Science Earth’s inner core may have started to spin in opposite direction, puzzling new discovery suggests - "Probably not the first time this has happened" - Nerds

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/earth-core-spin-opposite-direction-b2267880.html
Archive: https://archive.is/jtwY5

Earth’s inner core may have started to spin in opposite direction, puzzling new discovery suggests​

This isn’t the first time it has happened, scientists say

By Vishwam Sankaran
Updated Jan. 24, 2023 02:05 PM

Earth’s solid inner core layer may have paused its rotation recently and started to spin in the opposite direction instead, according to a new study.

The research could further the understanding of how processes deep inside the planet affect its surface, including the length of a day, noted the study, published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Previous research has found that the planet’s inner core is separated from the rest of the Earth by a liquid outer core, the magnetic field of which affects the inner layer’s rotation along with the gravitational effects of the mantle.

This has previously been inferred based on changes in the travel time between repeated seismic waves that should traverse the same path through the inner core, explained scientists, including those from Peking University in Beijing.

However, the speed of the inner core’s rotation, and whether it varies, has remained unclear.

Seismic waves from near-identical earthquakes that have passed through the Earth’s inner core along similar paths since the 1960s were assessed by researchers, including Yi Yang and Xiaodong Song, for the new study.

They particularly analysed the difference in the waveform and travel time of these quakes and found that since 2009, the paths of the seismic waves – that previously showed significant travel time variation – exhibited “little change”.

“Here we analyse repeated seismic waves from the early 1990s and show that all of the paths that previously showed significant temporal changes have exhibited little change over the past decade,” they wrote in the study.

The findings indicate that the Earth’s inner core rotation has paused.

This may be linked to a reversal of the inner core rotation as part of a seven-decade oscillation, indicating a “resonance system across different Earth layers”.

These variations are associated with changes in observations on the Earth’s surface, like the length of a day, according to the study.

“This multidecadal periodicity coincides with changes in several other geophysical observations, especially the length of day and magnetic field,” they noted.

The new findings also throw new light on the interaction between different layers of the Earth.

“These observations provide evidence for dynamic interactions between the Earth’s layers, from the deepest interior to the surface,” scientists said in the study.

A previous such turning point had occurred in the early 1970s, according to them.
 
Lol a long time ago I knew an astrophysicist (not even joking) who got a lot of shit for saying that he thought climate change was happening but had little to nothing to do with anything man made. He thought it had to do with changes in the Earth's magnetic field which was causing there to be variations in the amount of the sun's radiation which entered the Earth's atmosphere. I'm willing to bet he's out there using this article as evidence for his argument right now.
 
>The Earth is round and spinning but also you're all not being flung off

>Those weird structures in Antarctica are perfectly natural, ignore them

>Also the round ball inside the round ball that is Earth is spinning back and forth


Smdh when will these round earthers finally acquiesce to the fact that we're on the back of a turtle and these changes are a result of the turtle flapping his fins to keep flying.
 
So does this mean we're gonna go full Armageddon, just instead of sending deep sea oil drillers to the moon to nuke it, we send oil drillers to the core to blow it to bits in a epic Michael Bay climax?

What? No. That'd be silly. You send the team from The Core (2003) and just ask them to repeat their previous success.

The Earth's core has stopped spinning. Disasters are happening around the globe, including; animals acting in bizarre ways, monstrous thunderstorms. Dr. Josh Keyes and his crew of 5 go down to the centre to set off a nuclear device, hoping to make the core start spinning again, or humanity will cease.
 
Someone explain this to me. The inner core is liquid, and spins.
How does it spin? Like all together as one mass, like a ball would spin? Does it spin the same way the earth does? How can it slow down and reverse if it’s all spinning together as one mass? What forces make it do that? Or is ‘spin’ not really like a ball spinning but a way to describe movement in a liquid? Or field lines all squished up then bouncing back?
I have a hard time conceptualising this. Someone explain it to me so I can see it in my thick head
 
Someone explain this to me. The inner core is liquid, and spins.
How does it spin? Like all together as one mass, like a ball would spin? Does it spin the same way the earth does? How can it slow down and reverse if it’s all spinning together as one mass? What forces make it do that? Or is ‘spin’ not really like a ball spinning but a way to describe movement in a liquid? Or field lines all squished up then bouncing back?
I have a hard time conceptualising this. Someone explain it to me so I can see it in my thick head
The innermost core is solid (or at least relatively solid given temps) iron. Surrounding that is the layers of mantle (the more liquid bit) with the crust floating on top. So the very center may or may not have stopped spinning, but the mantle is still moving in the same directions it’s been going.

My question is how they can tell it’s stopped spinning vs. it just matching the speed of the surrounding materials?
 
Someone explain this to me. The inner core is liquid, and spins.
How does it spin? Like all together as one mass, like a ball would spin? Does it spin the same way the earth does? How can it slow down and reverse if it’s all spinning together as one mass? What forces make it do that? Or is ‘spin’ not really like a ball spinning but a way to describe movement in a liquid? Or field lines all squished up then bouncing back?
I have a hard time conceptualising this. Someone explain it to me so I can see it in my thick head

I will try based on my geology 101 class at state school nearly 2 decades ago.

The center of the earth is really hot from all the pressure and residual heat of planet formation, also heavy metals sink down toward the core as they have greater mass and all the rock down there is doughy and melt-y (that's why we can't drill baby drill). So you have this hot center full of molten iron but it's under so much pressure that the very core of it is a solid (simply too much pressure for it to be liquid), suspended inside the molten iron all around it. It spins because the earth spins and the charged ball of iron spinning against the molten iron creates the earths magnetic field (once the earth goes cold we loose the field and with it our atmosphere. See Mars.)

Also geological record (volcanic rock) records the polarity of the earths magnetic field and we can see that it flips regularly every ~750K years.

As far as the rotation flip I'm guessing it's like when astronauts spin things in space and they spontaneously flip on their axis in zero-G.. but that's the part I'm fuzziest about.
 
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Time to panic everybody

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Someone explain this to me. The inner core is liquid, and spins.
How does it spin? Like all together as one mass, like a ball would spin? Does it spin the same way the earth does? How can it slow down and reverse if it’s all spinning together as one mass? What forces make it do that? Or is ‘spin’ not really like a ball spinning but a way to describe movement in a liquid? Or field lines all squished up then bouncing back?
I have a hard time conceptualising this. Someone explain it to me so I can see it in my thick head
You ever stirred a bucket of paint? You ever stir it suddenly in the opposite direction?
 
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