Geo-neutrinos and the Radioactive Power of the Earth
Steve Dye

TL;DR
This paper discusses how geo-neutrino measurements help estimate Earth's radiogenic heat, providing insights into its thermal history and constraining geological models.
Contribution
It introduces the use of geo-neutrino observations to measure Earth's radiogenic heat and compare it with Earth models, advancing understanding of Earth's thermal evolution.
Findings
Geo-neutrino measurements estimate Earth's radiogenic heat at 20% of total heat flow.
Recent observations in Japan and Italy are consistent and mildly exclude the lowest model predictions.
Future measurements could improve constraints on Earth's thermal and compositional models.
Abstract
Chemical and physical Earth models agree little as to the radioactive power of the planet. Each predicts a range of radioactive powers, overlapping slightly with the other at about 24 TW, and together spanning 14-46 TW. Approximately 20 % of this radioactive power (3-8 TW) escapes to space in the form of geo-neutrinos. The remaining 11-38 TW heats the planet with significant geo-dynamical consequences, appearing as the radiogenic component of the 43-49 TW surface heat flow. The non-radiogenic component of the surface heat flow (5-38 TW) is presumably primordial, a legacy of the formation and early evolution of the planet. A constraining measurement of radiogenic heating provides insights to the thermal history of the Earth and potentially discriminates chemical and physical Earth models. Radiogenic heating in the planet primarily springs from unstable nuclides of uranium, thorium, and…
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