The Japan Times - Oh my (long) days: Melting ice caps slow Earth's spin

EUR -
AED 3.818489
AFN 76.782421
ALL 98.84803
AMD 414.899405
ANG 1.869733
AOA 950.748783
ARS 1095.657378
AUD 1.651456
AWG 1.868216
AZN 1.767918
BAM 1.958157
BBD 2.094701
BDT 126.522292
BGN 1.957122
BHD 0.391878
BIF 3070.966915
BMD 1.039641
BND 1.403976
BOB 7.168629
BRL 6.006423
BSD 1.037439
BTN 90.831205
BWP 14.419217
BYN 3.395154
BYR 20376.971302
BZD 2.083888
CAD 1.487638
CDF 2962.978524
CHF 0.941707
CLF 0.026078
CLP 1000.7281
CNY 7.575661
CNH 7.577915
COP 4306.776849
CRC 527.93038
CUC 1.039641
CUP 27.550497
CVE 110.397883
CZK 25.050731
DJF 184.740591
DKK 7.460659
DOP 64.296774
DZD 140.628227
EGP 52.291674
ERN 15.594621
ETB 132.998808
FJD 2.399441
FKP 0.856235
GBP 0.834104
GEL 2.905821
GGP 0.856235
GHS 15.977231
GIP 0.856235
GMD 74.854534
GNF 8968.709166
GTQ 8.020654
GYD 217.05126
HKD 8.098625
HNL 26.437568
HRK 7.672084
HTG 135.702036
HUF 404.477731
IDR 16918.292316
ILS 3.689297
IMP 0.856235
INR 90.860759
IQD 1359.016209
IRR 43755.903785
ISK 146.807262
JEP 0.856235
JMD 164.035868
JOD 0.737519
JPY 157.80977
KES 134.270197
KGS 90.916859
KHR 4166.975614
KMF 493.413946
KPW 935.677369
KRW 1500.83153
KWD 0.320678
KYD 0.864528
KZT 533.013886
LAK 22548.816167
LBP 92903.732519
LKR 309.417975
LRD 206.460498
LSL 19.28984
LTL 3.069791
LVL 0.628869
LYD 5.095084
MAD 10.40152
MDL 19.416184
MGA 4896.847123
MKD 61.505855
MMK 3376.71469
MNT 3532.701565
MOP 8.319614
MRU 41.362787
MUR 48.559694
MVR 16.007697
MWK 1798.94805
MXN 21.294886
MYR 4.614987
MZN 66.435758
NAD 19.28984
NGN 1561.718398
NIO 38.175584
NOK 11.659708
NPR 145.32753
NZD 1.828027
OMR 0.400285
PAB 1.037449
PEN 3.855641
PGK 4.228089
PHP 60.267538
PKR 289.552643
PLN 4.191082
PYG 8167.752777
QAR 3.782353
RON 4.977387
RSD 117.098972
RUB 101.234591
RWF 1443.323413
SAR 3.899162
SBD 8.777876
SCR 14.886366
SDG 624.82469
SEK 11.308886
SGD 1.402721
SHP 0.856235
SLE 23.81301
SLL 21800.760107
SOS 592.907967
SRD 36.497671
STD 21518.477806
SVC 9.077796
SYP 13517.417376
SZL 19.276017
THB 34.957422
TJS 11.324039
TMT 3.638745
TND 3.316692
TOP 2.434948
TRY 37.392574
TTD 7.044378
TWD 34.0415
TZS 2663.875268
UAH 43.013961
UGX 3812.589128
USD 1.039641
UYU 45.164798
UZS 13456.196921
VES 62.44782
VND 26292.530828
VUV 123.428314
WST 2.911856
XAF 656.741188
XAG 0.032089
XAU 0.000362
XCD 2.809683
XDR 0.79565
XOF 656.741188
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.87105
ZAR 19.156543
ZMK 9358.022685
ZMW 29.126779
ZWL 334.764104
  • RIO

    0.8200

    62.19

    +1.32%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.44

    -0.26%

  • NGG

    -1.0000

    61.67

    -1.62%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    11.58

    +0.17%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.83

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.3600

    125.11

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.83

    0%

  • GSK

    -1.3200

    36.38

    -3.63%

  • BCE

    -1.3800

    23.52

    -5.87%

  • RBGPF

    66.5100

    66.51

    +100%

  • AZN

    1.4250

    72.36

    +1.97%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.47

    -0.8%

  • BTI

    0.5200

    41.62

    +1.25%

  • BP

    0.2900

    31.96

    +0.91%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    50.4

    -0.73%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    8.44

    +2.01%

Oh my (long) days: Melting ice caps slow Earth's spin
Oh my (long) days: Melting ice caps slow Earth's spin / Photo: Olivier MORIN - AFP/File

Oh my (long) days: Melting ice caps slow Earth's spin

It's well known that as far as the climate crisis goes, time is of the essence.

Text size:

Now a study out Monday shows that the melting of the polar ice caps is causing our planet to spin more slowly, increasing the length of days at an "unprecedented" rate.

The paper, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that water flowing from Greenland and Antarctica is resulting in more mass around the equator, co-author Surendra Adhikari of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory told AFP.

"It's like when a figure skater does a pirouette, first holding her arms close to her body and then stretching them out," added co-author Benedikt Soja of ETH Zurich.

"The initially fast rotation becomes slower because the masses move away from the axis of rotation, increasing physical inertia."

Earth is commonly thought of as a sphere, but it's more accurate to call it an "oblate spheroid" that bulges somewhat around the equator, a bit like a satsuma.

What's more, its shape is constantly changing, from the impacts of the daily tides that affect the oceans and crusts, to longer term effects from drift of tectonic plates, and abrupt, violent shifts caused by earthquakes and volcanoes.

The paper relied on observational techniques like Very Long Baseline Interferometry, where scientists can measure the difference in how long it takes for radio signals from space to reach different points on Earth, and use that to infer variations in the planet's orientation and length of day.

It also used the Global Positioning System, which measures Earth's rotation very precisely, to about one-hundredth of a millisecond, and even looked at ancient eclipse records going back millenia.

- Implications for space travel -

If the Earth turns more slowly, then the length of day increases by a few milliseconds from the standard measure of 86,400 seconds.

A currently more significant cause of slowdown is the gravitational pull of the Moon, which pulls on the oceans in a process called "tidal friction" that has caused a gradual deceleration of 2.40 milliseconds per century over millions of years.

But the new study comes to a surprising conclusion that, if humans continue to emit greenhouse gases at a high rate, the effect of a warming climate will be greater than that of the Moon's pull by the end of the 21st century, said Adhikari.

Between the year 1900 and today, climate has caused days to become around 0.8 milliseconds longer -- and under the worst-case scenario of high emissions, climate alone would be responsible for making days 2.2 milliseconds longer by the year 2100, compared to the same baseline.

That might not sound like a great deal, and certainly not something that humans are able to perceive.

But "there are definitely a lot of implications for space and Earth navigation," said Adhikari.

Knowing the exact orientation of Earth at any given moment is crucial when attempting to communicate with a spaceship, such as the Voyager probes that are now well beyond our solar system, where even a slight deviation of a centimeter can end up being kilometers off by the time it reaches its destination.

S.Ogawa--JT