Earth's Inner Core Rotation Slower Than Estimated 223
intellitech writes "Scientists at the University of Cambridge believe they have achieved the first accurate estimate of how much faster Earth's core is rotating compared to the rest of the planet. The rate — about one degree every million years — is much slower than previously thought and arises from the complex dynamic between Earth's inner and outer core, which generates Earth's geomagnetic field. Without our magnetic field, Earth's surface would not be protected from charged particles spewing from the Sun, and life would not be able to exist."
oh GAWD NO! (Score:4, Funny)
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we have to quickly assemble a team to tunnel to the center of the Earth with nuclear bombs to restart the core's rotation!
But how can we obtain the needed unobtainium?
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unobtainium?
First we'll construct the vehicle out of obtainium. Using it we'll then obtain the unobtainium. Then we'll coat the vehicle with the unobtainium we obtained with the obtainium.
Is there anything obtainium can't help you obtain.
Re:oh GAWD NO! (Score:4, Funny)
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But how can we obtain the needed unobtainium?
Duh, time machine. Go get some from after when we've already gotten some. Too easy.
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Okay. I'll wait now while you go ahead and bring back the first time machine...
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beware the clowns and forgotten beasts!
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I dinnae say we wuren't crazy! [irregularwebcomic.net]
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Earth's Inner Core Rotation Slower Than Estimated (Score:2)
so how far is the date / year off? (Score:2)
so how far is the date / year off?
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Since all standard candles would be affected the same way, we would not detect it by comparing the distances calculated with different standard candles.
Until you cross calculate non-luminosity figures and it means galaxies must move faster than the speed of light, or rotate too quickly for their apparent density, or the redshifts indicate something weird, or typical stellar evolution would imply that distant galaxy should have collapsed into a black hole already, and measured supernova luminosities would not be remotely close to theoretical, etc.
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...How many other 'estimations', such as distances to distant stars, etc, can be off by a small percentage that would result in a large amount of actual distance?
Umm, I'll estimate 30%... it would be larger but sales and marketing departments have not yet become involved in things like interstellar distance and core super-rotation.
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Yes, but in a car, you can use the brakes to slow down...
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And in space you can use a planet or star's gravity to slow down.
But I gotta make #2 now...
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As the imaginary ship gets closer then the margins of error on the distance gets smaller so smaller adjustments are needed.
They build in course corrections into long space flights like this for a reason.
If you read up on the history of space probes within our Solar System, you'll see course corrections built into the mission for just this purpose.
http://www.qrg.northwestern.edu/projects/vss/docs/navigation/1-what-is-course-correction.html [northwestern.edu]
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And that's one of the beautiful and valuable things about science - that it is able to quantify and bound the error in its measurements / predictions / certainty. Small minded pundits, especially when they want to attack a conclusion produced by science, go on and on about how science can never be certain about anything: it's all just a theory. As though a theory has no value because it has some uncertainty
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I can say, with certainty, that it is more than 4.358 ly away and less than 4.372 ly.
Well, maybe.
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Your certainty here is 3, 4 or 5 standard deviations?
Ok, i just wanted to nitpick
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One single volcanic eruption uses more core energy than all of mankind has EVER used in his entire existence in every single energy form.
Let me guess, these whacks also believe that windmills will slow down the wind and cause us to not have any more wind and weather.
DONT USE SOLAR POWER! YOU'RE MAKING THE SUN DARKER!
I have exactly the same problem. (Score:3)
My inner core rotation is much slower than it should be, especially after a biggish lunch.
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A large lunch should increase your inner core rotation, how else are you going to make room?
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Every comedian is rolling in their grave... slowly.
You mean, like, slower than previously expected?
Or ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Earth's surface would not be protected from charged particles spewing from the Sun, and life would not be able to exist.
Re:Or ... (Score:5, Funny)
You mean... "God would have created us in such a manner or in a location so as to tolerate the particle flux. In the ocean, for example." Right?
Or ... (Score:2)
The particle flux is part of God's creation too. We wouldn't 'tolerate' it, we would rejoice in it as evidence of his bountiful provision of life-affirming radiation for us, his children. For without it we wouldn't be as we would be, and what are the chances of that happening through accidental evolution? Not much!
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Behold! He's coming with the clouds! And every eye shall be blind with his glory! Every ear shall be stricken deaf to hear the thunder of his voice! Come forth and drink the waters of the Glow, for this ancient weapon of war is our salvation, it is the very symbol of Atom's glory! Give your bodies to Atom, my friends. Release yourself to his power, feel his Glow and be Divided. There shall be no tears, no sorrow, no suffering, for in the Division, we shall see our release from the pain and hardships of this
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The particle flux is part of God's creation too.
Which god? A particle flux sounds like the kind of thing Prometheus would steal from Hephaestus for humanities (ab)use.
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AOL voice: "Congratulations! You found the 'God particle'."
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mmmmmm, bacon.... (Score:5, Funny)
I've always wondered what god tastes like...
bacon, obviously
Re:Or ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wafers. I tried him once, at a friend's cannibalistic Sunday religious ceremony, and God tastes like cardboard wafers.
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I've always wondered what god tastes like...
Stale flat-bread and cheap wine.
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In the ocean, for example
But then Avitar would have been about giant, 3D, blue dolphins instead.
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And yet the story still would've sucked, proving that there are some things that are constant across the many earths in the Multiverse.
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Possibly - there are some theories which suggest that the solar wind might have blown our atmosphere away were it not for the magnetic field, Mars' thin atmosphere is supposed to be an example of this because its magnetic field is weaker than Earth's.
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Venus manages to have an atmosphere 93 times more massive than Earth's while having no intrinsic magnetic field and being subjected to a stronger solar wind.
There is still much we have to learn.
Re:Or ... (Score:4, Informative)
Venus' atmosphere is heavier (almost all CO2) and is constantly replenished by outgassing at the 800F surface.
Venus also does have a magnetic field large enough to disperse the solar wind.
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If it weren't for the magnetic field, these particles would interact with the atmosphere and mess it up pretty bad, and we'd end up with an atmosphere like Venus (I'm to lazy to search for sources now, so you'll just have to decide whether you'll take my word for it or not).
It would be a heck of a lot more like Mars... think about it like a sandblaster slowly eroding the atmosphere away.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_wind#Atmospheres [wikipedia.org]
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Now which do you think affects the magnetic field more, the cores RELATIVE rotation speed (a few degrees in a million years?) or the overall Earth rotation (roughly 365 degrees in a day)? This is like putting a magnet in a plastic cup, rotating the magnet, and rotating the cup SLIGHTLY slower, and saying the resulting magnetic
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Previous attempts to measure the rotation (Score:2, Funny)
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Ahh, The Zipper. I took my then-girlfriend on that ride once, she instantly became sick and refused to move for hours. Wouldn't even ride the damn Ferris wheel. I would have been bored if it wasn't for the good old Gravitron... which spins around, much like the Earth's core. Back on topic!
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In Soviet Union, the Government controls spin.
first accurate estimate (Score:2)
This is an estimate, you'll note. But not just any estimate, it's the first accurate estimate.
Were previous estimates wild guesses made just for a laugh, with no expectation of accuracy?
And won't the next estimate researched be able to claim the same milestone, for all the same reasons?
Life is more robust than that... (Score:5, Interesting)
It bothers me how often I hear absolutes with regards to "If not for XXX, life would not exist on Earth." Life has proven to be a lot more robust than such simple statements imply. Certainly, without a magnetic field, life on Earth would look a lot different than it does today as it would have adapted to a much different environment, but it would most certainly still exist with all other things being equal.
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Yep there would probably still be life deep in the oceans, especially near volcanic vents where the water would be warm and chemotrophic organisms could survive on the chemicals that spew out.
Remind me again of why anyone would want to explore Mars instead of Europa?
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What oceans?
No magnetic field means there's nothing to stop solar winds from stripping earth of it's atmosphere.
With no atmospheric pressure, the oceans would boil at 0C (and the water vapor would then be blown off into space too).
Also, no magnetic field implies little to no plate tectonics, meaning volcanism is nonexistant, meaning no tasty little geothermal vents for microbes to snack on.
Make no mistake - without a magnetic field, life would most definitely not exist on this planet. This is not a case of
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With no atmospheric pressure, the oceans would boil at 0C (and the water vapor would then be blown off into space too).
Oh, good point 8-(
Re:Life is more robust than that... (Score:4, Informative)
"What oceans?
No magnetic field means there's nothing to stop solar winds from stripping earth of it's atmosphere.
With no atmospheric pressure, the oceans would boil at 0C (and the water vapor would then be blown off into space too)."
Let me fix that for you.
Wild speculation has it that our atmosphere will be stripped off without a magnetic field. Most experts now disagree as Venus is proof that that is not true. Venus uses a ionopause (as does Mars) but it is generated a different way than Earth's magnetic field. Mars is a special instance because something catastrophic happened at one point. The atmopshere had enough pressure to hold liquid water (it can now, but only in low lying areas or short amounts of time), enough for oceans. What kind of atmosphere makes a difference too. Hydrogen verses carbondioxide for example.
The magnetic field does more by keeping us from getting cooked by radiation than anything else.
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Make no mistake - without a magnetic field, life would most definitely not exist on this planet.
That is a statement rooted in faith, not in science.
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Conceded. It really should read that life as we know it would definitely not exist on this planet. It's far too speculative to say all life. My apologies.
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Remind me again of why anyone would want to explore Mars instead of Europa?
Because the monoliths told us to stay the hell away from Europa?
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Exactly. It's overbuilt.
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It's closer and you don't have to drag around an enormous drill.
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We haven't been able to look very closely. The jury is still out on the one place (Mars) we believe life is possible that we've been able to test repeatedly (at least robotically).
We haven't even begun to examine Europa and have barely tested Titan... and that's only considering the places in the Solar System where we think life is possible based on our understanding of where and how life can exist, which itself is constantly being challenged and broadened.
The Solar System might be teaming with life that w
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Decades down the line I may look like a fool for saying this, but I'm willing to stick my scrawny neck out and unequivocally state that there's no life on any planet other than Earth in our solar system.
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Well, intelligent life that resembles us in any way, yeah, I would agree we can be pretty certain about that, but life in general, even if it's very simple? I think it will be a long, long time before we can rule that out.
Of course, there's also the possibility that intelligent life could exist nearby in a form we would not be able to recognize.
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If life really was so resilient we would have found ample traces of it on every other planet.
The fact that we can find it on even one planet implies that here it's pretty resilient. It also implies that here the conditions for it are in the survivable range of a fairly large number of parameters.
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That's a bit of a fallacy... Of course life exists here: if it didn't, we wouldn't be here to observe it. So the 1-out-of-1 so far doesn't say much about the probability of life existing elsewhere, unless we find some place very similar to Earth. Also, "fairly large number of parameters" isn't quite accurate since, on a galactic scale, any place on/in the Earth is within a relatively small set of parameters. From our perspective it's a lot, because it's all we've been able to experience so far, with the
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Certainly, without a magnetic field, life on Earth would look a lot different than it does today as it would have adapted to a much different environment
What would the differences in the environment be?
Radiation levels would be about the same. For every particle of any energy that is steared away from the Earth there is another one on the other side steered into the Earth. The poles get a bit more (non-solar) cosmic radiation than the equator because they come in more-or-less along the axis of the Earth's magnetic field. The magnetic pole is currently moving quite quickly somewhere in northern Alaska, and I haven't heard any reports of it leaving a swath
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Yes, Earth's rotating inner hardcore.
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Bacteria don't have babies, either.
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I highly doubt the part about life not existing... (Score:2)
...w/o magnetic field. We have oceans which are miles deep. We also have microorganisms which have been found in active volcanoes and inside nuclear reactors. Even humans spend most of the time inside radiation-shielding buildings and have survived trips to moon inside thin metal shell. I think it's more fare to say that life forms would be slightly different without magnetic field.
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Oceans which would boil at 0 Celsius without an atmosphere.
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Thus creating an atmosphere, clouding up, and cooling them down again.
Could take some time before the whole run-out-of-water thing happens. Time enough to start up the magnetosphere again.
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See Venus. Tell us how it really keeps its atmosphere.
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"Life would not be able to exist" (Score:2)
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It's a nice way to punch up a news article or info piece. I think they may teach it in journalism school: people are really interested in death, and the apocalypse is a great way to attract eyeballs.
Scientists usually don't say such things, and the Nature article doesn't. But apparently the person who submitted it figured that a one-sentence answer "Scientists do an experiment and come up with a slightly different number from last time" didn't quite cut it.
Usually, it's the press who adds such things befo
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Actually, "Mars had oceans" is the hypothesis. That the solar wind strips off the atmosphere of the inner planets is pretty well established.
There are theories that a weak magnetic field screwed Venus, too, as the solar wind knocked away the hydrogen that used to form its water, leaving the heavier oxygen to bind with carbon and sulfur.
THE END IS NIGH! (Score:2)
We're all gonna die!
Someday... =)
Leave Out the Bit About Life (Score:2)
Deinococcus radiodurans (Score:4, Informative)
Deinococcus radiodurans takes your puny solar radiation, chews on it, and spits it out as not worthy of food. Go ahead, try and kill me!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinococcus_radiodurans [wikipedia.org]
super-rotation is fantastic geological hypothesis (Score:2)
Or it still would (Score:2)
"It is shown by kinematic estimates and three-dimensional plasma-neutral gas simulations that the solar wind can induce very fast a magnetic field in the previously completely unmagnetized Earth's ionosphere that is strong enough to protect Earth from cosmic radiations comparable to the case of an intact magnetic dynamo.
Consequently, even in the case of a complete breakdown of the Earth’s dynamo, the biosphere is still shielded against cosmic rays, in particular
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But is the atmosphere shielded from erosion by the solar wind?
Slightly OT question (Score:2)
I'm a layman but I would expect that, after 4.5 billion years, friction would have slowed down the inner core's rotation to match that of the rest of the planet. Has anyone hypothesized why that hasn't happened?
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Coriolis force. As dense matter settles toward the core it will carry angular momentum along. This implies that the magnetic field is ultimately driven by differentiation.
Compare this rate to Earth's slowing (Score:2)
So, the core rotates 1degree faster than the surface every million years. That's not much.
At the current rate of earth's rotation rate slowing, the surface will slow down some 30 degress in the next 400 years (this is a reasonably sound estimate used by people arguing against continuing "leap-seconds", that as the rotation rate slows geometrically, soon we'll be adding a leap second every month, then several a month, and so on. They suggest a leap-hour in 300 or 400 years.)
So...this suggests that the soli
that date is off (Score:2)
that date is off
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No the actual plot was even worse. That neutrinos from the sun, which are supposed to pass through matter without interacting, suddenly and inexplicably changed in some way such that they did interact with the earth's core, and that caused the heating.
2012 was a great movie, as long as you perceived it as a comedy -- I laughed the whole way through it.
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They recycled The Core?
Yeah, on the DVD box was ME-MA-NY-OR-IA-HI-VT-CT 5c MI 10c; why Michigan would pay 10 cents for that movie is anyone's guess.
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why Michigan would pay 10 cents for that movie is anyone's guess.
It's a condition on the Superfund money they're getting from the EPA for toxic media remediation.
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What the hell is an "accurate estimate"?
The opposite of a made-up fact.