Showing posts with label Geophysics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geophysics. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

NASA InSIGHT Mission: Mars Interior

Artist rendition of the formation of rocky bodies in the solar system - how they form and differentiate and evolve into terrestrial planets.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

This picture is included in a short Nasa video about the InSIGHT mission.  

Watch the full video here.

DLR Mars InSight: HP3-Experiment uses German Drill technology - YouTube

After the successful landing of the Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity by NASA has approved a further landing mission on Mars.

The InSight mission will be ready in 2016 and will arrive after a six-month flight to Mars. With InSight there should be a number of geophysical experiments to take a look at the interior of the Red Planet, including the German Aerospace Center (DLR) developed experiment HP3, which will penetrate several meters into the Martian soil.

This experiment make heat flow measurements make and investigate the thermo-mechanical properties of the Martian soil. InSight is a mnemonic for 'Interior Exploration using Seismic investigations, geodesy and heat transport'.

The mission name shows that this mission is primarily focussed on geophysical experiments which are conducted on and under the surface of Mars, for example, by measuring the velocity of seismic waves or the flow of heat.

The aim of the mission is to understand the structure and condition of the core and cladding, and the thermal evolution of Mars.

The InSight HP3 experiment was developed at DLR. HP3 "Heat Flow and Physical Property Package".

For more information: s.dlr.de/vmu5

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Earth's Magnetic Field Is Wonky

The solution to a long-standing puzzle, why magnetic north sits off the coast of Canada, rather than at the North Pole, may have been found in the strange, lopsided nature of Earth's inner core.

The inner core is a ball of solid iron about 760 miles (1,220 kilometers) wide.

It is surrounded by a liquid outer core (mostly iron and nickel), a rocky, viscous mantle layer and a thin, solid crust.

As the inner core cools, crystallizing iron releases impurities, sending lighter molten material into the liquid outer core.

This upwelling, combined with the Earth's rotation, drives convection, forcing the molten metal into whirling vortices.

These vortices stretch and twist magnetic field lines, creating Earth’s magnetic field. Currently, the center of the field, called an axis, emerges in the Arctic Ocean west of Ellesmere Island, about 300 miles (500 kilometers) from the geographic North Pole.

In the last decade, seismic waves from earthquakes revealed the inner core looks like a navel orange, bulging slightly more on its western half.

Geoscientists recently explainedthe asymmetry by proposing a convective loop: The inner core might be crystallizing on one half and melting on the other.

Peter Olson and Renaud Deguen, geophysicists at Johns Hopkins University, set out to test this theory, called translational instability.

They ran numerical models simulating the forces that generate Earth’s magnetic field, and included a lopsided inner core.

Olson and Deguen found that adding inner-core asymmetry shifted magnetic north away from the center of the Earth, into the cooling hemisphere. Convection was stronger there, as was the magnetic field.

"The lopsided growth of the inner core makes convection in the outer core a little bit lopsided, and that then induces the geomagnetic field to have this lopsided or eccentric character too," Olson stated.

Olson and Deguen's research was detailed online July 1 in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Geophysicist Bruce Buffett said Olson and Deguen’s research is intriguing, but there are still questions about the underlying theory. "It's an interesting result, but we don't know for sure the inner core is translating.

The model does a good job at explaining some but not all of the features of the inner core," said Buffett, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved with the research.

Olson points out that his numerical model offers a real-world proof of the theory. Magnetic particles trapped and aligned in rocks reveal that the magnetic north pole wandered around the Western Hemisphere over the past 10,000 years, and circled the Eastern Hemisphere before that — a result mirrored by the numerical test.

Gathering a longer, more detailed record of the magnetic field's behavior, Olson said, could reveal whether the inner core acts as researchers predict.

"The key question for interesting ideas like translational instability is, 'Can we test it?'" Olson said. "What we're doing is proposing a test, and we think it's a good test because people can go out and look for eccentricity in the rock record and that will either confirm or shoot down this idea."