SETI bioastro: Fw: CHANGES IN THE EARTH'S ROTATION ARE IN THE WIND

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Thu Mar 06 2003 - 11:51:28 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Mark Hess
    Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2003 2:32 PM
    To: News Media list.serv
    Subject: CHANGES IN THE EARTH'S ROTATION ARE IN THE WIND

    Rob Gutro March 6, 2003
    Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
    (Phone: 301-286-4044)

    RELEASE: 03-21

    CHANGES IN THE EARTH'S ROTATION ARE IN THE WIND

    Because of Earth's dynamic climate, winds and atmospheric pressure
    systems experience constant change. These fluctuations may affect how
    our planet rotates on its axis, according to NASA-funded research
    that used wind and satellite data.

    NASA's Earth Science Enterprise (ESE) mission is to understand the
    Earth system and its response to natural and human-induced changes
    for better prediction of climate, weather and natural hazards, such
    as atmospheric changes or El Niņo events that may have contributed to
    the affect on Earth's rotation.

    "Changes in the atmosphere, specifically atmospheric pressure around
    the world, and the motions of the winds that may be related to such
    climate signals as El Niņo are strong enough that their effect is
    observed in the Earth's rotation signal," said David A. Salstein, an
    atmospheric scientist from Atmospheric and Environmental Research,
    Inc., of Lexington, Mass.who led a recent study.

    >From year to year, winds and air pressure patterns change, causing
    different forces to act on the solid Earth. During El Niņo years, for
    example, the rotation of the Earth may slow ever so slightly because
    of stronger winds, increasing the length of a day by a fraction of a
    millisecond (thousandth of a second).

    Issac Newton's laws of motion explain how those quantities are
    related to the Earth's rotation rate (leading to a change in the
    length of day) as well as the exact position in which the North Pole
    points in the heavens (known also as polar motion, or Earth wobble).

    To understand the concept of angular momentum, visualize the Earth
    spinning in space. Given Earth's overall mass and its rotation, it
    contains a certain amount of angular momentum. When an additional
    force acting at a distance from the Earth's rotational axis occurs,
    referred to as a torque, such as changes in surface winds, or the
    distribution of high and low pressure patterns, especially near
    mountains, it can act to change the rate of the Earth's rotation or
    even the direction of the rotational axis.

    Because of the law of "conservation of angular momentum," small but
    detectable changes in the Earth's rotation and those in the rotation
    of the atmosphere are linked. The conservation of angular momentum is
    a law of physics that states the total angular momentum of a rotating
    object with no outside force remains constant regardless of changes
    within the system.

    An example of this principle occurs when a skater pulls his or her
    arms inward during a spin (changing the mass distribution to one
    nearer the rotation axis, reducing the "moment of inertia," and
    speeds up (increasing the skater's spin); because the moment of
    inertia goes down, the spin rate must increase to keep the total
    angular momentum of the system unchanged.

    "The key is that the sum of the angular momentum (push) of the solid
    Earth plus atmosphere system must stay constant unless an outside
    force (torque) is applied," Salstein said. "So if the atmosphere
    speeds up (stronger westerly winds) then the solid Earth must slow
    down (length-of-day increases).Also if more atmosphere moves to a
    lower latitude (further from the axis of rotation), and atmospheric
    pressure increases, it also gains angular momentum and the Earth
    would slow down as well."

    Other motions of the atmosphere such as larger mass in one hemisphere
    than the other can lead to a wobble (like a washing machine with
    clothes off-balance) and the poles move, in accordance to the law of
    the conservation of angular momentum.

    Salstein looked at wind and pressure measurements from a National
    Weather Service analysis that makes use of a combination of
    ground-based, aircraft, and space-based observations.The measurements
    for the Earth's motions come from a variety of space-based
    measurements including satellites, like those in the Global
    Positioning System (GPS), the geodetic satellites that included
    records from NASA's older LAGEOS satellite, and observations of
    distant astronomical objects using a technique known as Very Long
    Baseline Interferometry. Understanding the atmospheric pressure
    patterns, moreover, is essential to interpret results from NASA's
    Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE).

    The fact that the two vastly different systems, namely the
    meteorological and the astronomical, are in good agreement according
    to the conservation of angular momentum gives us assurance that both
    these types of measurements must be accurate. It shows, moreover,
    that changes in climate signals can have global implications on
    Earth's overall rotation.

    NASA's ESE research focuses on the changes and variability in the
    Earth system, including atmospheric, oceanic, and geodetic areas.
    This research was recently presented at the annual meeting of the
    American Meteorological Society in Long Beach, Calif.

    For more information and images, see:
    http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/2003/0210rotation.html

    Special Bureau for the Atmosphere of the International Earth Rotation
    Service (IERS), at Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc.
    http://www.aer.com/groups/diag/sb.html

    The LAGEOS 1 & 2 Satellites:
    http://msl.jpl.nasa.gov/QuickLooks/lageosQL.html

    Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite:
    http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/

    NASA's Earth Science Enterprise:
    http://earth.nasa.gov

    -end-

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