Earth's internal heat budget: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Accounting of heat created within the Earth}} |
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[[File:Earth heat flow.jpg|thumb|right|border|400px|Global map of the flow of heat, in mWm<sup>-2</sup>, from Earth's interior to the surface.<ref name=Davies />]] |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}} |
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The '''flow of heat from Earth's interior to the surface''' is estimated at 47 [[terawatt]]s<ref name=Davies>Davies, J. H., & Davies, D. R. (2010). Earth's surface heat flux. Solid Earth, 1(1), 5-24.</ref> and comes from two main sources, the ''radiogenic heat'' produced by the radioactive decay of isotopes in the mantle and crust and the ''primordial heat'' left over from the [[Earth#Formation|formation of the Earth]].<ref name=Turcotte /> |
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[[File:Earth heat flow.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|Global map of the flux of heat, in mW/m<sup>2</sup>, from Earth's interior to the surface.<ref name="Davies2010" /> The largest values of heat flux coincide with [[mid-ocean ridge]]s, and the smallest values of heat flux occur in stable continental interiors.]] |
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Earth's internal heat powers most geological processes<ref>Buffett, B. A. (2007). Taking earth's temperature. Science, 315(5820), 1801–1802.</ref> and drives [[Plate Tectonics|plate tectonics]].<ref name=Turcotte /> Despite its geological significance, this heat energy coming from Earth's interior is actually only 0.03% of [[Earth's energy budget|Earth's total energy budget]] at the surface, which is dominated by 173,000 TW of incoming [[solar radiation]].<ref>Archer, D. (2007). Global warming. Understanding the forecast.</ref> |
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'''Earth's internal heat budget''' is fundamental to the [[thermal history of the Earth]]. The flow of heat from Earth's interior to the surface is estimated at 47±2 [[terawatt]]s (TW)<ref name="Davies2010">{{cite journal |last1=Davies |first1=J.H. |last2=Davies |first2=D.R. |date=22 February 2010 |title=Earth's surface heat flux |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=5–24 |journal=Solid Earth |doi=10.5194/se-1-5-2010 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2010SolE....1....5D }}</ref> and comes from two main sources in roughly equal amounts: the ''radiogenic heat'' produced by the [[radioactive decay]] of isotopes in the mantle and crust, and the ''primordial heat'' left over from the [[Earth#Formation|formation of Earth]].<ref name=Turcotte /> |
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==Global internal heat flow== |
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[[File:Heat flow of the inner earth.jpg|thumb|border|400px|Cross section of the Earth showing its main divisions and their approximate contributions to Earth's total internal heat flow to the surface, and the dominant heat transport mechanisms within the Earth.]] |
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Earth's internal heat travels along [[geothermal gradient]]s and powers most geological processes.<ref>Buffett, B. A. (2007). Taking Earth's temperature. Science, 315(5820), 1801–1802.</ref> It drives [[mantle convection]], [[plate tectonics]], [[orogeny|mountain building]], [[metamorphism|rock metamorphism]], and [[volcanism]].<ref name=Turcotte /> [[Convective heat transfer]] within the planet's [[Earth's core|high-temperature metallic core]] is also theorized to sustain a [[geodynamo]] which generates [[Earth's magnetic field]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://news.mit.edu/2010/explained-dynamo-0325 |title=Explained: Dynamo Theory |publisher=MIT News |author=Morgan Bettex |date=25 March 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kageyama |first1=Akira |last2=Sato |first2=Tetsuya |author3=the Complexity Simulation Group |title=Computer simulation of a magnetohydrodynamic dynamo. II |journal=Physics of Plasmas |date=1 January 1995 |volume=2 |issue=5 |pages=1421–1431 |doi=10.1063/1.871485 |bibcode=1995PhPl....2.1421K }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Glatzmaier |first1=Gary A. |last2=Roberts |first2=Paul H. |title=A three-dimensional convective dynamo solution with rotating and finitely conducting inner core and mantle |journal=Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors |year=1995 |volume=91 |issue=1–3 |pages=63–75 |doi=10.1016/0031-9201(95)03049-3 |bibcode=1995PEPI...91...63G}}</ref> |
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Estimates of the total heat flow from Earth’s interior to surface span a range of 43 to 49 TW (TW = terawatt = 10<sup>12</sup> [[watt]]).<ref name=Dye>Dye, S. T. (2012). Geoneutrinos and the radioactive power of the Earth. Reviews of Geophysics, 50(3).</ref> The closest estimate is 47 TW,<ref name=Davies /> an average crust heat flow of 91.6 mW/m<sup>2</sup>, and is based on more than 38,000 measurements. The respective mean heat flows of continental and oceanic crust are 70.9 and 105.4 mW/m<sup>2</sup>.<ref name=Davies /><br /> Based on this mean continental crust heat flow value, the ground beneath our feet is releasing Earth's internal heat at a rate equivalent to 1,836 100-Watt lightbulbs per square mile. |
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Despite its geological significance, Earth's interior heat contributes only 0.03% of [[Earth's energy budget|Earth's total energy budget]] at the surface, which is dominated by 173,000 TW of incoming [[solar radiation]].<ref>{{cite book|isbn=978-0-470-94341-0|author=Archer, D.|year=2012|title=Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast}}</ref> This external energy source powers most of the planet's atmospheric, oceanic, and biologic processes. Nevertheless on [[land]] and at the [[ocean floor]], the [[sensible heat]] absorbed from non-reflected [[insolation]] flows inward only by means of [[thermal conduction]], and thus penetrates only a few dozen centimeters on the daily cycle and only a few dozen meters on the annual cycle. This renders solar radiation minimally relevant for processes internal to [[Earth's crust]].<ref>Lowrie, W. (2007). ''Fundamentals of geophysics''. Cambridge: CUP, 2nd ed.</ref> |
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While the total internal Earth heat flow to the surface is well constrained, the relative contribution of the two main sources of Earth's heat, radiogenic and primordial heat, are highly uncertain because their direct measurement is difficult. Chemical and physical models give estimated ranges of 15–41 TW and 12–30 TW for [[radiogenic heat]] and [[primordial heat]], respectively,<ref name=Dye /> and recent results indicate their contributions may be roughly equal.<ref name=Gando /> |
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The [[structure of the Earth]] is a rigid outer [[Crust (geology)|crust]] that is composed of thicker [[continental crust]] and thinner [[oceanic crust]], solid but plastically flowing [[Mantle (geology)|mantle]], a liquid [[outer core]], and a solid [[inner core]]. The [[viscosity]] of a material is inversely proportional to temperature; thus, the solid mantle can still flow on long time scales, as a function of its temperature<ref name=Turcotte /> and therefore as a function of the flow of Earth's internal heat. The [[Mantle convection|mantle convects]] in response to heat escaping from Earth's interior, with hotter and more buoyant mantle rising and cooler, and therefore denser, mantle sinking. This convective flow of the mantle drives the movement of Earth's [[Lithosphere|lithospheric plates]]; thus, an additional reservoir of heat in the lower mantle is critical for the operation of plate tectonics and one possible source is an enrichment of radioactive elements in the lower mantle.<ref name=Arevalo>Arevalo Jr, R., McDonough, W. F., & Luong, M. (2009). The K/U ratio of the silicate Earth: Insights into mantle composition, structure and thermal evolution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 278(3), 361–369.</ref> |
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Global data on heat-flow density are collected and compiled by the International Heat Flow Commission of the [[International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth's Interior]].<ref>[http://www.ihfc-iugg.org www.ihfc-iugg.org] IHFC: International Heat Flow Commission – Homepage. Retrieved 18/09/2019.</ref> |
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Earth heat transport occurs by [[Conduction (heat)|conduction]], [[mantle convection]], [[Hydrothermal circulation|hydrothermal convection]], and volcanic [[advection]].<ref name=Jaupart>Jaupart, C., & Mareschal, J. C. (2007). Heat flow and thermal structure of the lithosphere. Treatise on Geophysics, 6, 217–251.</ref> Earth's internal heat flow to the surface is thought to be 80% due to [[mantle convection]], with the remaining heat mostly originating in the Earth's crust,<ref>Korenaga, J. (2003). Energetics of mantle convection and the fate of fossil heat. Geophysical Research Letters, 30(8), 1437.</ref> with about 1% due to volcanic activity, earthquakes, and mountain building.<ref name=Turcotte>Turcotte, D. L., & Schubert, G. (2002). Geodynamics. Cambridge University Press.</ref> Thus, ~99% of Earth's internal heat loss at the surface is by conduction through the crust, and [[mantle convection]] is the dominant control on heat transport from deep within the Earth. Most of the heat flow from the thicker continental crust is attributed to internal radiogenic sources, in contrast the thinner oceanic crust has only 2% internal radiogenic heat.<ref name=Turcotte /> The remaining heat flow at the surface would be due to basal heating of the crust from mantle convection. Heat fluxes are negatively correlated with rock age,<ref name=Davies /> with the highest heat fluxes from the youngest rock at [[mid-ocean ridge]] spreading centers (zones of mantle upwelling), as observed in the [[:File:Earth heat flow.jpg|global map of Earth heat flow]]. |
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== Heat and early estimate of Earth's age == |
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==Radiogenic heat== |
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Based on calculations of Earth's cooling rate, which assumed constant conductivity in the Earth's interior, in 1862 [[William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin|William Thomson]], later [[Lord Kelvin]], estimated the age of the Earth at 98 million years,<ref>Thomson, William. (1864). [http://courses.seas.harvard.edu/climate/eli/Courses/EPS281r/Sources/Earth-age-and-thermal-history/more/Kelvin-1863-excerpts.pdf On the secular cooling of the earth], read 28 April 1862. ''Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh'', 23, 157–170.</ref> which contrasts with the age of 4.5 billion years obtained in the 20th century by [[radiometric dating]].<ref name="Taylor, S. R. 2007">{{cite book|editor1=Martin J. van Kranendonk|editor2=Vickie Bennett|editor3=Hugh R.H. Smithies|author-first=Stuart|author-last=Ross Taylor|title=Earth's Oldest Rocks (Developments in Precambrian Geology Vol 15, 2007)|chapter=Chapter 2: The Formation Of The Earth And Moon|pages=21–30|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lIRpMW6gLm4C&q=%22chapter%202.1%22&pg=PA21|date=26 October 2007|publisher=Elsevier|isbn=978-0-08-055247-7}}</ref> As pointed out by John Perry in 1895<ref>{{cite journal|last1=England|first1=Philip|last2=Molnar|first2=Peter|last3=Richter|first3=Frank|title=John Perry's neglected critique of Kelvin's age for the Earth: A missed opportunity in geodynamics|journal=GSA Today|date=2007|volume=17|issue=1|pages=4–9|doi=10.1130/GSAT01701A.1|doi-access=free|bibcode=2007GSAT...17R...4E }}</ref> a variable conductivity in the Earth's interior could expand the computed age of the Earth to billions of years, as later confirmed by radiometric dating. Contrary to the usual representation of Thomson's argument, the observed thermal gradient of the Earth's crust would not be explained by the addition of radioactivity as a heat source. More significantly, [[mantle convection]] alters how heat is transported within the Earth, invalidating Thomson's assumption of purely conductive cooling. |
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[[File:Evolution of Earth's radiogenic heat.jpg|thumb|border|400px|The evolution of Earth's radiogenic heat flow over time.]]The [[radioactive decay]] of elements in the Earth's mantle and crust results in production of daughter [[isotope]]s and release of particles and heat energy, or radiogenic heat. Four radioactive isotopes are responsible for the majority of radiogenic heat, [[uranium 238|uranium-238]] (<sup>238</sup>U), [[uranium 235|uranium-235]] (<sup>235</sup>U), [[isotopes of thorium|thorium-232]] (<sup>232</sup>Th), and [[potassium-40]] (<sup>40</sup>K).<ref name="Korenaga 2011">Korenaga, J. (2011). Earth's heat budget: Clairvoyant geoneutrinos. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 581–582.</ref> Due to a lack of rock samples from below 200 km depth it is not possible to do a simple radiogenic heat estimate off of known radioactive isotope concentrations in rock throughout the whole mantle.<ref name="Korenaga 2011" /> For the Earth's core, [[geochemical]] studies indicate that it would not be a significant source of radiogenic heat due to an expected low concentration of radioactive elements.<ref name=Turcotte /> Radiogenic heat production in the mantle is linked to the structure of [[mantle convection]], a topic of much debate, and it is thought that the mantle may either have a layered structure with a higher concentration of radioactive heat-producing elements in the lower mantle, or small reservoirs enriched in radioactive elements dispersed throughout the whole mantle.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> |
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== Global internal heat flow == |
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[[Geoneutrino]] detectors can detect the decay of <sup>238</sup>U and <sup>232</sup>Th, and thus allow estimation of their contribution to the present radiogenic heat budget, while <sup>235</sup>U is unobserved and <sup>40</sup>K is presently not able to be detected but is known to contribute 4 TW of heating.<ref name=Gando>Gando, A., Dwyer, D. A., McKeown, R. D., & Zhang, C. (2011). Partial radiogenic heat model for Earth revealed by geoneutrino measurements. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 647–651.</ref> However, the decay of <sup>235</sup>U and <sup>40</sup>K contributed a large fraction of radiogenic heat flux to the early Earth, which was also much hotter than at present.<ref name=Arevalo /> Initial results from measuring the geoneutrino products of [[radioactive decay]] from within the Earth, a [[proxy (statistics)|proxy]] for radiogenic heat, yielded a new estimate of half of the total Earth internal heat source being radiogenic,<ref name=Gando /> and this is consistent with previous estimates.<ref name="Korenaga 2008">Korenaga, J. (2008). Urey ratio and the structure and evolution of Earth's mantle. Reviews of Geophysics, 46(2).</ref> |
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[[File:Heat flow of the inner earth.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|Cross section of the Earth showing its main divisions and their approximate contributions to Earth's total internal heat flow to the surface, and the dominant heat transport mechanisms within Earth]] |
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Estimates of the total heat flow from Earth's interior to surface span a range of 43 to 49 terawatts (TW) (a terawatt is 10<sup>12</sup> [[watt]]s).<ref name=Dye>Dye, S. T. (2012). Geoneutrinos and the radioactive power of the Earth. Reviews of Geophysics, 50(3). [[doi:10.1029/2012RG000400]]</ref> One recent estimate is 47 TW,<ref name="Davies2010" /> equivalent to an average heat flux of 91.6 mW/m<sup>2</sup>, and is based on more than 38,000 measurements. The respective mean heat flows of continental and oceanic crust are 70.9 and 105.4 mW/m<sup>2</sup>.<ref name="Davies2010" /> |
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==Primordial heat== |
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Primordial heat is the heat lost by the Earth as it continues to cool from its original formation, and this is in contrast to its still actively-produced radiogenic heat. The Earth core's heat flow—heat leaving the core and flowing into the overlying mantle—is thought to be due to primordial heat, and is estimated at 5–15 TW.<ref name=Lay>Lay, T., Hernlund, J., & Buffett, B. A. (2008). Core–mantle boundary heat flow. Nature Geoscience, 1(1), 25-32.</ref> Estimates of mantle primordial heat loss range 7–15 TW.<ref name= Dye /><br /> |
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The early formation of the Earth's dense core could have caused superheating and rapid heat loss, and the heat loss rate would slow once the mantle solidified.<ref name=Lay /> Heat flow from the core is necessary for maintaining the convecting outer core and the geodynamo and [[Earth's magnetic field]], therefore primordial heat from the core enabled Earth's atmosphere and thus helped retain Earth's liquid water.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> |
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While the total internal Earth heat flow to the surface is well constrained, the relative contribution of the two main sources of Earth's heat, radiogenic and primordial heat, are highly uncertain because their direct measurement is difficult. Chemical and physical models give estimated ranges of 15–41 TW and 12–30 TW for [[radiogenic heat]] and [[primordial heat]], respectively.<ref name=Dye /> |
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==Heat flow and plate tectonics== |
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[[File:Tectonic evolution of Earth.jpg|thumb|border|400px|Earth's tectonic evolution over time from a molten state at 4.5 Ga,<ref>Taylor, S. R. (2007). .1 The Formation of the Earth and Moon. Developments in Precambrian Geology, 15, 21–30.</ref> to a single-plate lithosphere,<ref name=Moore /> to modern plate tectonics sometime between 3.2 Ga<ref>Pease, V., Percival, J., Smithies, H., Stevens, G., & Van Kranendonk, M. (2008). When did plate tectonics begin? Evidence from the orogenic record. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 199–208.</ref> and 1.0 Ga.<ref>Stern, R. J. (2008). Modern-style plate tectonics began in Neoproterozoic time: An alternative interpretation of Earth’s tectonic history. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 265–280.</ref>]] |
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The [[structure of Earth]] is a rigid outer [[crust (geology)|crust]] that is composed of thicker [[continental crust]] and thinner [[oceanic crust]], solid but plastically flowing [[mantle (geology)|mantle]], a liquid [[outer core]], and a solid [[inner core]]. The [[viscosity|fluidity]] of a material is proportional to temperature; thus, the solid mantle can still flow on long time scales, as a function of its temperature<ref name=Turcotte /> and therefore as a function of the flow of Earth's internal heat. The [[Mantle convection|mantle convects]] in response to heat escaping from Earth's interior, with hotter and more buoyant mantle rising and cooler, and therefore denser, mantle sinking. This convective flow of the mantle drives the movement of Earth's [[Lithosphere|lithospheric plates]]; thus, an additional reservoir of heat in the lower mantle is critical for the operation of plate tectonics and one possible source is an enrichment of radioactive elements in the lower mantle.<ref name=Arevalo>Arevalo Jr, R., McDonough, W. F., & Luong, M. (2009). The [[K-U ratio|K/U ratio]] of the silicate Earth: Insights into mantle composition, structure and thermal evolution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 278(3), 361–369.</ref> |
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Controversy over the exact nature of mantle convection makes the linked evolution of Earth's heat budget and the dynamics and structure of the mantle difficult to unravel.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> There is evidence that plate tectonics was not active in the Earth before 3.2 billion years ago, and that early Earth's internal heat loss could have been dominated by [[advection]] via heat-pipe volcanism.<ref name=Moore>Moore, W. B., & Webb, A. A. G. (2013). Heat-pipe Earth. Nature, 501(7468), 501–505.</ref> Terrestrial bodies with lower heat flows such as the [[Moon]] and [[Mars]] [[Thermal conduction|conduct]] their internal heat through a single lithospheric plate, and higher heat flows such as on Jupiter's moon [[Io (moon)|Io]] result in [[advection|advective]] heat transport via enhanced volcanism, while the active [[plate tectonics]] of Earth occur with an intermediate heat flow and a [[Mantle convection|convecting mantle]].<ref name=Moore /> |
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Earth heat transport occurs by [[conduction (heat)|conduction]], [[mantle convection]], [[hydrothermal circulation|hydrothermal convection]], and volcanic [[advection]].<ref name=Jaupart>Jaupart, C., & Mareschal, J. C. (2007). Heat flow and thermal structure of the lithosphere. Treatise on Geophysics, 6, 217–251.</ref> Earth's internal heat flow to the surface is thought to be 80% due to mantle convection, with the remaining heat mostly originating in the Earth's crust,<ref>Korenaga, J. (2003). Energetics of mantle convection and the fate of fossil heat. Geophysical Research Letters, 30(8), 1437.</ref> with about 1% due to volcanic activity, earthquakes, and mountain building.<ref name=Turcotte>{{cite book|author1=Donald L. Turcotte|author2=Gerald Schubert|title=Geodynamics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-nCHlVuJ4FoC&q=primordial&pg=PA286|date=25 March 2002|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-66624-4}}</ref> Thus, about 99% of Earth's internal heat loss at the surface is by conduction through the crust, and mantle convection is the dominant control on heat transport from deep within the Earth. Most of the heat flow from the thicker continental crust is attributed to internal radiogenic sources; in contrast the thinner oceanic crust has only 2% internal radiogenic heat.<ref name=Turcotte /> The remaining heat flow at the surface would be due to basal heating of the crust from mantle convection. Heat fluxes are negatively correlated with rock age,<ref name="Davies2010" /> with the highest heat fluxes from the youngest rock at [[mid-ocean ridge]] spreading centers (zones of mantle upwelling), as observed in the [[:File:Earth heat flow.jpg|global map of Earth heat flow]].<ref name="Davies2010" /> |
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==Historical== |
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Based on calculations of Earth's cooling rate, in 1862 [[Lord Kelvin]] (William Thomson) estimated the age of the Earth at 98 million years.<ref>Kelvin, W. T. (1863). On the secular cooling of the earth. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 23, 157–170.</ref> A critical, and as yet undiscovered, source of internal heat that would have sustained an older and hotter Earth was not accounted for in Lord Kelvin's calculations, and this was [[Radioactive decay|radioactivity]]. However, it is recognized that Kelvin's correlation of temperature and age does hold up for surface ages over large areas of the Earth crust.<ref name=Jaupart /> |
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== |
== Sources of heat == |
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{{Commons category}} |
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=== Radiogenic heat === |
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*[[Geothermal gradient]] |
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[[File:Evolution of Earth's radiogenic heat-with total.svg|thumb|upright=1.4|The evolution of Earth's [[radiogenic heat]] flow over time]] |
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*[[Geothermal energy]] |
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*[[Plate tectonics]] |
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The [[radioactive decay]] of elements in the Earth's mantle and crust results in production of daughter [[isotope]]s and release of [[geoneutrino]]s and heat energy, or [[radiogenic heat]]. About 50% of the Earth's internal heat originates from radioactive decay.<ref>{{Cite web|title=How much of the heat dissipated into space by Earth is due to radioactive decay of its elements? About half is due to this "radiogenic heat"|url=http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2014/ph241/estrada1/|url-status=live|publisher=[[Stanford University]] |year=2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170625114931/http://large.stanford.edu:80/courses/2014/ph241/estrada1/ |archive-date=2017-06-25 }}</ref> Four radioactive isotopes are responsible for the majority of radiogenic heat because of their enrichment relative to other radioactive isotopes: [[uranium 238|uranium-238]] (<sup>238</sup>U), [[uranium 235|uranium-235]] (<sup>235</sup>U), [[thorium-232]] (<sup>232</sup>Th), and [[potassium-40]] (<sup>40</sup>K).<ref name="Korenaga 2011">Korenaga, J. (2011). Earth's heat budget: Clairvoyant geoneutrinos. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 581–582.</ref> Due to a lack of rock samples from below 200 km depth, it is difficult to determine precisely the radiogenic heat throughout the whole mantle,<ref name="Korenaga 2011" /> although some estimates are available.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2013-01-01|title=Geophysical and geochemical constraints on geoneutrino fluxes from Earth's mantle|journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters|language=en|volume=361|pages=356–366|doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2012.11.001|issn=0012-821X|arxiv=1207.0853|bibcode=2013E&PSL.361..356S|last1=Šrámek|first1=Ondřej|last2=McDonough|first2=William F.|last3=Kite|first3=Edwin S.|last4=Lekić|first4=Vedran|last5=Dye|first5=Stephen T.|last6=Zhong|first6=Shijie|s2cid=15284566}}</ref> |
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*[[Earth's energy budget]] |
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*[[Radioactive decay]] |
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For the Earth's core, [[geochemical]] studies indicate that it is unlikely to be a significant source of radiogenic heat due to an expected low concentration of radioactive elements partitioning into iron.<ref>{{Citation|last=McDonough|first=W.F.|chapter=Compositional Model for the Earth's Core|date=2003|pages=547–568|publisher=Elsevier|doi=10.1016/b0-08-043751-6/02015-6|isbn=9780080437514|bibcode=2003TrGeo...2..547M|title=Treatise on Geochemistry|volume=2 }}</ref> Radiogenic heat production in the mantle is linked to the structure of [[mantle convection]], a topic of much debate, and it is thought that the mantle may either have a layered structure with a higher concentration of radioactive heat-producing elements in the lower mantle, or small reservoirs enriched in radioactive elements dispersed throughout the whole mantle.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> |
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*[[Mantle convection]] |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
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|+ An estimate of the present-day major heat-producing isotopes<ref name=Turcotte /> |
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|- |
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! Isotope |
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! Heat release<br /><span style="font-size: smaller;">{{sfrac|W|kg isotope}}</span> |
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! Half-life<br /><span style="font-size: smaller;">years</span> |
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! Mean mantle concentration<br /><span style="font-size: smaller;">{{sfrac|kg isotope|kg mantle}}</span> |
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! Heat release<br /><span style="font-size: smaller;">{{sfrac|W|kg mantle}}</span> |
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|- |
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| <sup>232</sup>Th |
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| {{val|26.4|e=-6}} |
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| {{val|14.0|e=9}} |
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| {{val|124|e=-9}} |
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| {{val|3.27|e=-12}} |
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|- |
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| <sup>238</sup>U |
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| {{val|94.6|e=-6}} |
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| {{val|4.47|e=9}} |
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| {{val|30.8|e=-9}} |
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| {{val|2.91|e=-12}} |
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|- |
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| <sup>40</sup>K |
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| {{val|29.2|e=-6}} |
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| {{val|1.25|e=9}} |
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| {{val|36.9|e=-9}} |
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| {{val|1.08|e=-12}} |
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|- |
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| <sup>235</sup>U |
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| {{val|569|e=-6}} |
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| {{val|0.704|e=9}} |
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| {{val|0.22|e=-9}} |
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| {{val|0.125|e=-12}} |
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|} |
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Geoneutrino detectors can detect the decay of <sup>238</sup>U and <sup>232</sup>Th and thus allow estimation of their contribution to the present radiogenic heat budget, while <sup>235</sup>U and <sup>40</sup>K are not thus detectable. Regardless, <sup>40</sup>K is estimated to contribute 4 TW of heating.<ref name="Gando">Gando, A., Dwyer, D. A., McKeown, R. D., & Zhang, C. (2011). Partial radiogenic heat model for Earth revealed by geoneutrino measurements. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 647–651.</ref> However, due to the short [[Half-life|half-lives]] the decay of <sup>235</sup>U and <sup>40</sup>K contributed a large fraction of radiogenic heat flux to the early Earth, which was also much hotter than at present.<ref name=Arevalo /> Initial results from measuring the geoneutrino products of [[radioactive decay]] from within the Earth, a [[proxy (statistics)|proxy]] for radiogenic heat, yielded a new estimate of half of the total Earth internal heat source being radiogenic,<ref name=Gando /> and this is consistent with previous estimates.<ref name="Korenaga 2008">Korenaga, J. (2008). Urey ratio and the structure and evolution of Earth's mantle. Reviews of Geophysics, 46(2).</ref> |
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=== Primordial heat === |
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Primordial heat is the heat lost by the Earth as it continues to cool from its original formation, and this is in contrast to its still actively-produced radiogenic heat. The Earth core's heat flow—heat leaving the core and flowing into the overlying mantle—is thought to be due to primordial heat, and is estimated at 5–15 TW.<ref name=Lay>Lay, T., Hernlund, J., & Buffett, B. A. (2008). Core–mantle boundary heat flow. Nature Geoscience, 1(1), 25–32.</ref> Estimates of mantle primordial heat loss range between 7 and 15 TW, which is calculated as the remainder of heat after removal of core heat flow and bulk-Earth radiogenic heat production from the observed surface heat flow.<ref name= Dye /> |
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The early formation of the Earth's dense core could have caused superheating and rapid heat loss, and the heat loss rate would slow once the mantle solidified.<ref name=Lay /> Heat flow from the core is necessary for maintaining the convecting outer core and the geodynamo and [[Earth's magnetic field]]; therefore primordial heat from the core enabled Earth's atmosphere and thus helped retain Earth's liquid water.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> |
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[[File: Tectonic evolution of Earth.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|Earth's tectonic evolution over time from a molten state at 4.5 Ga,<ref name="Taylor, S. R. 2007"/> to a single-plate lithosphere,<ref name=Moore /> to modern [[plate tectonics]] sometime between 3.2 Ga<ref>Pease, V., Percival, J., Smithies, H., Stevens, G., & Van Kranendonk, M. (2008). When did plate tectonics begin? Evidence from the orogenic record. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 199–208.</ref> and 1.0 Ga<ref>Stern, R. J. (2008). Modern-style plate tectonics began in Neoproterozoic time: An alternative interpretation of Earth’s tectonic history. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 265–280.</ref>]] |
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Primordial heat energy comes from the [[potential energy]] released by collapsing a large amount of matter into a [[gravity well]], and the [[kinetic energy]] of accreted matter. |
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== Heat flow and tectonic plates== |
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Controversy over the exact nature of mantle convection makes the linked evolution of Earth's heat budget and the dynamics and structure of the mantle difficult to unravel.<ref name="Korenaga 2008" /> There is evidence that the processes of [[plate tectonics]] were not active in the Earth before 3.2 billion years ago, and that early Earth's internal heat loss could have been dominated by [[advection]] via heat-pipe [[volcanism]].<ref name=Moore>Moore, W. B., & Webb, A. A. G. (2013). Heat-pipe Earth. Nature, 501(7468), 501–505.</ref> Terrestrial bodies with lower heat flows, such as the [[Moon]] and [[Mars]], [[Thermal conduction|conduct]] their internal heat through a single lithospheric plate, and higher heat flows, such as on Jupiter's moon [[Io (moon)|Io]], result in [[advection|advective]] heat transport via enhanced volcanism, while the active plate tectonics of Earth occur with an intermediate heat flow and a [[Mantle convection|convecting mantle]].<ref name=Moore /> |
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== See also == |
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* [[Geothermal energy]] |
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* [[Geothermal gradient]] |
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* [[Planetary differentiation]] |
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* [[Thermal history of the Earth]] |
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* [[Anthropogenic heat]] |
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==External links== |
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{{Commons category-inline}} |
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==References== |
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== References == |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
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[[Category:Earth]] |
[[Category:Earth]] |
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[[Category:Geology]] |
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[[Category:Geodynamics]] |
[[Category:Geodynamics]] |
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[[Category:Plate tectonics]] |
[[Category:Plate tectonics]] |
Latest revision as of 14:55, 23 November 2024
Earth's internal heat budget is fundamental to the thermal history of the Earth. The flow of heat from Earth's interior to the surface is estimated at 47±2 terawatts (TW)[1] and comes from two main sources in roughly equal amounts: the radiogenic heat produced by the radioactive decay of isotopes in the mantle and crust, and the primordial heat left over from the formation of Earth.[2]
Earth's internal heat travels along geothermal gradients and powers most geological processes.[3] It drives mantle convection, plate tectonics, mountain building, rock metamorphism, and volcanism.[2] Convective heat transfer within the planet's high-temperature metallic core is also theorized to sustain a geodynamo which generates Earth's magnetic field.[4][5][6]
Despite its geological significance, Earth's interior heat contributes only 0.03% of Earth's total energy budget at the surface, which is dominated by 173,000 TW of incoming solar radiation.[7] This external energy source powers most of the planet's atmospheric, oceanic, and biologic processes. Nevertheless on land and at the ocean floor, the sensible heat absorbed from non-reflected insolation flows inward only by means of thermal conduction, and thus penetrates only a few dozen centimeters on the daily cycle and only a few dozen meters on the annual cycle. This renders solar radiation minimally relevant for processes internal to Earth's crust.[8]
Global data on heat-flow density are collected and compiled by the International Heat Flow Commission of the International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth's Interior.[9]
Heat and early estimate of Earth's age
[edit]Based on calculations of Earth's cooling rate, which assumed constant conductivity in the Earth's interior, in 1862 William Thomson, later Lord Kelvin, estimated the age of the Earth at 98 million years,[10] which contrasts with the age of 4.5 billion years obtained in the 20th century by radiometric dating.[11] As pointed out by John Perry in 1895[12] a variable conductivity in the Earth's interior could expand the computed age of the Earth to billions of years, as later confirmed by radiometric dating. Contrary to the usual representation of Thomson's argument, the observed thermal gradient of the Earth's crust would not be explained by the addition of radioactivity as a heat source. More significantly, mantle convection alters how heat is transported within the Earth, invalidating Thomson's assumption of purely conductive cooling.
Global internal heat flow
[edit]Estimates of the total heat flow from Earth's interior to surface span a range of 43 to 49 terawatts (TW) (a terawatt is 1012 watts).[13] One recent estimate is 47 TW,[1] equivalent to an average heat flux of 91.6 mW/m2, and is based on more than 38,000 measurements. The respective mean heat flows of continental and oceanic crust are 70.9 and 105.4 mW/m2.[1]
While the total internal Earth heat flow to the surface is well constrained, the relative contribution of the two main sources of Earth's heat, radiogenic and primordial heat, are highly uncertain because their direct measurement is difficult. Chemical and physical models give estimated ranges of 15–41 TW and 12–30 TW for radiogenic heat and primordial heat, respectively.[13]
The structure of Earth is a rigid outer crust that is composed of thicker continental crust and thinner oceanic crust, solid but plastically flowing mantle, a liquid outer core, and a solid inner core. The fluidity of a material is proportional to temperature; thus, the solid mantle can still flow on long time scales, as a function of its temperature[2] and therefore as a function of the flow of Earth's internal heat. The mantle convects in response to heat escaping from Earth's interior, with hotter and more buoyant mantle rising and cooler, and therefore denser, mantle sinking. This convective flow of the mantle drives the movement of Earth's lithospheric plates; thus, an additional reservoir of heat in the lower mantle is critical for the operation of plate tectonics and one possible source is an enrichment of radioactive elements in the lower mantle.[14]
Earth heat transport occurs by conduction, mantle convection, hydrothermal convection, and volcanic advection.[15] Earth's internal heat flow to the surface is thought to be 80% due to mantle convection, with the remaining heat mostly originating in the Earth's crust,[16] with about 1% due to volcanic activity, earthquakes, and mountain building.[2] Thus, about 99% of Earth's internal heat loss at the surface is by conduction through the crust, and mantle convection is the dominant control on heat transport from deep within the Earth. Most of the heat flow from the thicker continental crust is attributed to internal radiogenic sources; in contrast the thinner oceanic crust has only 2% internal radiogenic heat.[2] The remaining heat flow at the surface would be due to basal heating of the crust from mantle convection. Heat fluxes are negatively correlated with rock age,[1] with the highest heat fluxes from the youngest rock at mid-ocean ridge spreading centers (zones of mantle upwelling), as observed in the global map of Earth heat flow.[1]
Sources of heat
[edit]Radiogenic heat
[edit]The radioactive decay of elements in the Earth's mantle and crust results in production of daughter isotopes and release of geoneutrinos and heat energy, or radiogenic heat. About 50% of the Earth's internal heat originates from radioactive decay.[17] Four radioactive isotopes are responsible for the majority of radiogenic heat because of their enrichment relative to other radioactive isotopes: uranium-238 (238U), uranium-235 (235U), thorium-232 (232Th), and potassium-40 (40K).[18] Due to a lack of rock samples from below 200 km depth, it is difficult to determine precisely the radiogenic heat throughout the whole mantle,[18] although some estimates are available.[19]
For the Earth's core, geochemical studies indicate that it is unlikely to be a significant source of radiogenic heat due to an expected low concentration of radioactive elements partitioning into iron.[20] Radiogenic heat production in the mantle is linked to the structure of mantle convection, a topic of much debate, and it is thought that the mantle may either have a layered structure with a higher concentration of radioactive heat-producing elements in the lower mantle, or small reservoirs enriched in radioactive elements dispersed throughout the whole mantle.[21]
Isotope | Heat release W/kg isotope |
Half-life years |
Mean mantle concentration kg isotope/kg mantle |
Heat release W/kg mantle |
---|---|---|---|---|
232Th | 26.4×10−6 | 14.0×109 | 124×10−9 | 3.27×10−12 |
238U | 94.6×10−6 | 4.47×109 | 30.8×10−9 | 2.91×10−12 |
40K | 29.2×10−6 | 1.25×109 | 36.9×10−9 | 1.08×10−12 |
235U | 569×10−6 | 0.704×109 | 0.22×10−9 | 0.125×10−12 |
Geoneutrino detectors can detect the decay of 238U and 232Th and thus allow estimation of their contribution to the present radiogenic heat budget, while 235U and 40K are not thus detectable. Regardless, 40K is estimated to contribute 4 TW of heating.[22] However, due to the short half-lives the decay of 235U and 40K contributed a large fraction of radiogenic heat flux to the early Earth, which was also much hotter than at present.[14] Initial results from measuring the geoneutrino products of radioactive decay from within the Earth, a proxy for radiogenic heat, yielded a new estimate of half of the total Earth internal heat source being radiogenic,[22] and this is consistent with previous estimates.[21]
Primordial heat
[edit]Primordial heat is the heat lost by the Earth as it continues to cool from its original formation, and this is in contrast to its still actively-produced radiogenic heat. The Earth core's heat flow—heat leaving the core and flowing into the overlying mantle—is thought to be due to primordial heat, and is estimated at 5–15 TW.[23] Estimates of mantle primordial heat loss range between 7 and 15 TW, which is calculated as the remainder of heat after removal of core heat flow and bulk-Earth radiogenic heat production from the observed surface heat flow.[13]
The early formation of the Earth's dense core could have caused superheating and rapid heat loss, and the heat loss rate would slow once the mantle solidified.[23] Heat flow from the core is necessary for maintaining the convecting outer core and the geodynamo and Earth's magnetic field; therefore primordial heat from the core enabled Earth's atmosphere and thus helped retain Earth's liquid water.[21]
Primordial heat energy comes from the potential energy released by collapsing a large amount of matter into a gravity well, and the kinetic energy of accreted matter.
Heat flow and tectonic plates
[edit]Controversy over the exact nature of mantle convection makes the linked evolution of Earth's heat budget and the dynamics and structure of the mantle difficult to unravel.[21] There is evidence that the processes of plate tectonics were not active in the Earth before 3.2 billion years ago, and that early Earth's internal heat loss could have been dominated by advection via heat-pipe volcanism.[24] Terrestrial bodies with lower heat flows, such as the Moon and Mars, conduct their internal heat through a single lithospheric plate, and higher heat flows, such as on Jupiter's moon Io, result in advective heat transport via enhanced volcanism, while the active plate tectonics of Earth occur with an intermediate heat flow and a convecting mantle.[24]
See also
[edit]- Geothermal energy
- Geothermal gradient
- Planetary differentiation
- Thermal history of the Earth
- Anthropogenic heat
External links
[edit]Media related to Earth's internal heat budget at Wikimedia Commons
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Davies, J.H.; Davies, D.R. (22 February 2010). "Earth's surface heat flux". Solid Earth. 1 (1): 5–24. Bibcode:2010SolE....1....5D. doi:10.5194/se-1-5-2010.
- ^ a b c d e f Donald L. Turcotte; Gerald Schubert (25 March 2002). Geodynamics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66624-4.
- ^ Buffett, B. A. (2007). Taking Earth's temperature. Science, 315(5820), 1801–1802.
- ^ Morgan Bettex (25 March 2010). "Explained: Dynamo Theory". MIT News.
- ^ Kageyama, Akira; Sato, Tetsuya; the Complexity Simulation Group (1 January 1995). "Computer simulation of a magnetohydrodynamic dynamo. II". Physics of Plasmas. 2 (5): 1421–1431. Bibcode:1995PhPl....2.1421K. doi:10.1063/1.871485.
- ^ Glatzmaier, Gary A.; Roberts, Paul H. (1995). "A three-dimensional convective dynamo solution with rotating and finitely conducting inner core and mantle". Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors. 91 (1–3): 63–75. Bibcode:1995PEPI...91...63G. doi:10.1016/0031-9201(95)03049-3.
- ^ Archer, D. (2012). Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast. ISBN 978-0-470-94341-0.
- ^ Lowrie, W. (2007). Fundamentals of geophysics. Cambridge: CUP, 2nd ed.
- ^ www.ihfc-iugg.org IHFC: International Heat Flow Commission – Homepage. Retrieved 18/09/2019.
- ^ Thomson, William. (1864). On the secular cooling of the earth, read 28 April 1862. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 23, 157–170.
- ^ a b Ross Taylor, Stuart (26 October 2007). "Chapter 2: The Formation Of The Earth And Moon". In Martin J. van Kranendonk; Vickie Bennett; Hugh R.H. Smithies (eds.). Earth's Oldest Rocks (Developments in Precambrian Geology Vol 15, 2007). Elsevier. pp. 21–30. ISBN 978-0-08-055247-7.
- ^ England, Philip; Molnar, Peter; Richter, Frank (2007). "John Perry's neglected critique of Kelvin's age for the Earth: A missed opportunity in geodynamics". GSA Today. 17 (1): 4–9. Bibcode:2007GSAT...17R...4E. doi:10.1130/GSAT01701A.1.
- ^ a b c Dye, S. T. (2012). Geoneutrinos and the radioactive power of the Earth. Reviews of Geophysics, 50(3). doi:10.1029/2012RG000400
- ^ a b Arevalo Jr, R., McDonough, W. F., & Luong, M. (2009). The K/U ratio of the silicate Earth: Insights into mantle composition, structure and thermal evolution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 278(3), 361–369.
- ^ Jaupart, C., & Mareschal, J. C. (2007). Heat flow and thermal structure of the lithosphere. Treatise on Geophysics, 6, 217–251.
- ^ Korenaga, J. (2003). Energetics of mantle convection and the fate of fossil heat. Geophysical Research Letters, 30(8), 1437.
- ^ "How much of the heat dissipated into space by Earth is due to radioactive decay of its elements? About half is due to this "radiogenic heat"". Stanford University. 2015. Archived from the original on 25 June 2017.
- ^ a b Korenaga, J. (2011). Earth's heat budget: Clairvoyant geoneutrinos. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 581–582.
- ^ Šrámek, Ondřej; McDonough, William F.; Kite, Edwin S.; Lekić, Vedran; Dye, Stephen T.; Zhong, Shijie (1 January 2013). "Geophysical and geochemical constraints on geoneutrino fluxes from Earth's mantle". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 361: 356–366. arXiv:1207.0853. Bibcode:2013E&PSL.361..356S. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2012.11.001. ISSN 0012-821X. S2CID 15284566.
- ^ McDonough, W.F. (2003), "Compositional Model for the Earth's Core", Treatise on Geochemistry, vol. 2, Elsevier, pp. 547–568, Bibcode:2003TrGeo...2..547M, doi:10.1016/b0-08-043751-6/02015-6, ISBN 9780080437514
- ^ a b c d Korenaga, J. (2008). Urey ratio and the structure and evolution of Earth's mantle. Reviews of Geophysics, 46(2).
- ^ a b Gando, A., Dwyer, D. A., McKeown, R. D., & Zhang, C. (2011). Partial radiogenic heat model for Earth revealed by geoneutrino measurements. Nature Geoscience, 4(9), 647–651.
- ^ a b Lay, T., Hernlund, J., & Buffett, B. A. (2008). Core–mantle boundary heat flow. Nature Geoscience, 1(1), 25–32.
- ^ a b c Moore, W. B., & Webb, A. A. G. (2013). Heat-pipe Earth. Nature, 501(7468), 501–505.
- ^ Pease, V., Percival, J., Smithies, H., Stevens, G., & Van Kranendonk, M. (2008). When did plate tectonics begin? Evidence from the orogenic record. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 199–208.
- ^ Stern, R. J. (2008). Modern-style plate tectonics began in Neoproterozoic time: An alternative interpretation of Earth’s tectonic history. When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth, 265–280.