Saturday 4 February 2012

Is The Earth Getting Smaller?



There are factors that are causing Earth to both gain and lose mass over time, according to Dr Chris Smith, a medical microbiologist and broadcaster who tries to improve the public understanding of science.
Using some back-of-the-envelope-style calculations, Dr Smith, with help from physicist and Cambridge University colleague Dave Ansell, drew up a balance sheet of what’s coming in, and what’s going out. All figures are estimated.
By far the biggest contributor to the world’s mass is the 40,000 tonnes of dust that is falling from space to Earth, says Dr Smith.
“[The dust] is basically the vestiges of the solar system that spawned us, either asteroids that broke up or things that never formed into a planet, and it’s drifting around.
“The Earth is acting like a giant vacuum cleaner powered by gravity in space, pulling in particles of dust,” says Dr Smith.
Another much less significant reason the planet is gaining mass is because of global warming.
“Nasa has calculated that the Earth is gaining about 160 tonnes a year because the temperature of the Earth is going up. If we are adding energy to the system, the mass must go up,” says Dr Smith.
This means that in total between 40,000 and 41,000 tonnes is being added to the mass of the planet each year.
Population growth and new buildings are not a factor, he says, because both of these are actually made up of existing matter on the planet.
But overall, Dr Smith has calculated that the Earth - including the sea and the atmosphere - is losing mass. He points to a handful of reasons.
For instance, the Earth’s core is like a giant nuclear reactor that is gradually losing energy over time, and that loss in energy translates into a loss of mass.
But this is a tiny amount - he estimates no more than 16 tonnes a year.
And what about launching rockets and satellites into space, like Phobos-Grunt? Dr Smith discounts this as most of it will fall back down to Earth again.
But there is something else that is making the planet lose mass. Gases such as hydrogen are so light, they are escaping from the atmosphere.
“Physicists have shown that the Earth is losing about three kilograms of hydrogen gas every second. It’s about 95,000 tonnes of hydrogen that the planet is losing every year.
“The other very light gas this is happening to is helium and there is much less of that around, so it’s about 1,600 tonnes a year of helium that we lose.”
So taking into account the gains and the losses, Dr Smith reckons the Earth is getting about 50,000 tonnes lighter a year, which is just less than half the gross weight of the Costa Concordia, the Italian cruise liner, that ran aground recently.
Summary:
  • It’s getting lighter, by about 50,000 tonnes in mass each year, but not due to space dust
  • Some factors include:
  • Gains: Mostly dust (like an asteroid, above) falling from space, plus increased energy from increases in the planet’s temperature
  • Losses: Mostly hydrogen, plus some helium and a tiny amount of lost energy

3 comments:

  1. this is mentioned in Holy Quran , Sura Ar-rad no.13 , verse 41 :
    " Have they not seen that We set upon the land, reducing it from its borders? And Allah decides; there is no adjuster of His decision. And He is swift in account. "
    this is the Translation of the Arabic verse, that cannot be translated 100%

    ReplyDelete
  2. That's Right Allah The Almighty Knows Best.

    ReplyDelete