12:00 PM - 12:15 PM
[SIT22-36] Has Earth’s Plate Tectonics Led to Rapid Core Cooling?
Keywords:core heat loss, mantle convection, plate tectonics, subduction, accretion energetics
The ~500-1000 kg m-3 seismically-inferred jump in density between the liquid outer core and solid inner core allows a direct estimate of the Clapeyron Slope for the outer core’s actual composition which contains ~0.08±0.02 lighter elements (S,Si,O,Al, H,…) mixed into a Fe-Ni alloy. A PREM-like 600 kg m^{-3} density jump yields a Clapeyron Slope for which there has been ~774K of core cooling during the freezing and growth of the inner core, cooling that has been releasing an average of ~21 TW of power during the past ~3 Ga. If so, core cooling could easily have powered Earth’s long-lived geodynamo. Another implication is that the present-day mantle is strongly ‘bottom-heated’, and diapiric mantle plumes should dominate deep mantle upwelling. This mode of core and mantle convection is consistent with slow, ~37.5K/Ga secular cooling of Earth’s mantle linked to more rapid secular cooling of the core (cf. Morgan, Rüpke, and White, Frontiers, 2016). Efficient plate subduction, hence plate tectonics, is a key ingredient for such rapid secular core cooling.
We also show how a more complete thermodynamic version of Birch’s accretional energy calculation predicts that accretion with FeNi-sinking-linked differentiation between an Earth-like mantle and core could naturally generate a core that, post-accretion, was both hotter than overlying mantle and ~1000K hotter than today.