Viewing Inside the Earth 133
Roland Piquepaille writes "Last week, a study released by Princeton University said that geoscientists have captured images of the interior of the Earth by using techniques similar to body scanning by physicians. This study also revealed in-depth structures which might explain how our planet is changing -- and aging. They studied more than 86,000 earthquakes which occurred since 1964. And they found 32 "mantle plumes" which are believed to cause island chains, such as the Hawaiian Islands and Iceland. They have been conjectured thirty years ago, but this is the first visual evidence they exist. This overview contains more details and references, including a rendering of mantle plumes in action."
This is awesome (Score:5, Funny)
I'm really amazed how Science Fiction is able to shape and mold our understanding of real science.
This is awesome (Score:1)
Re:This is awesome (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This is awesome (Score:2)
Re:This is awesome (Score:2, Interesting)
Suspension of disbelieve for me does not tolerate people drilling to the center of the earth, to do anything remotely noticable to the core.
Re:This is awesome (Score:2)
The Core (Score:2, Interesting)
In other news, with the recent Slashdotting, Princeton shows they're super-smart, for not posting the recent core scans online, at 2megs a pop.
It is very cool to hear that a 30 year old theory can be turned into observation. Now if we could only do that with religion, there'd be fewer needless deaths in the world.
Re:The Core (Score:2)
Well, kinda except that a story about images of the center of the earth is now missing images. A torrent would have been nice.
Re:The Core (Score:1)
Re:The Core (Score:1, Offtopic)
Right, because we all know that the only thing religion is good for is to convince people to go out and kill each other. I don't know if you're living under a rock, but religions do a lot of things that are good for people, like distributing food to the needy, and running countless charities that feed, clothe, and shelter people most of us wouldn't have the time of day for. Even for non-needy people, they run a lot
Consideration (Score:1, Offtopic)
I'm not knocking religious factions who set out only to do good. Just the ones who set out to do evil.
Re:The Core (Score:2)
hollow earth (Score:5, Funny)
Hollow Earth Theory [v-j-enterprises.com]
Re:hollow earth (Score:3, Funny)
Re:hollow earth (Score:1, Insightful)
ugh. (Score:2)
whoops, except for the inner sun... (Score:1)
ok... (Score:2)
Re:ok... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ok... (Score:5, Informative)
The suggested explanations for this are somewhat tenuous - that the plume gains strength in the upper mantle and is not imaged at depth runs counter to the improved tomographic resolution with depth, and besides, doesn't make much sense chemically.
Speaking as a geochemist, the real interest lies in tieing in the 3He origin with tomographic images. The evidence is rapidly shrinking for a chemically seperate 'upper' and 'lower' mantle, but rather for a 'marble cake' type mantle with small regions of primitive material mixed in with more recent 'evolved' mantle material.
Re:ok... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure they can. I have no problem with that, however I believe the AC that replied to you above me states is pretty nicely. I believe Iceland was discussed back when I took global plate tectonics, and I was given the impression that it was not a hotspot.
The main fact that keeps me skeptical about the presence of a hotspot under Iceland is the fact that if there
Re:ok... (Score:3, Informative)
It's also possible that there's a relationship between the causes of hot spots and of the ridge itself, so that the two are moving, but move in concert.
Re:ok... (Score:2)
Re:ok... (Score:2)
Now, I'm not saying that the ridges themselves don't move at all. But they are not moved by the same forces that move the plates themselves over hotspots. They are the cause for the plates moving. Also, in the case of the subduction around the Juan de Fuca plate (off the American Northwest), it's far more likely that the majority of the motion is
Re:ok... (Score:2)
Hype (Score:5, Insightful)
Moreover, I suspect this paper will be very controversial -- the inversion of tomographic data is necessarily model-dependent, and many scientists are going to be skeptical of the claim that the have settled the source claim of plumes once and for all. [It's much easier to understand why plumes would originate at the thermal boundary at the core; what causes a plume to begin if it starts somewhere in the middle of the mantle?]
Re:Hype (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hype (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hype (Score:2)
Re:Hype (Score:1)
Re:Hype (Score:1)
seismic survey (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:seismic survey (Score:5, Interesting)
apparently, yellowstone park is right on top of a vent or something that has exploded catastrophically and according to some is overdue to do the same soon.
i'm willing to bet that the funding discussed in the article i linked to above [sfgate.com]:
Grants totaling $319 million from the National Science Foundation have been awarded to cover the first five years of the major new project, called EarthScope. Work has already begun on its array of instruments and facilities, which will provide the tools for decades of future detailed studies.
... has eveything to do with attempting to determine just how soon and how badly North America is going to be covered with ash and oochi-hot burning lava. Cool, or what?
Re:seismic survey (Score:1)
Re:seismic survey (Score:1)
Of course, very few people west of the Appalachians will be around to know about it, but Eurasians and North Africans will be able to stop worrying about global warming for a few centuries.
Re:seismic survey (Score:2, Funny)
when the skies turn dark for days on end and for my very victuals i will must fend,
only nerds will oppose my wrathful blade, i'll cut them all down and take their vittles away.
(cut them all down, and take their vittles away!)
Re:seismic survey (Score:3, Insightful)
Pictures? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Pictures? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pictures? (Score:2, Informative)
Here is an illustration of how these mantle plumes are *moving* under ourselves (Credit: Jamie Painter, Visualization Scientist, Copyright The Regents of the University of California, Link).
This is not the "images" captured by geoscientists mentioned earlier on that page.
Background (Score:5, Informative)
is?
We derive our primary estimate of the temperature of the deep earth from the melting behavior of iron at ultrahigh pressures. We know that the earth's core depths from 2,886 kilometers to the center at 6,371 kilometers (1,794 to 3,960 miles), is predominantly iron, with some contaminants. How? The speed of sound through the core (as measured from the velocity at which seismic waves travel across it) and the density of the core are quite similar to those seen in of iron at high pressures and temperatures, as measured in the laboratory. Iron is the only element that closely matches the seismic properties of the earth's core and is also sufficiently abundant present in sufficient abundance in the universe to make up the approximately 35 percent of the mass of the planet present in the core.
The earth's core is divided into two separate regions: the liquid outer core and the solid inner core, with the transition between the two lying at a depth of 5,156 kilometers (3,204 miles). Therefore, If we can measure the melting temperature of iron at the extreme pressure of the boundary between the inner and outer cores, then this lab temperature should reasonably closely approximate the real temperature at this liquid-solid interface. Scientists in mineral physics laboratories use lasers and high-pressure devices called diamond-anvil cells to re-create these hellish pressures and temperatures as closely as possible.
From the Office of Redundancy Office comes... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:From the Office of Redundancy Office comes... (Score:4, Funny)
"Those long winter evenings must just fly by."--Black Adder
Resolution? (Score:3, Interesting)
It wouldn't take a lot of uranium settling to
Re:Resolution? (Score:3, Interesting)
Besides, doesn't uranium refract sound waves differently than iron? That seems like something we could test somehow. Perhaps reading the article will be enlightening...
Re:Resolution? (Score:4, Interesting)
Not necessarily. I can think of two ways the radioactivity wouldn't be expressed.
As to your refraction question - it goes back to the resolution of the tool being used and the size of a uranium core as to whether it would show up or not.
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
I didn't make myself clear (Score:2)
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Also, how would Lord Kelvin have accounted for the temperature differential of a "molten sphere" in a laboratory vs. a molten earth in the vacuum and extreme coldness of space? What about the effect of gravity to pull heavier
Re:Resolution? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Volcano lava is mantle material on its way out to the earth's surface. Depositing our waste there is not the safest approach for us surface inhabitants. A more plausible approach might be to bury the waste near subduction zones. But most of these zones are under water and subject to volcanism themselves. It would be rather expensive to do and there is no telling what percentage will come back at us.
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Nope. You run into the same problem.
If you look around all major subduction zones on earth, you will notice
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Watch out folks. Many may not read the articles, but I don't read the comments!
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Uranium bromide (Score:2)
Re:Resolution? (Score:4, Informative)
the best heat sources for the core appears to be latent heat of crystallisation, continued gravitational settling and the decay of radioactive potassium dissolved in the metal.
Re:Resolution? (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually its not, we have plenty of iron meteorites in our museums which are essentially an iron-nickel alloy. The crystallisation patterns (known as Widmanstatten patterns show that the metal cooled extremely slowly (ie. it was well insulated ie. it was at depth ie. it formed the core of a planetoid).
Uranium settling to the core would not form a reactor since natural uranium cannot sustain a chain reaction (the U238 gobbles up the neutrons) without a moderator. Even if there had been one long ago fuelled by relatively abundant U235, natural decay would have killed it by now. The 'reactor' in West Africa was moderated by ground water, which there isn't a lot of in the middle of the Earth.
And I'm sure a geochemist in the house will be able to tell me for sure. Isn't uranium partial to binding with silica - so the outer layers of the Earth are relatively enriched in uranium - it gets scarcer as you go down.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Moderator (Score:2)
If I recall correctly, u235 is more radioactive because it fissions in the presence of both fast and slow neutrons whereas u238 only fissions in the presence of slow neutrons. As I understand it, and I may be wrong, when u238 is hit by a slow neutron it can take one of
Re:Resolution? (Score:2)
Here's some interesting literature (Score:1, Insightful)
...about the Earth's Core (fantasy):
At The Earth's Core [gutenberg.org], by by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Offtopic sidenote... (Score:5, Interesting)
A tsunami resulting from a seismic event can be devistating, however the landing times can be predicted... The WestCoast/Alaska Tsunami Warning Center (US specific, though I'm sure there are others..) has a page (http://wcatwc.arh.noaa.gov), that include papers, faqs, and also nice charts showing if an eartquake hit how long would it take the wave to hit (http://wcatwc.arh.noaa.gov/ttt/ttt.htm)
Volcanic eruptions also are interesting in that they tend to throw up ash detectable via satellites... On the NOAA polar orbitals, channel 4 (10.3-11.3 microns) minus channel 5 (11.5-12.5 microns) shows most plumes... A good website for more information is NESDIS's volcano page (http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/VAAC/)
They've discovered my Evil Plan (Score:5, Funny)
- Dr. Evil
Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, does this method rely on the liquid nature of the mantle? Would these acoustic waves propagate as effectively through solid rock (I guess not)? So, even if we could create the effect of an earthquake on, say, the moon, would it even help?
(should get back down to Earth, really!)
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:4, Informative)
And no, solid rock is fine for wave propagation (even better as it will transmit both P and S waves).
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:2)
We do the same w/ IR lasers and glass windows, so it's not unimaginable (glass window = drum to our speech).
--Dan
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:2)
It has tidal quakes caused by the stresses and strains of orbiting the Earth, but their energy is minute.
The Apollo sensors also picked up a number of minor impacts, one of them estimated as being about 10 tonnes smashing into the far side.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Moonquakes do occur (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:1, Interesting)
I remember reading an article in the 80's in either Science Digest or Scientific American about how underground testing of nuclear weapons sent waves all over the planet and how some geologists were taking advantage of it to
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:2, Informative)
Not really, no, because the mantle isn't liquid. Technically it's a plastic solid - it's a solid for all practical intents and purpouses, but over long enough time scales, and under the sort of pressures and temperatures you get in the mantle, it can exhibit liquid-like properties, like flowing and convection and so on.
Would these acoustic waves propagate as effectively through solid rock (I guess not)?
Solid rock is much better for the pr
Re:Shame it requires earthquakes (Score:1)
In fact, the S (or Secondary) waves from an earthquake cannot propogate though a liquid, because they are shear waves, and require the material with cohesion between molecules to propogate. The fact that S waves don't pass through liquid is how we determined the upper core is liquid.
So... (Score:1, Funny)
Damn, so no inner earth? (Score:2)
Ah well, I guess when its been decades since your theory has been debunked, sometimes you've just got to give it up.
Re:Damn, so no inner earth? (Score:1)
Re:Damn, so no inner earth? (Score:3, Funny)
The Core (Score:1, Redundant)
Plumes not universally accepted (Score:5, Interesting)
Remember, an open mind is a terrible thing to waste.
Re:Plumes not universally accepted (Score:2)
New Evidence (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New Evidence (Score:1)
Who are you going to believe? Him or your lying eyes? Go! And never darken my pyroclastic clouds again!
Port to Quake ? (Score:2)
Darn (Score:1, Offtopic)
Right here (Score:1)
I assume this [shorl.com] is what you meant?
Dodged the bullet (Score:2)
Whew!
No surprise, really (Score:4, Funny)
The second thing I thought, of course, was, "Well, duh."
Why not real body scanning techniques? (Score:2)
It's a big thing to scan, but with a few airplanes it could easily be done in a few years.
My best guess is that there is no radiation that works well for it. you need something that is strong enough to pass through the planet, but is weak enough to be partially stopped by features you're interested in.
Re:Why not real body scanning techniques? (Score:4, Insightful)
Bingo! Earthquake waves are the only things we know about that go through the planet. Even radio waves don't make it.
Best wishes,
Mike.
OT: Quark Strangelets (Score:2)
I have no idea how you'd use these to map the earths core (asides from their seismic signatures), and they happen pretty infrequently. If you're interested th
Re:Why not real body scanning techniques? (Score:3, Insightful)
Neutrinos (Score:2)
What I had in the back of my mind was probably neutrinos and similar cosmic radioation particles. Their problem is the opposite, in that they pass through earth much easier than xrays through paper, so you would need very sensitive instruments, or very long measurment times.
I'm not up on the latest in elementary particles, so I don't know if there is some exotic little species of them that could be more practical.
Where are the "Unexpected Plumes"? (Score:2)
Not Nukes? (Score:1)
Does anyone know how they've got around this? A link describing the exact provedure for doing this would be sweet too.
Re:Not Nukes? (Score:2)
In part you're right, but nuclear weapons tests aren't the only things you can get precise times for. Using seismographs to record earthquakes, scientists can determine exactly when an earthquakes happened by looking at the record from t
Re:Not Nukes? (Score:2)
To find the precise time that an earthquake occured, you simply look at your seismograph record and note when the ground started shaking. Old paper seismographs allowed one to make a tick mark every second (with a minute mark leaving a type of U shaped mark). To keep accurate time, you can set certain seismographs up to the radio frequency of the atomic clock. As long as you know when you last changed the drum, it's a simple matter to find out when an earthquak
Random thoughts (Score:4, Informative)
So-called hot spots (fixed volcanic positions) was first proposed by the great Canadian geophysist J. Tuzo Wilson almost 40 years ago.
The mantle plume origin of these hot spots was proposed by W. Jason Morgan (as mentioned in the Princeton link). Morgan also the put forth the first model for global plate tectonics on a sphere (spring AGU meeting, 1967). This extended the work of Wilson that looked only at transform faults.
I've known Jason for 25 years and can truly say that he is one of the nicest guy you could ever meet. He is also an incredible smart scientist.
Ironically, this
Seismic tomography has been around for over two decades. Global body-wave seismic tomography has been performed primarily since the 1990's. I did seismic tomography work about twenty years ago albeit using surface waves covering only a portion of the Earth.
I hope that they publish a resolution map of their inversion model. An error map would also be good. Many times only the final model is presented.
what? (Score:1)
COME ON! show us the reptoids. we know they exist. you can't hide them from us forever.
WHAT A RIP! (Score:1)
David Icke? (Score:2)
Re:Pictures ? (Score:1)