Viscosity of the Inner Core
ORAL
Abstract
The Earth solid inner core (IC), composed mostly by iron, is a highly attenuating medium. This property of the core is at odds with the widely accepted paradigm of the hexagonal close-packed (hcp) phase stability under the inner core conditions, because sound waves propagate through the hcp iron without energy dissipation. We show by first-principles molecular dynamics that the body-centered cubic (bcc) phase of iron, recently demonstrated to be thermodynamically stable under the IC conditions, is considerably less elastic than the hcp phase. Being a crystalline phase, the bcc iron possesses the viscosity close to that of a liquid iron. The attenuation of the inner core is due to the unique diffusion characteristic of the bcc phase. The liquid-like nature of the bcc phase at extreme pressures and temperatures allow to resolve a number of controversies and explain enigmatic features of the Core.
*We thank VR (grants 2013-5767, 2014-4750, and 2017-03744), Scientific Research Foundation of Ningbo University (grant 421708130), Olle Engkvist Byggmästare Foundation, Swedish Government Strategic Research Area in Materials Science at LIU (grant SFO-MatLiU No. 2009 00971), and Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (CGL2013-41860-P and CGL2017-86070-R) for financial support.
–
Presenters
-
Anatoly Belonoshko
- Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden