You would burn up due to the hot magma core before you even get there. So it would be pleasant (except for the fact that you die).
The centre of the earth is very hot.
According to scientists it would be a bunch of lava, and would most likely look like the inside of a volcano but no one knows for sure.
the rain does not sink down to the centre of earth because it the centre of earth and nothing could be sink down to the centre
u would die in a small bright space while being vaporized into nothing
"Would you like to go on a journey with me?"
As Earth is a sphere, we can consider any point on Earth to be a centre. Just like we can point out any point on the Basketball as it's centre. So it can be your country or the Pacific :)
I would feel like the journey is worthless and meaningless
I would feel like the journey is worthless and meaningless
The Surface Of The Earth (The Ground) and though the centre of the Earth. Hey are pressure waves like sound waves.
when object fall free like at centre of earth that we call freefall with zero gravity.
Theoretically, yes. However, this would be impossible to do. First, you would have to dig through several miles of solid rock under the topsoil of the earth that we call the 'Crust'. Below this for a couple of thousand (!) miles is liquid magma (liquid rock) that could not be dug through as its temperature is incredibly high and would melt or burn any device that attempted to dig through it. It is also at a very high pressure because of gravity pulling it in towards the centre of the earth. It is this magma that we see as 'lava' when a volcano erupts. Such liquid rock destroys everything in its path. However, when on the surface it is much cooler than it would be when buried underound, as it is not under extreme pressure which causes it to heat up even more. So you could imagine what it must be like when buried under high pressure. And you have to travel through this. On your journey to the centre of the earth you would then reach the core which is solid iron or iron/nickel mixture, again a thousand or so miles in diameter. This would also be under immense pressure and incredibly hot, AND you would have to drill through the thousand miles or so of solid iron to get to the centre. The journey 'down' to the centre of earth of course would be easy once the hole had been made because you would fall down under the force of gravity until you reached the exact centre of the earth when you would become weightless (if you were still alive at the temperatures, pressure, and after having fallen a few thousand miles). But then, you would have to endure the same journey in reverse as you climbed back out the thousands of miles through to the other side of the earth up to the surface again - but this time against gravity which was constantly trying to pull you back. So, despite it being a fanciful idea - in practice it would never happen. If you are desperate to try this, then hop on a space ship, find yourself a small solid asteroid around a mile or less across, and with suitable drilling gear it just might be possible - but because of the structure of the inside of the earth here it would be totallly impossible.
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