Earth mass


Earth mass is the unit of mass equal to that of Earth.
The current best estimate for Earth mass is, with a standard uncertainty of . The recommended value in 1976 was. It is equivalent to an average density of.
The Earth mass is a standard unit of mass in astronomy that is used to indicate the masses of other planets, including rocky terrestrial planets and exoplanets. One Solar mass is close to 333,000 Earth masses. The Earth mass excludes the mass of the Moon. The mass of the Moon is about 1.2% of that of the Earth, so that the mass of the Earth+Moon system is close to.
Most of the mass is accounted for by iron and oxygen, magnesium and silicon, calcium, aluminium and nickel.
Precise measurement of the Earth mass is difficult, as it is equivalent to measuring the gravitational constant, which is the fundamental physical constant known with least accuracy, due to the relative weakness of the gravitational force. The mass of the Earth was first measured with any accuracy in the Schiehallion experiment in the 1770s, and within 1% of the modern value in the Cavendish experiment of 1798.

Unit of mass in astronomy

The mass of Earth is estimated to be:
which can be expressed in terms of solar mass as:
The ratio of Earth mass to lunar mass has been measured to great accuracy. The current best estimate is:
ObjectEarth mass Ref
Moon
Sun
Mercury0.0553
Venus0.815
Earth1By definition
Mars0.107
Jupiter317.8
Saturn95.2
Uranus14.5
Neptune17.1
Pluto0.0025
Eris0.0027
Gliese 667 Cc3.8
Kepler-442b1.0 – 8.2

The G product for the Earth is called the geocentric gravitational constant and equals. It is determined using laser ranging data from Earth-orbiting satellites, such as LAGEOS-1. The G product can also be calculated by observing the motion of the Moon or the period of a pendulum at various elevations. These methods are less precise than observations of artificial satellites.
The relative uncertainty of the geocentric gravitational constant is just, i.e. times smaller than the relative uncertainty for itself. can be found out only by dividing the G product by G, and G is known only to a relative uncertainty of , so will have the same uncertainty at best. For this reason and others, astronomers prefer to use the un-reduced G product, or mass ratios rather than mass in kilograms when referencing and comparing planetary objects.

Composition

Earth's density varies considerably, between less than in the upper crust to as much as in the inner core. The Earth's core accounts for 15% of Earth's volume but more than 30% of the mass, the mantle for 84% of the volume and close to 70% of the mass, while the crust accounts for less than 1% of the mass. About 90% of the mass of the Earth is composed of the iron–nickel alloy in the core, and the silicon dioxides and magnesium oxide in the mantle and crust. Minor contributions are from iron oxide, aluminium oxide and calcium oxide, besides numerous trace elements. Carbon accounts for 0.03%, water for 0.02%, and the atmosphere for about one part per million.

History of measurement

The mass of Earth is measured indirectly by determining other quantities such as Earth's density, gravity, or gravitational constant. The first measurement in the 1770s Schiehallion experiment resulted in a value about 20% too low. The Cavendish experiment of 1798 found the correct value within 1%. Uncertainty was reduced to about 0.2% by the 1890s, to 0.1% by 1930.
The figure of the Earth has been known to better than four significant digits since the 1960s, so that since that time, the uncertainty of the Earth mass is determined essentially by the uncertainty in measuring the gravitational constant. Relative uncertainty was cited at 0.06% in the 1970s, and at 0.01% by the 2000s. The current relative uncertainty of 10−4 amounts to in absolute terms, of the order of the mass of a minor planet.

Early estimates

Before the direct measurement of the gravitational constant, estimates of the Earth mass were limited to estimating Earth's mean density from observation of the crust and estimates on Earth's volume. Estimates on the volume of the Earth in the 17th century were based on a circumference estimate of to the degree of latitude, corresponding to a radius of 5,500 km, resulting in an estimated volume of about one third smaller than the correct value.
The average density of the Earth was not accurately known. Earth was assumed to consist either mostly of water or mostly of igneous rock, both suggesting average densities far too low, consistent with a total mass of the order of. Isaac Newton estimated, without access to reliable measurement, that the density of Earth would be five or six times as great as the density of water, which is surprisingly accurate. Newton under-estimated the Earth's volume by about 30%, so that his estimate would be roughly equivalent to.
In the 18th century, knowledge of Newton's law of universal gravitation permitted indirect estimates on the mean density of the Earth, via estimates of the gravitational constant. Early estimates on the mean density of the Earth were made by observing the slight deflection of a pendulum near a mountain, as in the Schiehallion experiment. Newton considered the experiment in Principia, but pessimistically concluded that the effect would be too small to be measurable.
An expedition from 1737 to 1740 by Pierre Bouguer and Charles Marie de La Condamine attempted to determine the density of Earth by measuring the period of a pendulum as a function of elevation. The experiments were carried out in Ecuador and Peru, on Pichincha Volcano and mount Chimborazo. Bouguer wrote in a 1749 paper that they had been able to detect a deflection of 8 seconds of arc, the accuracy was not enough for a definite estimate on the mean density of the Earth, but Bouguer stated that it was at least sufficient to prove that the Earth was not hollow.

Schiehallion experiment

That a further attempt should be made on the experiment was proposed to the Royal Society in 1772 by Nevil Maskelyne, Astronomer Royal. He suggested that the experiment would "do honour to the nation where it was made" and proposed Whernside in Yorkshire, or the Blencathra-Skiddaw massif in Cumberland as suitable targets. The Royal Society formed the Committee of Attraction to consider the matter, appointing Maskelyne, Joseph Banks and Benjamin Franklin amongst its members. The Committee despatched the astronomer and surveyor Charles Mason to find a suitable mountain.
After a lengthy search over the summer of 1773, Mason reported that the best candidate was Schiehallion, a peak in the central Scottish Highlands. The mountain stood in isolation from any nearby hills, which would reduce their gravitational influence, and its symmetrical east–west ridge would simplify the calculations. Its steep northern and southern slopes would allow the experiment to be sited close to its centre of mass, maximising the deflection effect. Nevil Maskelyne, Charles Hutton and Reuben Burrow performed the experiment, completed by 1776. Hutton reported that the mean density of the Earth was estimated at that of Schiehallion mountain. This corresponds to a mean density about 4 higher than that of water, about 20% below the modern value, but still significantly larger than the mean density of normal rock, suggesting for the first time that the interior of the Earth might be substantially composed of metal. Hutton estimated this metallic portion to occupy some of the diameter of the Earth. With a value for the mean density of the Earth, Hutton was able to set some values to Jérôme Lalande's planetary tables, which had previously only been able to express the densities of the major Solar System objects in relative terms.

Cavendish experiment

Henry Cavendish was the first to attempt to measure the gravitational attraction between two bodies directly in the laboratory. Earth's mass could be then found by combining two equations; Newton's second law, and Newton's law of universal gravitation.
In modern notation, the mass of the Earth is derived from the gravitational constant and the mean Earth radius by
Where gravity of Earth, "little g", is
Cavendish found a mean density of, about 1% below the modern value.

19th century

While the mass of the Earth is implied by stating the Earth's radius and density, it was not usual to state the absolute mass explicitly prior to the introduction of scientific notation using powers of 10 in the later 19th century, because the absolute numbers would have been too awkward. Ritchie gives the mass of the Earth's atmosphere as "11,456,688,186,392,473,000 lbs." and states that "compared with the weight of the globe this mighty sum dwindles to insignificance".
Absolute figures for the mass of the Earth are cited only beginning in the second half of the 19th century, mostly in popular rather than expert literature. An early such figure was given as "14 quadrillion pounds" in Masius. Beckett cites the "weight of the earth" as "5842 quintillion tons" . The "mass of the earth in gravitational measure" is stated as "9.81996×63709802" in The New Volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica with a "logarithm of earth's mass" given as "14.600522" . This is the gravitational parameter in m3·s−2 and not the absolute mass.
Experiments involving pendulums continued to be performed in the first half of the 19th century. By the second half of the century, these were outperformed by repetitions of the Cavendish experiment, and the modern value of G is still derived from high-precision repetitions of the Cavendish experiment.
In 1821, Francesco Carlini determined a density value of ρ = through measurements made with pendulums in the Milan area. This value was refined in 1827 by Edward Sabine to, and then in 1841 by Carlo Ignazio Giulio to. On the other hand, George Biddell Airy sought to determine ρ by measuring the difference in the period of a pendulum between the surface and the bottom of a mine.
The first tests took place in Cornwall between 1826 and 1828. The experiment was a failure due to a fire and a flood. Finally, in 1854, Airy got the value by measurements in a coal mine in Harton, Sunderland. Airy's method assumed that the Earth had a spherical stratification. Later, in 1883, the experiments conducted by Robert von Sterneck at different depths in mines of Saxony and Bohemia provided the average density values ρ between 5.0 and. This led to the concept of isostasy, which limits the ability to accurately measure ρ, by either the deviation from vertical of a plumb line or using pendulums. Despite the little chance of an accurate estimate of the average density of the Earth in this way, Thomas Corwin Mendenhall in 1880 realized a gravimetry experiment in Tokyo and at the top of Mount Fuji. The result was ρ =.

Modern value

The uncertainty in the modern value for the Earth's mass has been entirely due to the uncertainty in the gravitational constant G since at least the 1960s. G is notoriously difficult to measure, and some high-precision measurements during the 1980s to 2010s have yielded mutually exclusive results. Sagitov based on the measurement of G by Heyl and Chrzanowski cited a value of .
Accuracy has improved only slightly since then. Most modern measurements are repetitions of the Cavendish experiment, with results ranging between 6.672 and 6.676 ×10−11  m3 kg−1 s−2 in results reported since the 1980s, although the 2014 NIST recommended value is close to 6.674×10−11  m3 kg−1 s−2 with a relative uncertainty below 10−4. The Astronomical Almanach Online as of 2016 recommends a standard uncertainty of for Earth mass,

Variation

Earth's mass is variable, subject to both gain and loss due to the accretion of in-falling material, including micrometeorites and cosmic dust and the loss of hydrogen and helium gas, respectively. The combined effect is a net loss of material, estimated at per year. This amount is of the total earth mass. The annual net loss is essentially due to 100,000 tons lost due to atmospheric escape, and an average of 45,000 tons gained from in-falling dust and meteorites. This is well within the mass uncertainty of 0.01%, so the estimated value of Earth's mass is unaffected by this factor.
Mass loss is due to atmospheric escape of gases. About 95,000 tons of hydrogen per year and 1,600 tons of helium per year are lost through atmospheric escape. The main factor in mass gain is in-falling material, cosmic dust, meteors, etc. are the most significant contributors to Earth's increase in mass. The sum of material is estimated to be annually, although this can vary significantly; to take an extreme example, the Chicxulub impactor, with a midpoint mass estimate of, added 900 million times that annual dustfall amount to the Earth's mass in a single event.
Additional changes in mass are due to the mass–energy equivalence principle, although these changes are relatively negligible. Mass loss due to the combination of nuclear fission and natural radioactive decay is estimated to amount to 16 tons per year,
An additional loss due to spacecraft on escape trajectories has been estimated at since the mid-20th century. Earth lost about 3473 tons in the initial 53 years of the space age, but the trend is currently decreasing.