logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Up-to-fivefold reverberating waves through the Earth's center and distinctly anisotropic innermost inner core

Earth Sciences

Up-to-fivefold reverberating waves through the Earth's center and distinctly anisotropic innermost inner core

T. Phạm and H. Tkalčić

Discover groundbreaking insights into Earth's inner core from the innovative research conducted by Thanh-Son Phạm and Hrvoje Tkalčić. Their findings reveal unique characteristics of reverberating waves resulting from significant earthquakes, potentially transforming our understanding of Earth's structure.... show more
Abstract
Probing the Earth's center is critical for understanding planetary formation and evolution, but seismological inferences have been limited by a lack of probes sensitive to the Earth's center. By stacking waveforms recorded by a growing number of global seismic stations, we observe up-to-fivefold reverberating waves from selected earthquakes along the Earth's diameter. Differential travel times of these previously unreported arrival pairs complement and improve existing constraints. The inferred transversely isotropic inner-core model includes an ~650-km-thick innermost ball with P-wave speeds ~4% slower at ~50° from the Earth's rotation axis. In contrast, the inner core's outer shell exhibits much weaker anisotropy with the slowest direction in the equatorial plane. These findings strengthen evidence for a distinctly anisotropic innermost inner core (IMIC) and a transition to a weakly anisotropic outer shell, potentially recording a significant global event in Earth's past.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 21, 2023
Authors
Thanh-Son Phạm, Hrvoje Tkalčić
Tags
Earth's inner core
reverberating waves
seismic stations
P-wave speeds
anisotropy
global event
earthquakes
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny