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The Earth is billions of years old, yet its core has not yet cooled down and become solid. Will this happen in the foreseeable future?

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    $\begingroup$ Isn't the inner core solid? $\endgroup$
    – ProfRob
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 8:21
  • $\begingroup$ yes, the inner core is solid. $\endgroup$ Commented May 6, 2020 at 15:53
  • $\begingroup$ @RoghanArun It is, but not because it isn't hot enough to be molten, but because the pressure is too great $\endgroup$
    – Kevin
    Commented Jul 22, 2021 at 17:16

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I generally take "foreseeable future" to mean "in my lifetime" in which case the answer is No. However, if you are really asking, "What does science say about the solidification1 of earth's core?" then we can answer this.

In the core of the planet, we actually have this pretty picture: earth's innards

The "solid inner core" is pretty much pure iron at a nice pretty temperature of about 5700 K (strangely close to the sun's surface temperature), which seems to be greater than iron's melting point of about 1800 K, but the Clausius-Clapeyron relation shows that melting points change with an increase in pressure, so all is well there.

The reason the heat has been retained in the core is that the only processes to move the heat are convective transport and thermal conduction, the latter being a fairly slow process (aside: it's the convective currents that cause the magnetic field). Degeun et al (2013) state,

...the dynamical time-scale of the thermal convection in the inner core [is] $\sim$1 My or more.

Which, though shorter than the age of the planet, is still pretty long. But the inner core is also growing at a rate of about 0.5 mm/year (possible paywall) and has been doing so for about a billion years. Though unreferenced, this Earth.StackExchange answer suggests that the core has cooled only 250 K since it was formed (a rate of 55 K/Gyr). At that rate, "...it would take something like 91 billion years to cool to 0 K." So no, not in our lifetime for sure!

Note also that the mantle is being partially heated by radioactive decays of Uranium-238, Uranium-235, Thorium-232, and Potassium-40, all of which have half-lives of greater than 700 million years (up to about 14 billion years for Thorium). This will protect us for some time from the complete cooling of the core.

So, fortunately for our tiny planet, the core will stay nice and toasty warm for a few more billion years (my estimation). Unfortunately for the planet, the sun will go red giant phase and eat it up before the core cools.



I'm being liberal with this word. As I state elsewhere, the core is solid. OP intends it to mean a cold lump of iron rather than the toasty lump of iron that we have

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    $\begingroup$ " (a rate of 55 K/Gyr). At that rate, "...it would take something like 91 billion years to cool to 0 K". That assumes a linear relation. That is not reasonable for such systems. It is more like exponential (if the "heat flow" is proportional to the temperature difference), and it would take much much longer (infinity in fact for 0 K - a more reasonable temperature of 300 K could be assumed). $\endgroup$ Commented May 2, 2019 at 1:10
  • $\begingroup$ @PeterMortensen that is probably a more appropriate assumption; I just quoted a value I found there. If I get a chance later today I can edit it in. Though if you want to edit it in yourself, feel free (that is what the edit button is for ;)) $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented May 2, 2019 at 11:01
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Why has Earth's core not become solid? Will this happen in the foreseeable future?

TL;DR answers:

  • Why has Earth's core not become solid?
    A lot of residual heat from the Earth's formation remains inside the Earth. Heat is released as iron and nickel freeze onto the solid inner core, which slows this freezing process down. The Earth is big. Moon and Mars are much smaller, and they still have liquid outer cores.

  • Will this happen in the foreseeable future?
    No.


The answer to the second question is no. It might happen in a few billion years, then again it might not happen at all. The Sun will turn into a red giant in about five billion years or so and might expand to engulf the Earth. If that happens, the Earth will be gone.

The core answer to the first question is that a lot of residual heat from the Earth's formation still remains inside the Earth, and a good fraction of this residual heat is concentrated in the Earth's core.

An argument against the Earth's core freezing any time soon (e.g., a billion years is "soon") is that the Moon (Williams 2006) and Mars (Yoder 2003) still have liquid outer cores. The Moon and Mars are much smaller than is the Earth. The square-cube law suggests that a large body such as the Earth will have an even slower core cooling rate than those much smaller bodies. Going against this, the Moon and Mars have stagnant lid convection systems while Earth has an active plate tectonics system. However, that our Moon still has a liquid core has to argue against the the Earth's core freezing any time soon.

One key to answering this question is the rate at which heat energy crosses the core-mantle boundary. Estimates of this heat flux vary widely, from less than 2 terawatts to over 15 terawatts. The possible sources of this heat flux are:

  • Latent heat of freezing as molten iron and nickel in the outer core freeze onto the inner core.
  • Secular cooling of the Earth's inner and outer core.
  • Gravitational heating as lighter elements in the outer core are rejected from the freezing process.
  • Radiogenic heating from decay of radioactive elements in the Earth's core.

The final item is highly controversial. Most geochemists and geophysicists are of the opinion that there are but negligible amounts of radioactive elements (235U, 238U, 232Th, 40K) in the Earth's core. Uranium, thorium, and potassium are strongly lithophilic elements. Moreover, they are incompatible elements. Compared to chondrites, these elements are concentrated in the Earth's crust, depleted in the upper mantle, and are likely slightly depleted in the lower mantle. These elements just shouldn't be in the core.

Recent geoneutrino detection experiments (KamLAND 2011) bolster these views, at least with regard to 238U and 232Th. (The neutrinos produced by 235U and 40K are of too low an energy to be detected by existing detectors.) That uranium and and thorium are not present in the Earth's core is consistent with results from the these geoneutrino observations.

Nonetheless, several recent papers (e.g., Lay 2008) argue for a very high core-mantle boundary (CMB) heat flux. This presents several problems. One is that it means the Earth's inner core is very young, a billion years old or less (Labrosse 2001). Others argue that the inner core is at least two billion years old (Stacey 1999), and possibly even older. A related problem: If the Earth's inner core is very young, what powered the geodynamo prior to the formation of the inner core? Another problem is that this high heat flux means implies a non-negligible amount of radiogenic heating in the Earth's core.

One way around this dilemma is that the Earth's core does contain a non-negligible amount of radioactive elements, particularly 40K (Nimmo 2004). Others argue that even if it is possible for potassium to enter the core, there just isn't enough potassium in the Earth to explain a large heat flux from the core (Lassiter 2006).

An alternative is that a considerable amount of heat is generated at the CMB, in the D'' layer. The recent discovery of post-perovskite might provide a mechanism. There could well be a deep magma ocean or a partial melt at the base of the mantle (Labrosse 2007, Stixrude 2009). As uranium, thorium, and potassium are incompatible elements, this deep magma ocean would naturally contain concentrated amounts of those elements.

References

KamLAND 2011. KamLAND Collaboration (2011), "Partial radiogenic heat model for Earth revealed by geoneutrino measurements," Nature Geoscience 4.9 : 647-651.

Labrosse 2001. Stephane Labrosse, Jean-Paul Poirier, and Jean-Louis Le Mouël (2001), "The age of the inner core," Earth and Planetary Science Letters 190.3 : 111-123.

Labrosse 2007. Stéphane Labrosse, J. W. Hernlund, and Nicolas Coltice (2007), "A crystallizing dense magma ocean at the base of the Earth’s mantle," Nature 450.7171 : 866-869.

Lassiter 2006. J. C. Lassiter (2006), "Constraints on the coupled thermal evolution of the Earth's core and mantle, the age of the inner core, and the origin of the 186 Os/ 188 Os “core signal” in plume-derived lavas," Earth and Planetary Science Letters 250.1 : 306-317.

Lay 2008. T. Lay, J. Hernlund, and B.A. Buffett (2008), "Core–mantle boundary heat flow," Nature Geoscience 1.1 : 25-32.

Nimmo 2004. F. Nimmo, et al. (2004), "The influence of potassium on core and geodynamo evolution," Geophysical Journal International 156.2 : 363-376.

Stacey 1999. Frank D. Stacey and Conrad HB Stacey (1999), "Gravitational energy of core evolution: implications for thermal history and geodynamo power." Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 110.1 : 83-93.

Stixrude 2009. Lars Stixrude, et al. (2009), "Thermodynamics of silicate liquids in the deep Earth," Earth and Planetary Science Letters 278.3 : 226-232.

Williams 2006. J. G. Williams, et al. (2006), "Lunar laser ranging science: gravitational physics and lunar interior and geodesy," Advances in Space Research 37.1 : 67-71.

Yoder 2003. C. F. Yoder, et al. (2003), "Fluid core size of Mars from detection of the solar tide," Science 300.5617 : 299-303.

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    $\begingroup$ Isn't the inner core solid? $\endgroup$
    – ProfRob
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 8:24
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    $\begingroup$ It occurs to me that radiological heating of the mantle affects the rate of heat transfer across the core-mantle boundary even if there is no appreciable decay heating in the core proper. Not sure how that feeds into "The final item is highly controversial.". $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 6, 2017 at 14:48
  • $\begingroup$ Does the radiation from elements in the crust also penetrate towards the Earth's center and provide some heating effect? $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 2, 2018 at 11:46
  • $\begingroup$ Is CMB = core-mantle boundary? $\endgroup$
    – PM 2Ring
    Commented Nov 2, 2018 at 16:24
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    $\begingroup$ Can you introduce the abbrev. CMB in your answer? $\endgroup$ Commented May 2, 2019 at 1:42
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Hot stuff on the surface of the Earth cools fast because air can carry away the heat pretty easily by convection. This heat is eventually radiated back to space.

The outer core, on the other hand, touches the hot mantle. Due to the relatively small temperature difference, there's not much heat transfer to the mantle. The mantle itself does slowly cool, but this is at the subduction zones in the ocean (which are relatively few compared to the entire surface area of the mantle), as the rocky crust insulates the mantle.

Besides that, radioactive decay is a significant contributor to keeping the outer core molten.

So, no, the core won't cool significantly in the forseeable future.

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  1. Earth is big, so takes a long time to cool down. Note that Mars, being smaller, has already cooled down to this point.
  2. The heat from radioisotope decay over something with the mass/area ratio of earth is significant.
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    $\begingroup$ @dj_mu: The initial heat is lost by black body radiation from the surface. The energy of this heat is proportional to the planet mass, but the loss rate is proportional to the surface area. Small planets like Mars have less mass per surface, so cool faster. Radioisotope heating power is also proportional to mass or volume, but is also lost proportional to surface area. Mars looses again compared to Earth, as does our moon. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 11, 2013 at 16:03
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    $\begingroup$ Mars has not cooled down to this point. It still has a liquid core. See Yoder, et al. (2003), "Fluid core size of Mars from detection of the solar tide," Science 300.5617 : 299-303. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 22, 2014 at 21:43
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Earth's inner core is already solid. However not because it is cold, but because of high pressures. Now for whether Earth outer core will freeze, well radioactive decay heats up Earth's outer core. Pressure also prevents Earth outer core from losing heat. Of course a part of Earth's outer core is solidifying. Lighter elements are solidifying on the surface of the outer core as the outer core loses heat to the mantle. This causes dynamical patterns and is one reason for why the Earth has a magnetic field. As this happens molten iron moves through these solidified lighter elements. Amplifying the magnetic field coming from deeper in the outer core.

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Don't forget the gravitational title forces of the moon and the sun combined, that stretch and cool the earth, also generate heat within the planet.

Example, take a plastic spoon or something like that and start to slowly bend it – bend it back and forth slowly so it doesn't break and it will slowly start to get soft and as it gets soft, bend it back faster and faster until it actually gets hot enough to cause a first real first-degree burn in the spot that's been bending the most.

If we didn't have the moon, we would've ended up like Mars. Mars does not have any real moons to speak of – it has two large asteroids. If Mars had a moon similar to ours, it would've kept the center of the planet liquid and hot, which would have its magnetic field and prevented the atmosphere from being blown away by solar winds....

Mars once had a huge ocean and an atmosphere but then lost it… And the only way to lose that is to lose your magnetic field… And the only way to lose that is for the core of the planet to cool.

The amount of radioactivity based on the materials in our planet earth are not enough to keep our planet as warm and hot as it has been underneath the crust... Certainly radioactive decay has played a role in keeping the center of our planet warm… But the two main factors are high pressure and density combined with the title forces of the sun and moon. When the sun and moon are in opposition, the planet is slightly stretched out and is more oval-shaped...when the sun and moon are at 90° angles of the planet that pulls on the planet in a different manner… And when the sun and the moon are on the same side of the planet, that pulls that side of that side of the planet even further towards the sun and the moon.

So our planet is constantly being kneaded like bread dough....and if you ever kneaded bread, you know that the act of doing it keeps the dough warm.

Plus don't forget all of this tugging and pulling creates a huge amount of friction… And as we all know when you rub your hands together and generate friction – they get warm. The same thing with our planet.

Just do an Internet search for "what if the earth had no moon" and you will find many scientific articles that say we would be just like Mars or close to it nowadays. I'm not saying a moon is required for a planet to stay warm, but in our case, it is the most contributing factor to prevent our core from being cold by now.

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    $\begingroup$ That isn't true. Tidal heating of the earth by the Moon is negligable. See this book for the details. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 28, 2015 at 16:13
  • $\begingroup$ I read that book and it doesn't really have scientific merit in my opinion… I have read plenty of scientific articles that basically contradict that entire book $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 28, 2015 at 16:17

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