The Earth's deep interior: advances in theory and experiment

Citation
L. Vocadlo et D. Dobson, The Earth's deep interior: advances in theory and experiment, PHI T ROY A, 357(1763), 1999, pp. 3335-3357
Citations number
76
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary
Journal title
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES
ISSN journal
1364503X → ACNP
Volume
357
Issue
1763
Year of publication
1999
Pages
3335 - 3357
Database
ISI
SICI code
1364-503X(199912)357:1763<3335:TEDIAI>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
The Earth extends some 6400 km to the centre, where the conditions of press ure (P) and temperature (T) reach over three million times atmospheric pres sure and ca. 6000 degrees C. We stand on thin brittle crustal plates moving through geological time over a continuously deforming mantle of slowly con vecting hot rock. The mantle extends about halfway through the Earth to a l iquid outer core and a solid inner core. Although the mantle and core make up 99% of the Earth by volume and mass, we are only able to sample mantle m aterial directly to a few hundred kilometres, from inclusions in diamonds t hat are brought up to the surface by volcanic intrusions; the remaining 90% of the Earth is effectively inaccessible. The most direct knowledge ne hav e of the Earth's deep interior comes from the seismic waves generated from earthquakes. A knowledge of material properties coupled with these seismic waves tell us that, the mantle is made up of complex silicates and that the core is predominantly made of solid and liquid iron with some alloying ele ments. However, the detailed structure of the Earth's deep interior is poor ly constrained. Major advances toward the understanding of the composition, structure and dynamics of the Earth's deep interior are to be gained only by a combination of experimental and theoretical techniques. It is already clear that many of the large-scale geological processes responsible for the conditions at the surface are driven from the Earth's core. However, there are many questions yet to be answered about the exact nature of the core a nd mantle, and the interaction between them. For example, we have yet to fu lly define the major- and minor-element chemistry of the mantle! the convec tive regime of the mantle, the alloying elements in the core, the nature of the core-mantle boundary and the dynamical processes in the outer core gov erning the geodynamo. Advances in high-PIT experimental techniques osier th e last two decades allow laboratory simulation of the physical conditions f rom the surface of the Earth to the core, shedding light on the physics and chemistry of the Earth's deep interior. High P and T can be maintained for significant periods (minutes to days) in multi-anvil and diamond-anvil pre sses. Shock experiments produce high T and P in the megabar range for tiny durations (milliseconds), but., in doing so, they shed light on the physics of the solid inner core. The current development of in situ high-pressure research such as P- and S-wave interferometry, electrical conductivity and synchrotron-based Xray techniques will, over the coming decades, allow sign ificant improvements in our understanding of processes in the deep Earth. E ven so, with increasing depth, it becomes increasingly difficult to mimic t he extreme conditions of P and T precisely. An alternative to laboratory ex periments is the use of computer simulations, which allow us to test which models best match the seismic evidence and experimental data. In particular , with increasingly powerful supercomputer resources, emphasis is now being placed on the use of ab initio quantum-mechanical calculations to simulate materials at the conditions of pressure and temperature to be found in the Earth's deep interior. This approach allows us to predict the properties o f candidate mantle silicates with remarkable accuracy when compared with se ismic data and the results of laboratory experiments. With these simulation techniques, we are also trying to solve mam problems that are out of the reach of experimentation involving simultaneously high P and T, such as the nature of iron and iron alloys under the extreme condi tions of the core where iron is squeezed to about half its normal volume, a nd we will soon be able provide constraints on the temperature profile of t he Earth, which, at core depths, is known only to within a few thousand deg rees! It is therefore the challenge of the next few years among deep-Earth scientists to develop accurate measurements and models of the properties of the high-pressure silicates and iron alloys at deep-Earth conditions. With an interdisciplinary approach involving theory, experiment and seismology we will be able to determine the nature, evolution and influence of the Ear th's deep interior.