The deadly
Asian earthquake may have permanently accelerated the Earth's
rotation -- shortening days by a fraction of a second -- and caused
the planet to wobble on its axis, US scientists say.
Richard Gross, a geophysicist with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in California, theorized that a shift of mass toward the Earth's
center during the quake on Sunday caused the planet to spin 3
microseconds, or one millionth of a second, faster and to tilt
about 2.5 cm on its axis.
When one huge tectonic plate beneath the Indian Ocean was forced
below the edge of another "it had the effect of making the Earth
more compact and spinning faster," Gross said.
Gross said changes predicted by his model probably are too
minuscule to be detected by a global positioning satellite network
that routinely measures changes in Earth's spin, but said the data
may reveal a slight wobble.
The Earth's poles travel a circular path that normally varies by
about 10 metres, so an added wobble of an 2.5 cm is unlikely to
cause long-term effects, he said.
"That continual motion is just used to changing," Gross said. "The
rotation is not actually that precise. The Earth does slow down and
change its rate of rotation."
When those tiny variations accumulate, planetary scientists must
add a "leap second" to the end of a year, something that has not
been done in many years, Gross said.
Scientists have long theorized that changes on the Earth's surface
such as tide and groundwater shifts and weather could affect its
spin but they have not had precise measurements to prove it,
Caltech seismologist Hiroo Kanamori said.
"Even for a very large event, the effect is very small," Kanamori
said. "It's very difficult to change the rotation rate
substantially."
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