Mercury still has a motlen core and a magnetic field. What is the source of this?
Mercury still has a motlen core and a magnetic field. What is the source of this?
Uh, heat?
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The core of Mercury produces heat from radioactive decay just as the Earth.
Perhaps "still" alludes to the idea of the small core of a small planet cooling off more quickly. This would have happened too, if not for the large solar influx reducing the thermal gradient from the core to the surface.
Add in tidal flexure due to Mercury's elliptical orbit very deep in the Sun's gravity well.
And I assume the fact that Mercury has a very large core for the size of the planet.
How about:
When did they start thinking that Mercury has a liquid core?
Has anyone heared any evidence that the core is liquid? If so, what is it?
Thanks. My reasoning is, since Mercury still has a liquid core and Mars doesn't, what's the difference between the two worlds?
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Crustal composition is important but to a fair degree ubiquitous. The point is that typical igneous and metamorphic crustal materials have a non-linear thermal conductivity which typically transmits 3 to 7 times more (phonon) heat flow at temperatures below some 270K than above 500K-600K.