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The study of the Earth's surface and interior is the domain of geology.
We know little directly about the interior
of the Earth. Most of our information in that regard has come from seismic
waves, which are vibrations in the body of the Earth.
Seismic WavesThere
are two general categories of seismic
waves.
- P-waves, which are longitudinal pressure waves
and can propagate in both solids and liquids.
- S-waves, which are transverse waves that can
propagate in solids but not in liquids
Here is an illustration
of the difference between P-waves and S-waves. These seismic waves, which
are generated naturally by earthquakes,
by volcanoes,
and by impacts,
and may be produced artificially by explosions and mechanical devices, tell
us about the interior in several general ways. The figure on the right illustrates
for a planet with varying interior density and a liquid core.
First, seismic waves have their direction
of motion changed (refracted) by variations in the interior density.
Thus, by studying the way such waves propagate in the Earth we can learn
something about density variations. Second, the fact that P-waves propagate
in liquids but S-waves do not allows us to determine if portions of the
interior are liquid.
Structure of the InteriorAccumulated
and detailed seismic studies, coupled with theoretical speculation,
suggests the interior structure shown schematically on the left (the
figure is not to scale). The Earth is believed to have a solid inner core,
made mostly of iron and nickel. This is surrounded by a liquid outer core,
also mostly iron and nickel. The diameter of the core is estimated to be
7000 km, compared with a 12,700 km diameter for the entire planet. The crust
is only a few tens of kilometers thick. The region between the core and
the crust is called the
mantle. The upper part of the mantle and the crust together are called
the lithosphere. Sitting just below the lithosphere is a region
of plastic consistency called the aesthenosphere. We shall have
more to say about the lithosphere and aesthenosphere shortly. |