IT SOMETIMES feels as though some months go by faster
than others, but November 2009 really did. Events in the Southern Ocean
conspired to make the Earth spin ever-so-slightly faster, shortening
half of the days in the month by 0.1 milliseconds each.
Different
factors affect how fast the Earth spins. For instance, if the winds
that whip around the planet slow down, the Earth spins faster to
conserve angular momentum.
There
was a more down-to-earth cause in November 2009, however. The Antarctic
Circumpolar Current is a powerful ocean current that rings the
continent. Stephen Marcus and his colleagues at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California and at the Institute of Earth Physics of Paris in France noticed that it slowed abruptly on 8 November 2009, only to speed up two weeks later.
Precise
day-length data revealed that the changes immediately caused the Earth
to spin faster, shortening each day by 0.1 milliseconds. Like the
currents, day length returned to normal on 20 November (Geophysical Research Letters, DOI: 10.1029/2011gl050671).
This
is the first time we have seen a rapid change in the oceans that is
large enough to affect the Earth's rotation, says Marcus. The event is
worth noting as the Antarctic currents directly impact the health of
the ice sheets.
No
one knows for sure why the currents slowed, but Marcus and his
colleagues note that it happened in lockstep with atmospheric changes.
Two days before the currents slowed, regional winds that move in the
same direction slowed too. Two days after the winds went back to
normal, so did the currents. Winds help drive currents, so that may not
seem surprising. But it's unusual to see such a large response, says
Marcus.
Tong
Lee, also at JPL, believes that a slightly shifted El NiƱo may be to
blame for the drop in wind speed. That, in turn, could come back to the
environmental zeitgeist: models suggest that such shifts will happen
more frequently as a result of climate change.
This
isn't the only way that climate change may affect Earth's spin. Models
suggest that rising sea levels will shift water towards the poles,
drawing mass in closer to the Earth's axis and making it spin faster
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