Can a convecting magma ocean offer a solution to the puzzling case of core convection in early earth?
Urmi Dutta, Chris J. Davies, Ashley P. Willis

TL;DR
This study models the fluid dynamics of a magma ocean above Earth's core to explore how it could have driven early magnetic field generation, addressing the puzzle of early Earth's magnetism despite a young inner core.
Contribution
The paper introduces numerical simulations of magma ocean and core convection, highlighting the potential of magma oceans to generate early Earth's magnetic field.
Findings
Magma ocean flow can drive significant core flow velocities.
Core and ocean flow components are of similar magnitude, supporting dynamo action.
A linear relationship exists between flow velocity ratios and Nusselt number differences.
Abstract
Convective flow in Earth's iron-rich liquid core drives self-sustained dynamo action, generating Earth's magnetic field, which is strongest among all terrestrial planets of the solar system. Rock records show that this magnetic field has been operative in Earth for at least 3.4 billion years (b.y). However, advanced high pressure experiments have revised the value of the thermal conductivity of the outer core, which implies an age for the inner core of less than 1 b.y., when compositional convection begins. This creates a puzzle, with a gap between the observations of an early magnetic field on Earth and the young inner core. Previous work has suggested that the pre-inner core dynamo could have been generated in a magma ocean (MO) at the base of the mantle; however, the fluid dynamics of this scenario have received little attention. Here we numerically model the non-magnetic rotating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Geological and Geochemical Analysis
