Don't panic! Earth's core has stopped spinning, may change direction; experts say
![Don't panic! Earth's core has stopped spinning, may change direction; experts say](https://www.kxan.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/40/2023/01/AdobeStock_206315813.jpeg?w=900)
In a bit of news you didn't expect, in a new study published this week in Nature Geoscience, scientists announced that they believe the Earth's inner core has stopped spinning. Scientists Yi Yang and Xiaodong Song with Peking University published the paper. They observed changes in the length of the Earth's day and magnetic field, which they said implied changes in layers of the Earth.
AUSTIN (KXAN) - In a bit of news you didn't expect, in a new study published this week in Nature Geoscience, scientists announced that they believe the Earth's inner core has stopped spinning.
Scientists Yi Yang and Xiaodong Song from Peking University published the paper. They observed changes in the length of the Earth's day and magnetic field, which they said implied changes in layers of the Earth.
Based on seismic observations from 1964 through the 1990s, the pair said in their paper that they believe that the inner core goes through "an approximately seven-decade oscillation." Basically, the inner core slows and then spins in the opposite direction every seventy years.
Song helped discover that the core spins in a study published in 1996. He discovered this by studying seismic waves created by earthquakes. The core itself was discovered in 1936.
The core is stopping! Are we all going to die?
Eventually, yes, but not because of this. According to the research, this slowing and reversing is a natural part of the core's cycle.
The core, according to the researchers, likely "paused" its spin in the last decade. It may now be turning back. The slowing was detected by looking at seismic data from the 1970s through now. The core slowed the most in 2009, according to the research.
The change could help explain the changes in sea level and the length of days every 70 or so years.
"Interestingly, the same multidecadal periodicity is also well observed in the Earth’s climate system, especially the global mean temperature and sea level rise," the team said in their paper.
Why does the Earth's core spin?
According to the research, differences between the mantle, outer and inner core cause the core to spin.
The inner core is about 70% of the moon's radius and is believed to be primarily made of iron. It is believed to be solid.
The outer core is liquid. It is made of iron and nickel and is very hot. The temperature of the core is believed to be 9,800 degrees Fahrenheit.
We know a little more about the Earth's mantle. It makes up 84% of the Earth's volume. It is primarily solid but acts sort of like caramel, according to NASA.
The paper states that as the outer core cools, it fuses with the inner core. During this transition, heat is released, generating the Earth's magnetic field. This, plus the gravity exhibited by the mantle, causes the inner core to spin.