Earth's `solid' inner core may contain both mushy and hard iron
Date:
October 6, 2021
Source:
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Summary:
New research suggests that Earth's 'solid' inner core is, in fact,
endowed with a range of liquid, soft, and hard structures which
vary across the top 150 miles of the inner core.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== 3,200 miles beneath Earth's surface lies the inner core, a ball-shaped
mass of mostly iron that is responsible for Earth's magnetic field. In
the 1950's, researchers suggested the inner core was solid, in contrast
to the liquid metal region surrounding it.
==========================================================================
New research led by Rhett Butler, a geophysicist at the University
of Hawai'i at Manoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology
(SOEST), suggests that Earth's "solid" inner core is, in fact, endowed
with a range of liquid, soft, and hard structures which vary across the
top 150 miles of the inner core.
No human, nor machine has been to this region. The depth, pressure and temperature make inner Earth inaccessible. So Butler, a researcher at
SOEST's Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, and co-author
Seiji Tsuboi, research scientist at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth
Science and Technology, relied on the only means available to probe the innermost Earth -- earthquake waves.
"Illuminated by earthquakes in the crust and upper mantle, and observed
by seismic observatories at Earth's surface, seismology offers the only
direct way to investigate the inner core and its processes," said Butler.
As seismic waves move through various layers of Earth, their speed
changes and they may reflect or refract depending on the minerals,
temperature and density of that layer.
In order to infer features of the inner core, Butler and Tsuboi utilized
data from seismometers directly opposite of the location where an
earthquake was generated. Using Japan's Earth Simulator supercomputer,
they assessed five pairings to broadly cover the inner core region: Tonga-Algeria, Indonesia- Brazil, and three between Chile-China.
"In stark contrast to the homogeneous, soft iron alloys considered in
all Earth models of the inner core since the 1970's, our models suggest
there are adjacent regions of hard, soft, and liquid or mushy iron alloys
in the top 150 miles of the inner core," said Butler. "This puts new constraints upon the composition, thermal history, and evolution of Earth.
The study of the inner core and discovery of its heterogeneous structure provide important new information about dynamics at the boundary between
the inner and outer core, which impact the generation Earth's magnetic
field.
"Knowledge of this boundary condition from seismology may enable better, predictive models of the geomagnetic field which shields and protects
life on our planet," said Butler.
The researchers plan to model the inner core structure in finer detail
using the Earth Simulator and compare how that structure compares with
various characteristics of Earth's geomagnetic field.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided
by University_of_Hawaii_at_Manoa. Original written by Marcie
Grabowski. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Rhett Butler, Seiji Tsuboi. Antipodal seismic reflections upon
shear wave
velocity structures within Earth's inner core. Physics of the Earth
and Planetary Interiors, Volume 321, December 2021, 106802 DOI:
10.1016/ j.pepi.2021.106802 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211006112718.htm
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