Earth’s core seems to be slowing its spin, study suggests

24 Jan 2023

Image: © rost9/Stock.adobe.com

Researchers looking at seismic waves believe the Earth’s inner core may be in a 70-year-cycle where it spins in one direction and stops, before spinning in the opposite direction.

New research suggests the spinning of the Earth’s inner core slowed in recent years and at one point, may have stopped entirely.

It is widely believed that the inner core is roughly 5,000km beneath the Earth’s surface, having been formed only 1bn years ago in the planet’s 4.5bn years of existence.

In the 1990s, scientists argued that this superheated core spins at a different rate to the rest of the Earth. Now, a study published in the scientific journal Nature Geoscience suggests this spinning changed in the 21st century.

Looking at the travel time of seismic waves stemming from earthquakes, the researchers came to the conclusion that the core’s rotation “paused” in roughly 2009.

The researchers, Yi Yang and Xiaodong Song of Peking University, believe that the core may be in a cycle of oscillation, where it spins in one direction, stops, and then spins in the opposite direction. The study suggests this spinning cycle occurs roughly every 70 years.

“If the oscillation model is correct, we expect that the inner core will keep rotating slower than the surface until the mid-2040s,” Song said in an email to Inverse.

Much of what we know about the Earth’s core is based on estimations and theories. This study is only the latest theory. A study published last year argues that the inner core’s spin appeared to be “nearly locked to the mantle before 2001 and after 2003,” with a sudden difference in rotation during this short time period.

A study from 2019 argued that “inner core differential rotation cannot provide a reasonable or consistent interpretation for the observed temporal change of seismic data”.

In 2019, another study on seismic waves suggested that the Earth’s core is capped with iron ‘snow’, which gave new clues about the forces that affect our planet.

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Leigh Mc Gowran is a journalist with Silicon Republic

editorial@siliconrepublic.com