Abstract

AbstractThe rate that Earth's inner core rotates relative to the mantle and crust has been debated for decades. Nonrotational processes, including internal deformation and flow in the outer core, have also been proposed to explain observed seismic changes. The observed changes thus far have been so inconsistent and weak as to hamper convincing interpretation. Here, we examine waves backscattered from within the inner core, which can more robustly evaluate rotation, from two nuclear tests 3 years apart in Novaya Zemlya, Russia. We have extended our previous analysis of these explosions using precise station corrections and the full Large Aperture Seismic Array, thus revealing how the time shifts depend on slowness and lag time and halving our rotation rate estimate. Our derived 0.07°/year inner core superrotation rate from 1971 to 1974 is more robust and slower than most previous estimates and may require interesting reinterpretations of localized signals previously interpreted as inner core rotation.

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