The Earth’s core has been once again confirmed to be rotating slower than the upper layers of the planet, according to a new study that has independently come to the same conclusion as researchers with China’s SinoProbe Lab at Peking University arrived at last year. While the core’s rotation is only lagging behind by a fraction of a second each day, this development could have an effect on the length of the day for us surface-dwellers, as well as the generation of the planet’s magnetic field.

“When I first saw the seismograms that hinted at this change, I was stumped,” remarked John Vidale, an Earth scientist from the University of Southern California (USC). “But when we found two dozen more observations signaling the same pattern, the result was inescapable.

“The inner core had slowed down for the first time in many decades,” Vidale continued. “Other scientists have recently argued for similar and different models, but our latest study provides the most convincing resolution.”

For their study, Vidale’s team analyzed seismic data collected from 121 earthquakes recorded between 1991 and 2023 in the vicinity of the South Sandwich Islands in the South Atlantic, along with the seismic waves generated by Soviet-era nuclear tests; the lensing of these shockwaves through the various layers of the Earth revealed the motion of the individual layers, including the rotation of the core.
 
This minute slowing produces the illusion that, at least from the point of view of someone on the Earth’s surface, that the core’s spin has reversed direction entirely, although it is still rotating counter-clockwise from north as it always has. At some point in the near future the core’s rotation will speed up again, matching the mantle’s rotation before outpacing the surface once again.

The current slowing of the core’s rotation appears to have started sometime around 2010, following a period of “super-rotation” between 2003 and 2008 where the core was outpacing the upper layers. These changes in relative rotation of the solid inner core appear to be caused by the turbulent nature of the fluid outer core, wherein massive eddies act like gigantic dynamos that generate the planet’s magnetic field.

Although it is unknown as to whether or not changes in the core’s rotation will affect the magnetosphere, it could cause the upper layers to slow their rotation, although at such a slow rate that we’d never notice.

“It’s very hard to notice, on the order of a thousandth of a second, almost lost in the noise of the churning oceans and atmosphere,” Vidale explained.

Dreamland Video podcast
To watch the FREE video version on YouTube, click here.

Subscribers, to watch the subscriber version of the video, first log in then click on Dreamland Subscriber-Only Video Podcast link.

Leave a Reply