The Huffington Post | By Jacqueline Howard
Cutaway - Internal structure of Earth Image Via Getty Images - Photo Researchers Inc |
Just how long would it take to fall through the center of
the Earth, traveling from one side of our planet to the other?
Physicists have long calculated the answer to that question
as being 42 minutes, but now, new calculations show that the theoretical trip
would actually take around 38 minutes -- and we can blame gravity for the
discrepancy.
The traditional calculation to measure a fall through Earth
assumes that our planet has a constant density throughout its many layers.
Since the gravitational attraction between two objects is proportional to their
masses (or density) and inversely proportional to the square of the distance
between them, if Earth's density were constant, the only change in gravity we'd
experience would be due to how far we were from Earth's center.
But as Alexander Klotz, a graduate student at McGill
University in Canada, came up with the new calculations, he took into
consideration how Earth's density changes layer by layer. And as a result, the
gravitational speed at which we would fall through each layer changed too.
Klotz measured the different densities found in Earth's
interior using seismic data. Indeed, our planet has a less dense crust and
mantle and a more dense core, Science magazine reported.
A paper describing the new thought experiment results was
published in the March 2015 issue of the American Journal of Physics.
"This is the kind of paper we love," Dr. David
Jackson, editor of the journal and a physicist at Dickinson College in
Carlisle, Pennsylvania, told Science magazine. "This is a nice addition to
the classic problem."
Want to learn more about our planet's internal layers? Take
a journey to the center of the Earth in the "Talk Nerdy To Me" video
below.
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