There was word today that the earth day is 1.26 millionths of second shorter thanks to the earthquake in Chile, which has affected the earth’s mass and caused it to speed up to compensate.
Earthquakes alter planetary speed in two ways. Shifting plates rearrange the distribution of the Earth’s mass, causing it to bulge imperceptibly in spots it didn’t bulge before and contract in others. That rearrangement should further shift the Earth’s inclination, or figure axis (the axis around which the Earth’s mass is balanced, which is slightly different from the north-south axis around which the Earth rotates) — in the case of the Chile earthquake, by about 3 inches. The law of conservation of angular momentum, however, requires that even under these exigent circumstances, the Earth’s angular momentum stays constant, which means the planet must step on the gas (or the brake) to accommodate shifting mass. The same thing happened in 2004 with the 9.1 Sumatran earthquake that triggered the tsunami. That earthquake should have shifted the Earth’s figure axis by 2.76 inches and shortened its day by 6.8 millionths of a second, according to computer models.
Somewhere in that gibberish is a big story, right? No. Even driving your car home from work today has an effect on the earth’s rotation, according to NASA. Anything that shifts mass will. Scientists calculated the effect after a 2005 earthquake:
They also found the earthquake decreased the length of day by 2.68 microseconds. Physically this is like a spinning skater drawing arms closer to the body resulting in a faster spin. The quake also affected the Earth’s shape. They found Earth’s oblateness (flattening on the top and bulging at the equator) decreased by a small amount. It decreased about one part in 10 billion, continuing the trend of earthquakes making Earth less oblate.
Or, as The Current’s Mary Lucia said in our conversation today, “Duh!”
-
Audio not found
You can also subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or by going here.