Something in Earth’s Core May Be Altering The Length of Days

Earth’s day-night cycle is defined precisely, each a span of 24 hours before the next begins. Such is the yardstick by which we live our lives, strictly adhering to the ticking of the clock.

Earth, however, is not precise. Our planet is a big wobbly gooey ball rocketing around the Sun at a breakneck speed of 107,000 kilometers (67,000 miles) per hour, orbited by a large satellite exerting a gravitational tug of its own. The rotation of the planet, therefore, does not adhere strictly to the 24-hour timeframe.

Many of the fluctuations in the length of Earth’s day have known causes. But on scales of decades to millennia, scientists have noticed a miniscule fluctuation in the length of the day which is a little more difficult to pin down.

Now, a team of geophysicists from ETH Zürich in Switzerland thinks they have found the answer in Earth’s molten iron core, with tiny alterations affecting the planet’s rotation.

Shifts in Earth's Molten Core Could Be Altering The Length of The Planet's Days
Illustration of the layers inside Earth. (Andrzej Wojcicki/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

There are several different fluctuations contributing to variations in the length of Earth’s day. One is around 1.72 milliseconds per century, caused by the Moon and the slow bouncing of Earth’s crust where ancient ice once weighed it down. Changing water volumes can also affect Earth’s rotation as mass shifts around under its surface, as can ice volumes.

On decadal scales, a fluctuation of 2 to 3 milliseconds has been linked to large-scale flows in Earth’s fluid core.

See more here Science Alert 

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Comments (2)

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    BOB M

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    Well I guess Scientist have run out of things to study…

    ““However, with remaining shortcomings – including the lack of a comprehensive physical model to take various components of the core dynamics into account – there is ample motivation for improving the currently available models of the Earth’s core.”

    This seems to be their effort to rationalize this Study and are now in search of new funding to continue finding the lost 2 – 3 milliseconds of time. How about the lost “time” they spent looking for this in the first place.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

    |

    “Such is the yardstick by which we live our lives, strictly adhering to the ticking of the clock.”
    Nope.

    Reply

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