The crust occupies less than 1% of Earth's volume.
The Earth's inner and outer core together make up about 15% of the planet's total volume. The outer core is liquid and comprises approximately 55% of this core volume, while the inner core is solid and accounts for the remaining 45%. In terms of mass, the core constitutes about one-third of the Earth's total mass.
No. The combined thickness of the inner and outer core is about 3500 to 3520 kilometers, out of the Earth's total radius of about 6370 kilometers. This means that the combination of inner solid core and liquid outer core has about 16% of the Earth's volume. *The reference to "1% of the Earth's volume" may refer to the Earth's crust, which has about "1% of the Earth's total mass."
False. The earth has a radius of 6,371 km. As such it has a volume of:1.083x1012 km3 The Earth's core has a radius of 3400 km. As such it has a volume of 0.164x1012 km3 1.083x1012 / 0.164x1012 = approx. 6.6 Therefore the Earth's core composes approximately 1/6th the total volume of Earth.
The layer of the Earth that contains most of the Earth's volume is the mantle. It is located between the Earth's crust and the core and is composed of hot, semi-solid rock.
The Earth is composed of four main layers: the inner core, outer core, mantle, and crust. The inner core is a solid ball of iron and nickel, while the outer core is a liquid layer. The mantle is a solid, rocky layer that makes up the majority of the Earth's volume, and the crust is the thin outermost layer that we live on.
The Earth's inner and outer core together make up about 15% of the planet's total volume. The outer core is liquid and comprises approximately 55% of this core volume, while the inner core is solid and accounts for the remaining 45%. In terms of mass, the core constitutes about one-third of the Earth's total mass.
No. The combined thickness of the inner and outer core is about 3500 to 3520 kilometers, out of the Earth's total radius of about 6370 kilometers. This means that the combination of inner solid core and liquid outer core has about 16% of the Earth's volume. *The reference to "1% of the Earth's volume" may refer to the Earth's crust, which has about "1% of the Earth's total mass."
to the US Geological Survey, the mantle is 84% of Earth's volume. The core is 15%, which doesn't leave much for the crust.
for my scientififc research I have learned htat I have no clue :)
False. The earth has a radius of 6,371 km. As such it has a volume of:1.083x1012 km3 The Earth's core has a radius of 3400 km. As such it has a volume of 0.164x1012 km3 1.083x1012 / 0.164x1012 = approx. 6.6 Therefore the Earth's core composes approximately 1/6th the total volume of Earth.
The layer of the Earth that contains most of the Earth's volume is the mantle. It is located between the Earth's crust and the core and is composed of hot, semi-solid rock.
crust
The Earth's core makes up about 15 of the planet's total volume.
It is impossible to mine Earth's core.
The Earth is composed of four main layers: the inner core, outer core, mantle, and crust. The inner core is a solid ball of iron and nickel, while the outer core is a liquid layer. The mantle is a solid, rocky layer that makes up the majority of the Earth's volume, and the crust is the thin outermost layer that we live on.
The mantle is the largest zone of interior of the Earth by volume. It makes up about 84% of Earth's volume and extends from the base of the crust to the outer core.
The core consists of an inner solid core with a radius of 760 miles, and an outer liquid core with a total diameter of 1400 miles. Applying the 4/3pi(r3) volume formula to these values we get: 1.8 billion cubic miles for the solid core and 11.7 billion cubic miles for the total outer and inner core volume. This compares to a total volume for the earth of 32.5 billion cubic miles.