No. The inner and outer core are both composed primarily of iron and nickel, but the outer core is liquid and surrounds the inner core. The inner core is the innermost layer of Earth and is kept solid by the enormous pressure.
The Earth's core is divided into two parts: the inner core and the outer core. The inner core is solid iron and nickel, while the outer core is liquid iron and nickel.
the solid inner core and the liquid outer core
The outer core is thicker than the inner core. The outer core is about 2,260 kilometers thick, while the inner core is approximately 1,220 kilometers thick.
Yes, Inter core has more pressure than outer core and that's why outer core is solid, because there is not enough pressure in outer core.
It lets all nodes connected to the network get full available bandwidth on the network.
core network is for swithiching of calls,routing,authentication,providing services like sms,prepaid,rbt etc but access network is used to provide network access to end users through wireless or wired medium
A core network is used for holding information that is not only vital, but required across an array of sub networks. A core network is useful since information can be consolidated and backed up rather easily in this manner, and access to said information is simpler.
A GPRS core network allows for mobile networks to transmit data to the internet. A GPRS network also offers support to companies regarding billing and cell phone tracking.
The speed at which it establish a network connection.
Yes it can and the reason is because of redundancy provides for a backup route or network connection in case of a link failure. The core hardware is typically interconnected to all distribution network hardware and the objective is to ensure that the data traffic continues for the whole network even if a core networking device or link fails.
network topology
The core must be able to quickly forward data to other parts of the network.
High-speed backbone
One very large controlling network
You narrow the scope
network is based on which topology?