• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

News 2 Business

Your Leading Business News Source

NEWS 2 BUSINESS
Your Leading Business News Source

  • Home
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • MONEY
  • POLITICS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • US
  • About/Contact

Scientists baffled: Images reveal mysterious ‘continent-sized’ blobs inside the Earth | Science | News

May 22, 2022 by Staff Reporter

For the first time, scientists have managed to get a look at the mystery blobs that have left geologists baffled for decades. Known as an ultra-low velocity zone, these objects in trapped inside the mantle of the Earth, about 3,000 kilometres (1,864 miles) below the surface. Officially known as Large Low-Shear-Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs), these blobs are massive, each the size of a continent, and 100 times taller than Mount Everest.

Until recently, scientists have known very little about these blobs, why they exist, and why they have odd shapes of varying heights.

At such depths, researchers have had difficulty studies these bodies, only aware of its existence because of the way they slow down seismic waves that pass through them.

Until now, images of these LLSVPs have been grainy and difficult to study, but the new study offers the clearest look at one of the blobs yet.

Lead author Zhi Li, PhD student at Cambridge’s Department of Earth Sciences said: “Of all Earth’s deep interior features, these are the most fascinating and complex.

“We’ve now got the first solid evidence to show their internal structure – it’s a real milestone in deep earth seismology.”

Mr Li and his team used the latest in computational modelling techniques to produce the image, using high-frequency signals to record seismic waves that passed through the blob.

The signals provided the researchers with a kilometre-scale look at the blob, a far better resolution image than they had previously.

According to co-author Dr Kuangdai Leng, who developed the methods while at the University of Oxford: “We are really pushing the limits of modern high-performance computing for elastodynamic simulations, taking advantage of wave symmetries unnoticed or unused before.”

READ MORE: Scientists baffled as two mysterious ‘continent-sized’ blobs found

Sujoy Mukhopadhyay at the University of California, Davis highlighted the importance of understanding these lumps, saying: “if these things are truly ancient, it tells us something about how our planet formed”.

According to Qian Yuan, a PhD student in geodynamics at Arizona State University (ASU), Tempe, these anomalies are “the largest thing in the Earth’s mantle.”

While experts have theorised that these blobs were by crystallising out of the depths of Earth’s primordial magma ocean, Mr Qian believes that lumps are actually the remains of Theia itself.

>>> ad: Don't Miss Today's BEST Amazon Deals!
Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: TECH/SCIENCE

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Health News Roundup: FDA says found possible carcinogen in certain samples of Merck’s Januvia; Escaping Shanghai’s COVID lockdown only to get trapped in Hainan and more
  • Risk Factors Worsening for Adults With Cardiovascular Disease – Consumer Health News
  • First-home buyers: Should you buy now or wait for prices to fall further?
  • Secretary Blinken Leads Handover of Medical Supplies as U.S. Covid-19 Aid for the Philippines Exceeds $50M > U.S. Indo-Pacific Command > 2015
  • Marshall faculty, alumni play key roles in the 2022 National Youth Science Camp

Recent Comments

    Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | About/ Contact
    As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

    Copyright © 2022 · NEWS 2 BUSINESS . Log in