• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

What Caused The Earth’s Inner Core To Freeze?

November 22, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

As much as we have explored and modeled our planet, there are a number of mysteries that surround the Earth’s inner core. 

This isn’t that surprising, as it’s pretty difficult to study a region over 5,100 kilometers (3,170 miles) beneath our feet, when the furthest we have physically drilled into the Earth is a measly 12,263 meters (40,230 feet). But we can learn about the center through looking at seismic waves traveling through the Earth, as well as the magnetic field lines of the planet, the result of conditions in the core.

Advertisement

One mystery we haven’t solved yet is how the core has “frozen” solid from a molten liquid state in its past.

“The Earth’s inner core was once liquid, but has turned solid over time. As the Earth gradually cools, the inner core expands outwards [as] the surrounding iron-rich liquid ‘freezes’. That said, it is still extremely hot, at least 5,000 Kelvin (K) (4,726.85°C),” Alfred Wilson-Spencer, research fellow of Mineral Physics at the University of Leeds and lead author of a new study, wrote in a piece for The Conversation. 



Discovering how this process took place could help us understand the Earth’s magnetic fields, which given the magnetosphere’s role in protecting the Earth from harmful solar radiation, could in turn help us understand the conditions necessary for life to thrive.

Advertisement

“This process of freezing releases elements, such as oxygen and carbon, which aren’t compatible with being in a hot solid. It creates a hot, buoyant liquid at the bottom of the outer core. The liquid rises into the liquid outer core and mixes with it, which creates electric currents (through ‘dynamo action’), which generates our magnetic field,” Wilson-Spencer said. 

How the Earth’s core “froze” is difficult to figure out, given our location on Earth and in time, with the cooling taking place over a billion years or longer.

“The traditional view of inner core growth is that the temperature at the centre of the Earth declined until it reached the melting temperature of the constituent liquid iron alloy, at which point freezing of the inner  core began,” the team explain in their paper. “However, this picture is incomplete because it ignores the physical requirement that all liquids must be supercooled by [a significant] amount […] below the melting temperature before solids can nucleate without remelting.”

Previous models suggest that in order for the core to “freeze” in a ~1 billion year timeframe, the liquid iron (and other minerals in far smaller abundances) would need to be supercooled by around 700-1,000 Kelvin. But this presents some problems.

Advertisement

“If the core was supercooled by 1,000K before freezing, the inner core should be much larger than observed,” Wilson-Spencer explained. “Alternatively, if 1,000K is necessary for freezing and was never achieved, the inner core should not exist at all.”



In the study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, the team looked at how the presence of other elements in the core could affect its supercooling, simulating the interactions of iron and carbon atoms under intense pressure using a supercomputer. With carbon present, the team found that the core could cool and solidify with far less supercooling, perhaps under 400K, and in plausible timescales.

Further study is of course needed, and the idea could be complicated further by the presence of other elements in the core, such as oxygen and silicon. However, it is an interesting avenue to explore, and may raise further questions about the heart of our planet.

Advertisement

“The implications of not understanding the formation of the inner core are far-reaching. Previous estimates of the inner core’s age range from 500 to 1,000 million years. But these do not account for the supercooling issue,” Wilson-Spencer added. “Even a modest supercooling of 100K could mean the inner core is several hundred million years younger than previously thought.”

The study is posted to preprint server EarthArXiv, and has not yet been peer-reviewed.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Biden administration to move public lands agency back to Washington from Colorado
  2. “I’d Eat An Indian,” Bragged Brazil’s President In Resurfaced Video
  3. Women Who Have Just Had A Baby Are More Likely To Experience Pareidolia
  4. What Do We Know About Australopithecus Anamensis?

Source Link: What Caused The Earth's Inner Core To Freeze?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • 25-Year-Old Paper On Controversial Glyphosate Weedkiller Retracted, After It Turns Out Monsanto Staff Helped Write It
  • Gravitational Lenses Confirm That Something Is Still Broken In The Universe
  • Adorable Camera Trap Footage Of Moms And Cubs Heralds Conservation Win For Sunda Tigers
  • Exercise VS Sleep: Which Is More Important When You Don’t Have Time For Both?
  • A Deep-Sea Mining Test Carved Up The Seabed. Two Years On, We’re Seeing Devastating Impacts
  • Enormous New Study Finds COVID-19 mRNA Shots Associated With 25 Percent Lower Risk Of Death From Any Cause
  • What Is The Best Movie Set In Space? We Asked Real-Life Astronauts To Find Out
  • Chernobyl’s Protective Shield Is Broken After A Drone Strike, Warns UN Nuclear Watchdog
  • Isaac Newton Was Born On Christmas Day – And January 4th
  • Why Is December The 12th Month Of The Year When Its Name Means 10?
  • Poor Sauropod Was Limping When It Made Curious 360° Looping Dinosaur Track
  • Inhaling “Laughing Gas” Could Treat Severe Depression, Live Seven-Arm Octopus Spotted In The Deep Sea, And Much More This Week
  • People Are Surprised To Learn That The Closest Planet To Neptune Turns Out To Be Mercury
  • The Age-Old “Grandmother Rule” Of Washing Is Backed By Science
  • How Hero Of Alexandria Used Ancient Science To Make “Magical Acts Of The Gods” 2,000 Years Ago
  • This 120-Million-Year-Old Bird Choked To Death On Over 800 Stones. Why? Nobody Knows
  • Radiation Fog: A 643-Kilometer Belt Of Mist Lingers Over California’s Central Valley
  • New Images Of Comet 3I/ATLAS From 4 Different Missions Reveal A Peculiar Little World
  • Neanderthals Used Reindeer Bones To Skin Animals And Make Leather Clothes
  • Why Do Power Lines Have Those Big Colorful Balls On Them?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version