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Shadow zone

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Seismic shadow zone (from USGS)

A seismic shadow zone is an area of the Earth's surface where seismographs cannot detect an earthquake after its seismic waves have passed through the Earth. When an earthquake occurs, seismic waves radiate out spherically from the earthquake's focus. The primary seismic waves are refracted by the liquid outer core of the Earth and are not detected between 104° and 140° (between approximately 11,570 and 15,570 km (7,190 and 9,670 miles)*) from the epicenter. The secondary seismic waves cannot pass through the liquid outer core and are not detected more than 104° (approximately 11,570 km (7,190 miles)*) from the epicenter.[1][2]

The reason for this is that the velocity for P-waves and S-waves is governed by both the different properties in the material which they travel through and the different mathematical relationships they share in each case. The three properties are: incompressibility (), density () and rigidity (). P-wave velocity is equal to where as S-wave velocity is equal to and so S-wave velocity is entirely dependent on the rigidity of the material it travels through. Liquids, however, have zero rigidity, hence always making the S-wave velocity overall zero and as such S-waves lose all velocity when travelling through a liquid. P-waves, however, are only partially dependent on rigidity and as such still maintain some velocity (if greatly reduced) when travelling through a liquid.[3] Analysis of the seismology of various recorded earthquakes and their shadow zones, led geologist Richard Oldham to deduce in 1906 the liquid nature of the Earth's outer core.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Earthquake Glossary - shadow zone". USGS. Retrieved May 8, 2011.
  2. ^ "PX266 Geophysics - Extra Material - Seismic shadow zones". University of Warwick. Retrieved May 8, 2011.
  3. ^ Armstrong, D.; Mugglestone, F.; Richards, R.; Stratton, F. (2008). "OCR AS and A2 Geology" (Document). Pearson Education. p. 14.{{cite document}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  4. ^ Bragg, William (1936). "Tribute to Deceased Fellows of the Royal Society". Science. 84 (2190). American Association for the Advancement of Science: 544. Bibcode:1936Sci....84..539B. doi:10.1126/science.84.2190.539. ISSN 0036-8075.