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Speeding Up Earth

Discover how the moon’s gravity pulls on Earth, affecting rotation rates and altered by human-made reservoirs.

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Days are not as long as they should be. Scientists know that the moon’s gravity pulls on Earth and slows its rotation, so that yearly, the days get about 20 millionths of a second longer. But Benjamin Chao has discovered a countervailing effect, one that shortens the day by about .2 millionths of a second per year. Chao, a geophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, says humans have redistributed enough mass on Earth to affect the planet’s rotation rate. How? By storing water in artificial reservoirs, most of which have been built in the past four decades.

Chao estimates that over 2 quadrillion gallons of water that would otherwise be spread evenly in oceans are in reservoirs, lowering sea levels by more than an inch. To estimate the effects of this on Earth’s rotation, Chao assessed the capacity of 88 reservoirs worldwide that hold more than 2 trillion gallons, ...

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