Abstract

According to the respective restoring forces of self-gravitation, Coriolis force, and inertial coupling at the boundaries, the free oscillations of a contained fluid can be classified into gravitational, inertial, and toroidal oscillations. For the outer core of the Earth, however, due to the interplay of rotation, elasticity, and self-gravitation, the gravitational undertones and inertial oscillations are not distinguishable. Both have eigenfunctions consisting of spheroidal and toroidal parts of about equal amplitude, and exist in alternating allowed and forbidden zones depending on the gravitational stability of the outer core. The forbidden zones for a stable core correspond to the allowed zones for an unstable core, while for a neutrally stratified core there appear to be no forbidden zones. The eigenfunction of a toroidal mode consists essentially of a primary toroidal field and a secondary spheroidal component of the order of ellipticity, coupled at the outer core-mantle or outer core-inner core boundary. Therefore, in general, toroidal core modes appear in doublets Smn+1Tmn and Smn-1Tmn with degenerate frequency equal to 2m/n(n+l) times the angular frequency of rotation of the Earth. The ellipticities of the outer core boundaries are responsible for the removal of the degeneracy.

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