Monday, August 31, 2009

TechnologyReview.com | Earth's Chandler Wobble Changed Dramatically in 2005

Monday, August 31, 2009

New analysis shows that the Chandler Wobble in the Earth's axis changed phase by 180 degrees in 2005. The question is why


If you travel to the Arctic and attempt to find the axis of the Earth's rotation, you'll notice something odd. The position of this axis on the Earth's surface moves with a period of about 7 years. This is the combined result of two effects. The one we're interested today is called the Chandler Wobble with a period of 433 days and discovered by the eponymous American astronomer in 1891.

The Chandler Wobble is reasonably well understood. Any spinning sphere that it is not entirely spherical should wobble in this way. However, on Earth, the wobble varies in amplitude from decade to decade, a motion that is thought to be the result of the changes in pressure at the bottom of the oceans caused by fluctuations in salinity, temperature and ocean circulation.

But there is also something mysterious about the Chandler Wobble. In 1920, it underwent a sudden phase change of 180 degrees. Nobody knows why.

Now a new analysis of data on the Earth's rotation going back 160 years indicates that this event was not unique. Zinovy Malkin and Natalia Miller at the Russian Academy of Sciences Central Astronomical Observatory in Pulkovo say that the phase has changed by small amounts on many occasions during this time. But the big news is that the Wobble underwent 180 degree changes in phase on two other occasions: once in 1850 and the other in 2005.

So why should the Chandler Wobble undergo these changes in phase? An interesting puzzle for anybody with a few brain cycles to spare.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/0908.3732: Chandler Wobble: Two More Large Phase Jumps Revealed