Earth Getting Wider Around the Equator, the Reason Still an Enigma (Photo)
Like a pumpkin, Earth is a bit wider around the equator than the
meridian. Since the end of the last glaciations, postglacial rebound of Earth's
crust has resulted in a net transfer of mass from the equatorial regions to high
latitudes. This small mass transfer has been monitored for 25 years. This slight
oblateness (by about 0.3%) results from axial rotation and large-scale mantle
convection. But newest science findings suggest that since 1998, the mass
transfer has changed direction. According to BBC August 1 report, the research conducted since 1982 showed
that the oblateness was decreasing linearly, however since 1998, contrary to
expectation, the oblateness started to increase.
The earlier decreasing trend in oblateness meant that Earth was becoming less
oblate. This observation can be largely explained by postglacial rebound--the
viscous relaxation of Earth's mantle that began when polar ice caps started to
melt at the end of the last glaciations 18,000 years ago.
Satellite laser ranging data from numerous satellites from 1979 to 2001 show
that for most of the past two decades, oblateness has been steadily decreasing.
But in early 1998 it suddenly started to increase substantially indicating a
large-scale mass redistribution from high latitudes to the equatorial regions.
Scientists discuss several mechanisms that might explain these observations:
melting of the polar ice caps, melting of the Alpine glaciers, or melting of
Arctic sea ice. According to current knowledge, however, none of these can
explain the observations.
A sudden change in material flow at the top of the fluid outer core, as
evidenced by geomagnetic "jerks" (changes in the trend of the secular
variation of the geomagnetic field), could produce a non-negligible change in
oblateness, a jerk around 1999 suspected from geomagnetic observations was
recently confirmed from updated data. Thus, one cannot rule out that
redistribution of mass inside the core before the observed jerk may have
contributed to the observed change in oblateness.
References:
Detection of a Large-Scale Mass Redistribution in the Terrestrial System
Since 1998á
Christopher M. Cox and Benjamin F. Chao Science 2002 297: 831-833.
Redistributing Earth's Mass
Anny Cazenave and R. Steven Nerem Science 2002 297: 783-784. (in Perspectives)

Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2002/8/4/34307.html
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