Eli5: How does the core of the Earth (or any planets) not cool and still give off tons of heat energy? Where is this energy coming from?

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Eli5: How does the core of the Earth (or any planets) not cool and still give off tons of heat energy? Where is this energy coming from?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

I had also read that the pull of gravity by the moon and sun cyclically deforms the earth, creating internal friction that also contributes to added heating. Somebody more knowledgeable on the topic can expand on this.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I had also read that the pull of gravity by the moon and sun cyclically deforms the earth, creating internal friction that also contributes to added heating. Somebody more knowledgeable on the topic can expand on this.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The core is 19,400,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms. That does cool down if you give it a few billion years.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The core is 19,400,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms. That does cool down if you give it a few billion years.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’d say the earths impact with the moon billions of years ago would be the attributing factor for the amount of heat it’s been able to hold in comparison to the other planets that are pretty much dead or dying

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’d say the earths impact with the moon billions of years ago would be the attributing factor for the amount of heat it’s been able to hold in comparison to the other planets that are pretty much dead or dying

Anonymous 0 Comments

Since space is mostly empty space, the process of losing heat is very slow. Typically heat transfer happens through conduction and convection, that is a warmer object is bleeding off heat to surrounding matter, which is typically a gas or fluid surrounding it. In space, this effectively doesn’t happen, since there’s very little matter in between bodies to transfer that heat to. So most of the heat is transferred through infrared radiation. This is a much slower process than the other two, and in the case of planets their cooled outer shell acts as further insulation which means that the rate at which a planetary body cools gets slower as the outside is cooling. In the case of Earth there’s even more insulation because of the atmosphere.

So the Earth is cooling, just very very slowly.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Since space is mostly empty space, the process of losing heat is very slow. Typically heat transfer happens through conduction and convection, that is a warmer object is bleeding off heat to surrounding matter, which is typically a gas or fluid surrounding it. In space, this effectively doesn’t happen, since there’s very little matter in between bodies to transfer that heat to. So most of the heat is transferred through infrared radiation. This is a much slower process than the other two, and in the case of planets their cooled outer shell acts as further insulation which means that the rate at which a planetary body cools gets slower as the outside is cooling. In the case of Earth there’s even more insulation because of the atmosphere.

So the Earth is cooling, just very very slowly.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The planet is cooling off, although very slowly. Heat in the inner planet has three sources:

Original heat present when the planet formed

Heat given off via radioactive decay

Heat given off when liquid outer core iron crystallizes at the inner/outer core boundary.

Eventually the latter two will subside and Earth will slowly cool down permanently.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The planet is cooling off, although very slowly. Heat in the inner planet has three sources:

Original heat present when the planet formed

Heat given off via radioactive decay

Heat given off when liquid outer core iron crystallizes at the inner/outer core boundary.

Eventually the latter two will subside and Earth will slowly cool down permanently.