Earth's core far hotter than thought

Harpo

Getting away with it
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The edge of the world. Yes, really.
New measurements suggest the Earth's inner core is far hotter than prior experiments suggested, putting it at 6,000C - as hot as the Sun's surface.

The solid iron core is actually crystalline, surrounded by liquid.

But the temperature at which that crystal can form had been a subject of long-running debate.

Experiments outlined in Science used X-rays to probe tiny samples of iron at extraordinary pressures to examine how the iron crystals form and melt.

Seismic waves captured after earthquakes around the globe can give a great deal of information as to the thickness and density of layers in the Earth, but they give no indication of temperature.

That has to be worked out either in computer models that simulate the Earth's insides, or in the laboratory.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22297915
 
isn't that approximately what they always believed given that there are periodic fluctuations within the magnetic poles,( the collywobble dance that they have followed over eons)?
I never really believed in the solid core theory.
 

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