavity?”
In
1818,
John Cleves Symmes, Jr. suggested that the Earth consisted of a hollow shell about 800 miles (1,300 km) thick, with openings about 1400 miles (2,300 km) across at both
poles with 4 inner shells each open at the
poles.
Jules Verne, in ''
Journey to the Center of the Earth'' imagined vast interior caverns, and
William Reed, in ''
Phantom of the Poles'' (1906) imagined a
hollow earth.
Some Christian writers resisted the idea of a spherical Earth on theological grounds, without gaining widespread acceptance. The
Flat Earth Society, previously presided by
Charles K. Johnson, in the USA work hard to keep the concept alive, and have claimed a few thousand followers.
[13] Some Christians in
England and the
United States tried to revive flat Earth thinking in the
19th century.
The drilling of the
Kola Superdeep Borehole was the inspiration for an
urban legend, the "
well to hell hoax".
See also
★
Mohorovičić discontinuity, boundary crust and mantle.
★
Core-mantle boundary
★
Lehmann discontinuity
Notes
1. http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0101/14earthwater/
2. T. H. Jordan, "Structural Geology of the Earth's Interior", ''Proceedings of the National Academy of Science'', 1979, Sept., 76(9): 4192–4200.
3. Herndon, J. M., The chemical composition of the interior shells of the Earth. Proc. R. Soc. Lond, 1980, A372, 149-154.
4. Herndon, J. M., Scientific basis of knowledge on Earth's composition. Curr.Sci., 2005, 88(7), 1034-1037.
5. Crystal at the Center of the Earth
6. Lars Stixrude and R. E. Cohen, "High-Pressure Elasticity of Iron and Anisotropy of Earth's Inner Core", ''Science'' 31 March 1995: Vol. 267. no. 5206, pp. 1972 - 1975 DOI: 10.1126/science.267.5206.1972
7. Wootton, Anne (September 2006) "Earth's Inner Fort Knox" ''Discover'' 27(9): p.18;
8. http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/25/science/25cnd-core.html
9. Kerr, Richard A. (26 August 2005) "Earth's Inner Core Is Running a Tad Faster Than the Rest of the Planet" ''Science'' 309(5739): p.1313;
10. Chang, Kenneth (26 August 2005) "Scientists Say Earth's Center Rotates Faster Than Surface" ''The New York Times'' Sec. A, Col. 1, p.13;
11. http://www2.uni-jena.de/chemie/geowiss/geodyn/poster2.html
12. N. Kollerstrom, 1992. "The hollow world of Edmond Halley" from ''Journal for History of Astronomy'' '23', 185-192
13. http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/flatearth.html
References
★ Herndon, J. Marvin (1994) ''Planetary and Protostellar Nuclear Fission: Implications for Planetary Change, Stellar Ignition and Dark Matter'' Proceedings: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Vol. 445, No. 1924 (May 9, 1994) , pp. 453-461
★ Herndon, J. Marvin (1996) ''Substructure of the inner core of the Earth'' Vol. 93, Issue 2, 646-648, January 23, 1996, PNAS
★ Hollenbach, D. F. ,dagger and J. M. HerndonDagger (2001) ''Deep-Earth reactor: Nuclear fission, helium, and the geomagnetic field'' Published online before print September 18, 2001, 10.1073/pnas.201393998, September 25, 2001, vol. 98, no. 20, PNAS
★ Lehmann, I. (1936) ''Inner Earth'', Bur. Cent. Seismol. Int. 14, 3-31
★ Schneider, David (Oct 1996) ''A Spinning Crystal Ball'', Scientific American