COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE
 
 

Earth is a terrestrial planet, meaning that it is a rocky body, rather than a gas giant like Jupiter. It is the largest of the four solar terrestrial planets, both in terms of size and mass. Of these four planets, Earth also has the highest density, the highest surface gravity and the strongest magnetic field.

Shape
 

     Figure of the Earth
 

Size comparison of inner planets (left to right): Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.

 

The Earth's shape is very close to an oblate spheroid — a rounded shape with a bulge around the equator — although the precise shape (the geoid) varies from this by up to 100 meters. The average diameter of the reference spheroid is about 12,742 km. More approximately the distance is 40,000 km/p because the meter was originally defined as 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the north pole through Paris, France.

 

The rotation of the Earth creates the equatorial bulge so that the equatorial diameter is 43 km larger than the pole to pole diameter. The largest local deviations in the rocky surface of the Earth are Mount Everest (8,848 m above local sea level) and the Mariana Trench (10,911 m below local sea level). Hence compared to a perfect ellipsoid, the Earth has a tolerance of about one part in about 584, or 0.17%, which is less than the 0.22% tolerance allowed in billiard balls. Because of the bulge, the feature farthest from the center of the Earth is actually Mount Chimborazo in Ecuador.

Chemical composition

Abundance of elements on Earth

F. W. Clarke's Table of Crust Oxides

Compound

Formula

Composition

silica

SiO2

59.71%

alumina

Al2O3

15.41%

lime

CaO

4.90%

Magnesia

MgO

4.36%

sodium oxide

Na2O

3.55%

iron(II)oxide

FeO

3.52%

potassium oxide

K2O

2.80%

iron(III) oxide

Fe2O3

2.63%

water

H2O

1.52%

titanium dioxide

TiO2

0.60%

phosphorus pentoxide

P2O5

0.22%

Total

99.22%

 

The mass of the Earth is approximately 5.98×1024 kg. It is composed mostly of iron (32.1%), oxygen (30.1%), silicon (15.1%), magnesium (13.9%), sulfur (2.9%), nickel (1.8%), calcium (1.5%), and aluminium (1.4%); with the remaining 1.2% consisting of trace amounts of other elements. Due to mass segregation, the core region is believed to be primarily composed of iron (88.8%), with smaller amounts of nickel (5.8%), sulfur (4.5%), and less than 1% trace elements.

 

The geochemist F. W. Clarke calculated that a little more than 47% of the Earth's crust consists of oxygen. The more common rock constituents of the Earth's crust are nearly all oxides; chlorine, sulfur and fluorine are the only important exceptions to this and their total amount in any rock is usually much less than 1%. The principal oxides are silica, alumina, iron oxides, lime, magnesia, potash and soda. The silica functions principally as an acid, forming silicates, and all the commonest minerals of igneous rocks are of this nature. From a computation based on 1,672 analyses of all kinds of rocks, Clarke deduced that 99.22% were composed of 11 oxides (see the table at right.) All the other constituents occur only in very small quantities.

 
Internal structure
 

     Structure of the Earth
 

Earth cutaway from core to exosphere. Not to scale.

 

The interior of the Earth, like that of the other terrestrial planets, is chemically divided into layers. The Earth has an outer silicate solid crust, a highly viscous mantle, a liquid outer core that is much less viscous than the mantle, and a solid inner core. The crust is separated from the mantle by the Mohorovicic discontinuity, and the thickness of the crust varies: averaging 6 km under the oceans and 30–50 km on the continents.


The geologic component layers of the Earth are at the following depths below the surface:


Depth
km

Layer

Density
g/cm³

0–60

Lithosphere(locally varies between 5 and 200 km)

0–35

...Crust (locally varies between 5 and 70 km)

2.2–2.9

35–60

Uppermost part of mantle

3.4–4.4

35–2890

Mantle

3.4–5.6

100–700

Asthenosphere

2890–5100

Outer core

9.9–12.2

5100–6378

Inner core

12.8–13.1

 

The internal heat of the planet is most likely produced by the radioactive decay of potassium-40, uranium-238 and thorium-232 isotopes. All three have half-life decay periods of more than a billion years. At the center of the planet, the temperature may be up to 7,000 K and the pressure could reach 360 GPa. A portion of the core's thermal energy is transported toward the crust by Mantle plumes; a form of convection consisting of upwellings of higher-temperature rock. These plumes can produce hotspots and flood basalts.

 

Source:-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth