Author Topic: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -  (Read 1216 times)

pep0

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Practical Explanation ( For Example ) :- `1st of all can you tell me every single seconds detail from that time when you born ?? ( i need every seconds detail ?? that what- what you have thought and done on every single second )

can you tell me every single detail of your `1 cheapest Minute Or your whole hour, day, week, month, year or your whole life ??

if you are not able to tell me about this life then what proof do you have that you didn't forget your past ? and that you will not forget this present life in the future ?

that is Fact that Supreme Lord Krishna exists but we posses no such intelligence to understand him.
there is also next life. and i already proved you that no scientist, no politician, no so-called intelligent man in this world is able to understand this Truth. cuz they are imagining. and you cannot imagine what is god, who is god, what is after life etc.
_______
for example :Your father existed before your birth. you cannot say that before your birth your father don,t exists.

So you have to ask from mother, "Who is my father?" And if she says, "This gentleman is your father," then it is all right. It is easy.
Otherwise, if you makes research, "Who is my father?" go on searching for life; you'll never find your father.

( now maybe...maybe you will say that i will search my father from D.N.A, or i will prove it by photo's, or many other thing's which i will get from my mother and prove it that who is my Real father.{ So you have to believe the authority. who is that authority ? she is your mother. you cannot claim of any photo's, D.N.A or many other things without authority ( or ur mother ).

if you will show D.N.A, photo's, and many other proofs from other women then your mother. then what is use of those proofs ??} )

same you have to follow real authority. "Whatever You have spoken, I accept it," Then there is no difficulty. And You are accepted by Devala, Narada, Vyasa, and You are speaking Yourself, and later on, all the acaryas have accepted. Then I'll follow.
I'll have to follow great personalities. The same reason mother says, this gentleman is my father. That's all. Finish business. Where is the necessity of making research? All authorities accept Krsna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. You accept it; then your searching after God is finished.

Why should you waste your time?
_______
all that is you need is to hear from authority ( same like mother ). and i heard this truth from authority " Srila Prabhupada " he is my spiritual master.
im not talking these all things from my own.
___________

in this world no `1 can be Peace full. this is all along Fact.

cuz we all are suffering in this world 4 Problems which are Disease, Old age, Death, and Birth after Birth.

tell me are you really happy ?? you can,t be happy if you will ignore these 4 main problem. then still you will be Forced by Nature.
___________________

if you really want to be happy then follow these 6 Things which are No illicit sex, No gambling, No drugs ( No tea & coffee ), No meat-eating ( No onion & garlic's )

5th thing is whatever you eat `1st offer it to Supreme Lord Krishna. ( if you know it what is Guru parama-para then offer them food not direct Supreme Lord Krishna )

and 6th " Main Thing " is you have to Chant " hare krishna hare krishna krishna krishna hare hare hare rama hare rama rama rama hare hare ".
_______________________________
If your not able to follow these 4 things no illicit sex, no gambling, no drugs, no meat-eating then don,t worry but chanting of this holy name ( Hare Krishna Maha-Mantra ) is very-very and very important.

Chant " hare krishna hare krishna krishna krishna hare hare hare rama hare rama rama rama hare hare " and be happy.

if you still don,t believe on me then chant any other name for 5 Min's and chant this holy name for 5 Min's and you will see effect. i promise you it works And chanting at least 16 rounds ( each round of 108 beads ) of the Hare Krishna maha-mantra daily.
____________
Here is no Question of Holy Books quotes, Personal Experiences, Faith or Belief. i accept that Sometimes Faith is also Blind. Here is already Practical explanation which already proved that every`1 else in this world is nothing more then Busy Foolish and totally idiot.
_________________________
Source(s):
every `1 is already Blind in this world and if you will follow another Blind then you both will fall in hole. so try to follow that person who have Spiritual Eyes who can Guide you on Actual Right Path. ( my Authority & Guide is my Spiritual Master " Srila Prabhupada " )
_____________
if you want to see Actual Purpose of human life then see this link : ( www.asitis.com {Bookmark it })
read it complete. ( i promise only readers of this book that they { he/she } will get every single answer which they want to know about why im in this material world, who im, what will happen after this life, what is best thing which will make Human Life Perfect, and what is perfection of Human Life. ) purpose of human life is not to live like animal cuz every`1 at present time doing 4 thing which are sleeping, eating, sex & fear. purpose of human life is to become freed from Birth after birth, Old Age, Disease, and Death.

RWG

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Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #1 on: August 09, 2014, 07:06:03 am »
Earth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about the planet. For other uses, see Earth (disambiguation).

Earth 
A composite image of Earth produced by NASA.
Orbital characteristics
Epoch J2000.0 [n 1]
Aphelion   152098232 km
(1.01671388 AU) [n 2]
Perihelion   147098290 km
(0.98329134 AU) [n 2]
Semi-major axis   149598261 km
(1.00000261 AU) [1]
Eccentricity   0.01671123[1]
Orbital period   365.256363004 d [2]
(1.000017421 yr)
Average orbital speed   29.78 km/s[3]
(107200 km/h)
Mean anomaly   357.51716 deg[3]
Inclination   7.155 deg to Sun's equator;
1.57869 deg[4] to invariable plane.
Longitude of ascending node   348.73936 deg[3][n 3]
Argument of perihelion   114.20783 deg[3][n 4], precessing at 11.45 "/yr[5]
Satellites   One natural satellite;
1070 operational artificial satellites;
21000 pieces of debris over 10 cm
 in size (as of 24 October 2013).[6]
Physical characteristics
Mean radius   6371.0 km[7]
Equatorial radius   6378.1 km[8][9]
Polar radius   6356.8 km[10]
Flattening   0.0033528[11]
Circumference   40075.017 km (equatorial) [9]
40007.86 km (meridional) [12][13]
Surface area   510072000 km2[14][15][n 5]
 (148940000 km2 (29.2%) land
  361132000 km2 (70.8%) water)
Volume   1.08321×1012 km3[3]
Mass   5.97219×1024 kg[16]
(3.0×10-6 Suns)
Mean density   5.515 g/cm3[3]
Surface gravity   9.798 m/s2[17]
(0.99732 g)
Moment of inertia factor   0.3307[18]
Escape velocity   11.186 km/s[3]
Sidereal rotation period   0.99726968 d[19]
(23h 56m 4.100s)
Equatorial rotation velocity   1,674.4 km/h (465.1 m/s)[20]
Axial tilt   23 deg 26 min 21.4119 s [2]
Albedo   0.367 geometric[3]
0.306 Bond[3]
Surface temp.   min   mean   max
Kelvin   184 K[21]   288 K[22]   330 K[23]
Celsius   −89.2 °C   15 °C   56.7 °C

Atmosphere
Surface pressure   101.325 kPa (at MSL)
Composition   78.08% nitrogen (N2)[3] (dry air)
20.95% oxygen (O2)
0.930% argon
0.039% carbon dioxide[24]
~ 1% water vapor (climate-variable)


Earth, also known as the world,[26] Terra,[28] or Gaia,[30] is the third planet from the Sun, the densest planet in the Solar System, the largest of the Solar System's four terrestrial planets, and the only celestial body known to accommodate life. It is home to millions of species,[31] including billions of humans[32] who depend upon its biosphere and minerals. The Earth's human population is divided among about two hundred independent states that interact through diplomacy, conflict, travel, trade, and media.

According to evidence from sources such as radiometric dating, Earth was formed around four and a half billion years ago. Within its first billion years,[33] life appeared in its oceans and began to affect its atmosphere and surface, promoting the proliferation of aerobic as well as anaerobic organisms and causing the formation of the atmosphere's ozone layer. This layer and Earth's magnetic field block the most life-threatening parts of the Sun's radiation, so life was able to flourish on land as well as in water.[34] Since then, Earth's position in the Solar System, its physical properties and its geological history have allowed life to persist.

Earth's lithosphere is divided into several rigid segments, or tectonic plates, that migrate across the surface over periods of many millions of years. Over 70% percent of Earth's surface is covered with water,[35] with the remainder consisting of continents and islands which together have many lakes and other sources of water that contribute to the hydrosphere. Earth's poles are mostly covered with ice that is the solid ice of the Antarctic ice sheet and the sea ice that is the polar ice packs. The planet's interior remains active, with a solid iron inner core, a liquid outer core that generates the magnetic field, and a thick layer of relatively solid mantle.

Earth gravitationally interacts with other objects in space, especially the Sun and the Moon. During one orbit around the Sun, the Earth rotates about its own axis 366.26 times, creating 365.26 solar days, or one sidereal year.[n 6] The Earth's axis of rotation is tilted 23.4° away from the perpendicular of its orbital plane, producing seasonal variations on the planet's surface with a period of one tropical year (365.24 solar days).[36] The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It began orbiting the Earth about 4.53 billion years ago (bya). The Moon's gravitational interaction with Earth stimulates ocean tides, stabilizes the axial tilt, and gradually slows the planet's rotation.


Contents  [hide]
1 Name and etymology
2 Composition and structure
2.1 Shape
2.2 Chemical composition
2.3 Internal structure
2.4 Heat
2.5 Tectonic plates
2.6 Surface
2.7 Hydrosphere
2.8 Atmosphere
2.8.1 Weather and climate
2.8.2 Upper atmosphere
2.9 Magnetic field
3 Orbit and rotation
3.1 Rotation
3.2 Orbit
3.3 Axial tilt and seasons
4 Habitability
4.1 Biosphere
4.2 Evolution of life
4.3 Natural resources and land use
4.4 Natural and environmental hazards
4.5 Human geography
5 Cultural and historical viewpoint
6 Chronology
6.1 Formation
6.2 Geological history
6.3 Predicted future
7 Moon
8 Asteroids and artificial satellites
9 See also
10 Notes
11 References
12 Further reading
13 External links


Name and etymology
 
NASA's 2014 Earth Day "Global Selfie" mosaic, composed of more than 50,000 photographs from around the world.

The modern English Earth developed from a wide variety of Middle English forms,[38] which derived from an Old English noun most often spelled eorðe.[37] It has cognates in every Germanic language and their proto-Germanic root has been reconstructed as *erþō. In its earliest appearances, eorðe was already being used to translate the many senses of Latin terra and Greek γῆ (gē): the ground,[40] its soil,[42] dry land,[45] the human world,[47] the surface of the world (including the sea),[50] and the globe itself.[52] As with Terra and Gaia, Earth was a personified goddess in Germanic paganism: the Angles were listed by Tacitus among the devotees of Nerthus[53] and later Norse mythology included Jörð, a giantess often given as the mother of Thor.[54]

Originally, earth was written in lowercase and, from early Middle English, its definite sense as "the globe" was expressed as the earth. By early Modern English, many nouns were capitalized and the earth became (and often remained) the Earth, particularly when referenced along with other heavenly bodies. More recently, the name is simply given as Earth, by analogy with the names of the other planets.[37] House styles now vary: Oxford spelling recognizes the lowercase form as the most common, with the capitalized form an acceptable variant. Another convention capitalizes Earth when appearing as a name (e.g., "Earth's atmosphere") but writes it in lowercase when preceded by the (e.g., "the atmosphere of the earth"). It almost always appears in lowercase in colloquial expressions such as "what on earth are you doing?"[55]
Composition and structure
Main article: Earth science
Further information: Earth physical characteristics tables

Earth is a terrestrial planet, meaning that it is a rocky body, rather than a gas giant like Jupiter. It is the largest of the four terrestrial planets in size and mass. Of these four planets, Earth also has the highest density, the highest surface gravity, the strongest magnetic field, and fastest rotation,[56] and is probably the only one with active plate tectonics.[57]
Shape
Main article: Figure of the Earth
 
 Stratocumulus clouds over the Pacific, viewed from orbit

The shape of the Earth approximates an oblate spheroid, a sphere flattened along the axis from pole to pole such that there is a bulge around the equator.[58] This bulge results from the rotation of the Earth, and causes the diameter at the equator to be 43 km (kilometer) larger than the pole-to-pole diameter.[59] For this reason the furthest point on the surface from the Earth's center of mass is the Chimborazo volcano in Ecuador.[60] The average diameter of the reference spheroid is about 12742 km, which is approximately 40,000 km/π, as the meter was originally defined as 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the North Pole through Paris, France.[61]

Local topography deviates from this idealized spheroid, although on a global scale, these deviations are small: Earth has a tolerance of about one part in about 584, or 0.17%, from the reference spheroid, which is less than the 0.22% tolerance allowed in billiard balls.[62] The largest local deviations in the rocky surface of the Earth are Mount Everest (8,848 m above local sea level) and the Mariana Trench (10911 m below local sea level). Due to the equatorial bulge, the surface locations farthest from the center of the Earth are the summits of Mount Chimborazo in Ecuador and Huascarán in Peru.[63][64][65]
Chemical composition of the crust[66]Compound   Formula   Composition
Continental   Oceanic
silica   SiO2   60.2%   48.6%
alumina   Al2O3   15.2%   16.5%
lime   CaO   5.5%   12.3%
magnesia   MgO   3.1%   6.8%
iron(II) oxide   FeO   3.8%   6.2%
sodium oxide   Na2O   3.0%   2.6%
potassium oxide   K2O   2.8%   0.4%
iron(III) oxide   Fe2O3   2.5%   2.3%
water   H2O   1.4%   1.1%
carbon dioxide   CO2   1.2%   1.4%
titanium dioxide   TiO2   0.7%   1.4%
phosphorus pentoxide   P2O5   0.2%   0.3%
Total   99.6%   99.9%

Chemical composition
See also: Abundance of elements on Earth

The mass of the Earth is approximately 5.98×1024 kg. It is composed mostly of iron (32.1%), oxygen (30.1%), silicon (15.1%), magnesium (13.9%), sulfur (2.9%), nickel (1.8%), calcium (1.5%), and aluminium (1.4%); with the remaining 1.2% consisting of trace amounts of other elements. Due to mass segregation, the core region is believed to be primarily composed of iron (88.8%), with smaller amounts of nickel (5.8%), sulfur (4.5%), and less than 1% trace elements.[67]

The geochemist F. W. Clarke calculated that a little more than 47% of the Earth's crust consists of oxygen. The more common rock constituents of the Earth's crust are nearly all oxides; chlorine, sulfur and fluorine are the only important exceptions to this and their total amount in any rock is usually much less than 1%. The principal oxides are silica, alumina, iron oxides, lime, magnesia, potash and soda. The silica functions principally as an acid, forming silicates, and all the commonest minerals of igneous rocks are of this nature. From a computation based on 1,672 analyses of all kinds of rocks, Clarke deduced that 99.22% were composed of 11 oxides (see the table at right), with the other constituents occurring in minute quantities.[68]
Internal structure
Main article: Structure of the Earth

The interior of the Earth, like that of the other terrestrial planets, is divided into layers by their chemical or physical (rheological) properties, but unlike the other terrestrial planets, it has a distinct outer and inner core. The outer layer of the Earth is a chemically distinct silicate solid crust, which is underlain by a highly viscous solid mantle. The crust is separated from the mantle by the Mohorovičić discontinuity, and the thickness of the crust varies: averaging 6 km (kilometers) under the oceans and 30-50 km on the continents. The crust and the cold, rigid, top of the upper mantle are collectively known as the lithosphere, and it is of the lithosphere that the tectonic plates are comprised. Beneath the lithosphere is the asthenosphere, a relatively low-viscosity layer on which the lithosphere rides. Important changes in crystal structure within the mantle occur at 410 and 660 km below the surface, spanning a transition zone that separates the upper and lower mantle. Beneath the mantle, an extremely low viscosity liquid outer core lies above a solid inner core.[69] The inner core may rotate at a slightly higher angular velocity than the remainder of the planet, advancing by 0.1–0.5° per year.[70]
Geologic layers of the Earth[71]

 Earth cutaway from core to exosphere. Not to scale.   Depth[72]
km   Component Layer   Density
g/cm3
0–60   Lithosphere[n 7]   —
0–35   Crust[n 8]   2.2–2.9
35–60   Upper mantle   3.4–4.4
  35–2890   Mantle   3.4–5.6
100–700   Asthenosphere   —
2890–5100   Outer core   9.9–12.2
5100–6378   Inner core   12.8–13.1

Heat

Earth's internal heat comes from a combination of residual heat from planetary accretion (about 20%) and heat produced through radioactive decay (80%).[73] The major heat-producing isotopes in Earth are potassium-40, uranium-238, uranium-235, and thorium-232.[74] At the center, the temperature may be up to 6,000 °C (10,830 °F),[75] and the pressure could reach 360 GPa.[76] Because much of the heat is provided by radioactive decay, scientists believe that early in Earth's history, before isotopes with short half-lives had been depleted, Earth's heat production would have been much higher. This extra heat production, twice present-day at approximately 3 byr,[73] would have increased temperature gradients within Earth, increasing the rates of mantle convection and plate tectonics, and allowing the production of igneous rocks such as komatiites that are not formed today.[77]
Present-day major heat-producing isotopes[78]Isotope   Heat release
W
/
kg isotope   Half-life

years   Mean mantle concentration
kg isotope
/
kg mantle   Heat release
W
/
kg mantle
238U   9.46 × 10−5   4.47 × 109   30.8 × 10−9   2.91 × 10−12
235U   5.69 × 10−4   7.04 × 108   0.22 × 10−9   1.25 × 10−13
232Th   2.64 × 10−5   1.40 × 1010   124 × 10−9   3.27 × 10−12
40K   2.92 × 10−5   1.25 × 109   36.9 × 10−9   1.08 × 10−12


The mean heat loss from Earth is 87 mW m−2, for a global heat loss of 4.42 × 1013 W.[79] A portion of the core's thermal energy is transported toward the crust by mantle plumes; a form of convection consisting of upwellings of higher-temperature rock. These plumes can produce hotspots and flood basalts.[80] More of the heat in Earth is lost through plate tectonics, by mantle upwelling associated with mid-ocean ridges. The final major mode of heat loss is through conduction through the lithosphere, the majority of which occurs in the oceans because the crust there is much thinner than that of the continents.[81]
Tectonic plates
Earth's main plates[82]
Plate name   Area
106 km2
  Pacific Plate   103.3
  African Plate[n 9]   78.0
  North American Plate   75.9
  Eurasian Plate   67.8
  Antarctic Plate   60.9
  Indo-Australian Plate   47.2
  South American Plate   43.6

Main article: Plate tectonics

The mechanically rigid outer layer of the Earth, the lithosphere, is broken into pieces called tectonic plates. These plates are rigid segments that move in relation to one another at one of three types of plate boundaries: Convergent boundaries, at which two plates come together, Divergent boundaries, at which two plates are pulled apart, and Transform boundaries, in which two plates slide past one another laterally. Earthquakes, volcanic activity, mountain-building, and oceanic trench formation can occur along these plate boundaries.[83] The tectonic plates ride on top of the asthenosphere, the solid but less-viscous part of the upper mantle that can flow and move along with the plates,[84] and their motion is strongly coupled with convection patterns inside the Earth's mantle.

As the tectonic plates migrate across the planet, the ocean floor is subducted under the leading edges of the plates at convergent boundaries. At the same time, the upwelling of mantle material at divergent boundaries creates mid-ocean ridges. The combination of these processes continually recycles the oceanic crust back into the mantle. Due to this recycling, most of the ocean floor is less than 100 myr old in age. The oldest oceanic crust is located in the Western Pacific, and has an estimated age of about 200 myr.[85][86] By comparison, the oldest dated continental crust is 4030 myr.[87]

The seven major plates are the Pacific, North American, Eurasian, African, Antarctic, Indo-Australian, and South American. Other notable plates include the Arabian Plate, the Caribbean Plate, the Nazca Plate off the west coast of South America and the Scotia Plate in the southern Atlantic Ocean. The Australian Plate fused with the Indian Plate between 50 and 55 mya. The fastest-moving plates are the oceanic plates, with the Cocos Plate advancing at a rate of 75 mm/year[88] and the Pacific Plate moving 52–69 mm/year. At the other extreme, the slowest-moving plate is the Eurasian Plate, progressing at a typical rate of about 21 mm/year.[89]
Surface
Main articles: Lithosphere, Landform and Extreme points of Earth




Features of Earth's solid surface shown as percentages of the planet's total surface area
  Oceanic ridges (22.1%)
  Ocean basin floors (29.8%)
  Continental mountains (10.3%)
  Continental lowlands (18.9%)
  Continental shelves and
slopes (11.4%)
  Continental rise (3.8%)
  Volcanic island arcs, trenches,
submarine volcanoes, and hills (3.7%)

The Earth's terrain varies greatly from place to place. About 70.8%[14] of the surface is covered by water, with much of the continental shelf below sea level. This equates to 361.132 million km2 (139.43 million sq mi).[90] The submerged surface has mountainous features, including a globe-spanning mid-ocean ridge system, as well as undersea volcanoes,[59] oceanic trenches, submarine canyons, oceanic plateaus and abyssal plains. The remaining 29.2% (148.94 million km2, or 57.51 million sq mi) not covered by water consists of mountains, deserts, plains, plateaus, and other geomorphologies.

The planetary surface undergoes reshaping over geological time periods due to tectonics and erosion. The surface features built up or deformed through plate tectonics are subject to steady weathering from precipitation, thermal cycles, and chemical effects. Glaciation, coastal erosion, the build-up of coral reefs, and large meteorite impacts[91] also act to reshape the landscape.
 
 Present-day Earth altimetry and bathymetry. Data from the National Geophysical Data Center's TerrainBase Digital Terrain Model.

The continental crust consists of lower density material such as the igneous rocks granite and andesite. Less common is basalt, a denser volcanic rock that is the primary constituent of the ocean floors.[92] Sedimentary rock is formed from the accumulation of sediment that becomes compacted together. Nearly 75% of the continental surfaces are covered by sedimentary rocks, although they form only about 5% of the crust.[93] The third form of rock material found on Earth is metamorphic rock, which is created from the transformation of pre-existing rock types through high pressures, high temperatures, or both. The most abundant silicate minerals on the Earth's surface include quartz, the feldspars, amphibole, mica, pyroxene and olivine.[94] Common carbonate minerals include calcite (found in limestone) and dolomite.[95]

The pedosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth that is composed of soil and subject to soil formation processes. It exists at the interface of the lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere. Currently the total arable land is 13.31% of the land surface, with only 4.71% supporting permanent crops.[15] Close to 40% of the Earth's land surface is presently used for cropland and pasture, or an estimated 1.3×107 km2 of cropland and 3.4×107 km2 of pastureland.[96]

The elevation of the land surface of the Earth varies from the low point of −418 m at the Dead Sea, to a 2005-estimated maximum altitude of 8,848 m at the top of Mount Everest. The mean height of land above sea level is 840 m.[97]

Besides being divided logically into Northern and Southern Hemispheres centered on the earths poles, the earth has been divided arbitrarily into Eastern and Western Hemispheres. The surface of the Earth is traditionally divided into seven continents and various seas. As people settled and organized the planet, nearly all the land was divided into nations. As of 2013, there are about 196 recognized nations.[98] An example of how major geographical regions can be broken down is Africa, America, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, and Europe.
Hydrosphere
Main article: Hydrosphere
 
 Elevation histogram of the surface of the Earth

The abundance of water on Earth's surface is a unique feature that distinguishes the "Blue Planet" from others in the Solar System. The Earth's hydrosphere consists chiefly of the oceans, but technically includes all water surfaces in the world, including inland seas, lakes, rivers, and underground waters down to a depth of 2,000 m. The deepest underwater location is Challenger Deep of the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean with a depth of 10,911.4 m.[n 10][99]

The mass of the oceans is approximately 1.35×1018 metric tons, or about 1/4400 of the total mass of the Earth. The oceans cover an area of 3.618×108 km2 with a mean depth of 3682 m, resulting in an estimated volume of 1.332×109 km3.[100] If all the land on Earth were spread evenly, water would rise to an altitude of more than 2.7 km.[n 11] About 97.5% of the water is saline, while the remaining 2.5% is fresh water. Most fresh water, about 68.7%, is currently ice.[101]

The average salinity of the Earth's oceans is about 35 grams of salt per kilogram of sea water (3.5% salt).[102] Most of this salt was released from volcanic activity or extracted from cool, igneous rocks.[103] The oceans are also a reservoir of dissolved atmospheric gases, which are essential for the survival of many aquatic life forms.[104] Sea water has an important influence on the world's climate, with the oceans acting as a large heat reservoir.[105] Shifts in the oceanic temperature distribution can cause significant weather shifts, such as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation.[106]
Atmosphere
Main article: Atmosphere of Earth

The atmospheric pressure on the surface of the Earth averages 101.325 kPa, with a scale height of about 8.5 km.[3] It is 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, with trace amounts of water vapor, carbon dioxide and other gaseous molecules. The height of the troposphere varies with latitude, ranging between 8 km at the poles to 17 km at the equator, with some variation resulting from weather and seasonal factors.[107]

Earth's biosphere has significantly altered its atmosphere. Oxygenic photosynthesis evolved 2.7 bya, forming the primarily nitrogen–oxygen atmosphere of today.[108] This change enabled the proliferation of aerobic organisms as well as the formation of the ozone layer which blocks ultraviolet solar radiation, permitting life on land. Other atmospheric functions important to life on Earth include transporting water vapor, providing useful gases, causing small meteors to burn up before they strike the surface, and moderating temperature.[109] This last phenomenon is known as the greenhouse effect: trace molecules within the atmosphere serve to capture thermal energy emitted from the ground, thereby raising the average temperature. Water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane and ozone are the primary greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere. Without this heat-retention effect, the average surface would be −18 °C, in contrast to the current +15 °C, and life would likely not exist.[110]
Weather and climate
Main articles: Weather and Climate
 
 Satellite cloud cover image of Earth using NASA's Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer

The Earth's atmosphere has no definite boundary, slowly becoming thinner and fading into outer space. Three-quarters of the atmosphere's mass is contained within the first 11 km of the planet's surface. This lowest layer is called the troposphere. Energy from the Sun heats this layer, and the surface below, causing expansion of the air. This lower-density air then rises, and is replaced by cooler, higher-density air. The result is atmospheric circulation that drives the weather and climate through redistribution of thermal energy.[111]

The primary atmospheric circulation bands consist of the trade winds in the equatorial region below 30° latitude and the westerlies in the mid-latitudes between 30° and 60°.[112] Ocean currents are also important factors in determining climate, particularly the thermohaline circulation that distributes thermal energy from the equatorial oceans to the polar regions.[113]

Water vapor generated through surface evaporation is transported by circulatory patterns in the atmosphere. When atmospheric conditions permit an uplift of warm, humid air, this water condenses and settles to the surface as precipitation.[111] Most of the water is then transported to lower elevations by river systems and usually returned to the oceans or deposited into lakes. This water cycle is a vital mechanism for supporting life on land, and is a primary factor in the erosion of surface features over geological periods. Precipitation patterns vary widely, ranging from several meters of water per year to less than a millimeter. Atmospheric circulation, topological features and temperature differences determine the average precipitation that falls in each region.[114]

The amount of solar energy reaching the Earth's decreases with increasing latitude. At higher latitudes the sunlight reaches the surface at lower angles and it must pass through thicker columns of the atmosphere. As a result, the mean annual air temperature at sea level decreases by about 0.4 °C per degree of latitude away from the equator.[115] The Earth can be subdivided into specific latitudinal belts of approximately homogeneous climate. Ranging from the equator to the polar regions, these are the tropical (or equatorial), subtropical, temperate and polar climates.[116] Climate can also be classified based on the temperature and precipitation, with the climate regions characterized by fairly uniform air masses. The commonly used Köppen climate classification system (as modified by Wladimir Köppen's student Rudolph Geiger) has five broad groups (humid tropics, arid, humid middle latitudes, continental and cold polar), which are further divided into more specific subtypes.[112]
Upper atmosphere
 
 This view from orbit shows the full Moon partially obscured and deformed by the Earth's atmosphere. NASA image
See also: Outer space

Above the troposphere, the atmosphere is usually divided into the stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere.[109] Each layer has a different lapse rate, defining the rate of change in temperature with height. Beyond these, the exosphere thins out into the magnetosphere, where the Earth's magnetic fields interact with the solar wind.[117] Within the stratosphere is the ozone layer, a component that partially shields the surface from ultraviolet light and thus is important for life on Earth. The Kármán line, defined as 100 km above the Earth's surface, is a working definition for the boundary between atmosphere and space.[118]

Thermal energy causes some of the molecules at the outer edge of the Earth's atmosphere to increase their velocity to the point where they can escape from the planet's gravity. This causes a slow but steady leakage of the atmosphere into space. Because unfixed hydrogen has a low molecular weight, it can achieve escape velocity more readily and it leaks into outer space at a greater rate than other gasses.[119] The leakage of hydrogen into space contributes to the pushing of the Earth from an initially reducing state to its current oxidizing one. Photosynthesis provided a source of free oxygen, but the loss of reducing agents such as hydrogen is believed to have been a necessary precondition for the widespread accumulation of oxygen in the atmosphere.[120] Hence the ability of hydrogen to escape from the Earth's atmosphere may have influenced the nature of life that developed on the planet.[121] In the current, oxygen-rich atmosphere most hydrogen is converted into water before it has an opportunity to escape. Instead, most of the hydrogen loss comes from the destruction of methane in the upper atmosphere.[122]
Magnetic field
 
 Schematic of Earth's magnetosphere. The solar wind flows from left to right
Main article: Earth's magnetic field

The Earth's magnetic field is shaped roughly as a magnetic dipole, with the poles currently located proximate to the planet's geographic poles. At the equator of the magnetic field, the magnetic field strength at the planet's surface is 3.05 × 10−5 T, with global magnetic dipole moment of 7.91 × 1015 T m3.[123] According to dynamo theory, the field is generated within the molten outer core region where heat creates convection motions of conducting materials, generating electric currents. These in turn produce the Earth's magnetic field. The convection movements in the core are chaotic; the magnetic poles drift and periodically change alignment. This causes field reversals at irregular intervals averaging a few times every million years. The most recent reversal occurred approximately 700,000 years ago.[124][125]

The field forms the magnetosphere, which deflects particles in the solar wind. The sunward edge of the bow shock is located at about 13 times the radius of the Earth. The collision between the magnetic field and the solar wind forms the Van Allen radiation belts, a pair of concentric, torus-shaped regions of energetic charged particles. When the plasma enters the Earth's atmosphere at the magnetic poles, it forms the aurora.[126]
Orbit and rotation
Rotation
Main article: Earth's rotation
 
 Earth's axial tilt (or obliquity) and its relation to the rotation axis and plane of orbit

Earth's rotation period relative to the Sun—its mean solar day—is 86,400 seconds of mean solar time (86,400.0025 SI seconds).[127] As the Earth's solar day is now slightly longer than it was during the 19th century due to tidal acceleration, each day varies between 0 and 2 SI ms longer.[128][129]

Earth's rotation period relative to the fixed stars, called its stellar day by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS), is 86,164.098903691 seconds of mean solar time (UT1), or 23h 56m 4.098903691s.[2][n 12] Earth's rotation period relative to the precessing or moving mean vernal equinox, misnamed its sidereal day, is 86,164.09053083288 seconds of mean solar time (UT1) (23h 56m 4.09053083288s) as of 1982.[2] Thus the sidereal day is shorter than the stellar day by about 8.4 ms.[130] The length of the mean solar day in SI seconds is available from the IERS for the periods 1623–2005[131] and 1962–2005.[132]

Apart from meteors within the atmosphere and low-orbiting satellites, the main apparent motion of celestial bodies in the Earth's sky is to the west at a rate of 15°/h = 15'/min. For bodies near the celestial equator, this is equivalent to an apparent diameter of the Sun or Moon every two minutes; from the planet's surface, the apparent sizes of the Sun and the Moon are approximately the same.[133][134]
Orbit
Main article: Earth's orbit

Earth orbits the Sun at an average distance of about 150 million kilometers every 365.2564 mean solar days, or one sidereal year. From Earth, this gives an apparent movement of the Sun eastward with respect to the stars at a rate of about 1°/day, which is one apparent Sun or Moon diameter every 12 hours. Due to this motion, on average it takes 24 hours—a solar day—for Earth to complete a full rotation about its axis so that the Sun returns to the meridian. The orbital speed of the Earth averages about 29.8 km/s (107,000 km/h), which is fast enough to travel a distance equal to the planet's diameter, about 12,742 km, in seven minutes, and the distance to the Moon, 384,000 km, in about 3.5 hours.[3]

The Moon revolves with the Earth around a common barycenter every 27.32 days relative to the background stars. When combined with the Earth–Moon system's common revolution around the Sun, the period of the synodic month, from new moon to new moon, is 29.53 days. Viewed from the celestial north pole, the motion of Earth, the Moon and their axial rotations are all counterclockwise. Viewed from a vantage point above the north poles of both the Sun and the Earth, the Earth revolves in a counterclockwise direction about the Sun. The orbital and axial planes are not precisely aligned: Earth's axis is tilted some 23.4 degrees from the perpendicular to the Earth–Sun plane (the ecliptic), and the Earth–Moon plane is tilted up to ±5.1 degrees against the Earth–Sun plane. Without this tilt, there would be an eclipse every two weeks, alternating between lunar eclipses and solar eclipses.[3][135]

The Hill sphere, or gravitational sphere of influence, of the Earth is about 1.5 Gm or 1,500,000 km in radius.[136][n 13] This is the maximum distance at which the Earth's gravitational influence is stronger than the more distant Sun and planets. Objects must orbit the Earth within this radius, or they can become unbound by the gravitational perturbation of the Sun.

Earth, along with the Solar System, is situated in the Milky Way galaxy and orbits about 28,000 light years from the center of the galaxy. It is currently about 20 light years above the galactic plane in the Orion spiral arm.[137]
Axial tilt and seasons
Main article: Axial tilt

Due to the axial tilt of the Earth, the amount of sunlight reaching any given point on the surface varies over the course of the year. This causes seasonal change in climate, with summer in the northern hemisphere occurring when the North Pole is pointing toward the Sun, and winter taking place when the pole is pointed away. During the summer, the day lasts longer and the Sun climbs higher in the sky. In winter, the climate becomes generally cooler and the days shorter. Above the Arctic Circle, an extreme case is reached where there is no daylight at all for part of the year—a polar night. In the southern hemisphere the situation is exactly reversed, with the South Pole oriented opposite the direction of the North Pole.

By astronomical convention, the four seasons are determined by the solstices—the point in the orbit of maximum axial tilt toward or away from the Sun—and the equinoxes, when the direction of the tilt and the direction to the Sun are perpendicular. In the northern hemisphere, Winter Solstice occurs on about December 21, Summer Solstice is near June 21, Spring Equinox is around March 20 and Autumnal Equinox is about September 23. In the Southern hemisphere, the situation is reversed, with the Summer and Winter Solstices exchanged and the Spring and Autumnal Equinox dates switched.[138]
 
 NASA's Cassini spacecraft photographs the Earth and Moon (visible bottom-right) from Saturn (July 19, 2013).

The angle of the Earth's tilt is relatively stable over long periods of time. The tilt does undergo nutation; a slight, irregular motion with a main period of 18.6 years.[139] The orientation (rather than the angle) of the Earth's axis also changes over time, precessing around in a complete circle over each 25,800 year cycle; this precession is the reason for the difference between a sidereal year and a tropical year. Both of these motions are caused by the varying attraction of the Sun and Moon on the Earth's equatorial bulge. From the perspective of the Earth, the poles also migrate a few meters across the surface. This polar motion has multiple, cyclical components, which collectively are termed quasiperiodic motion. In addition to an annual component to this motion, there is a 14-month cycle called the Chandler wobble. The rotational velocity of the Earth also varies in a phenomenon known as length of day variation.[140]

In modern times, Earth's perihelion occurs around January 3, and the aphelion around July 4. These dates change over time due to precession and other orbital factors, which follow cyclical patterns known as Milankovitch cycles. The changing Earth–Sun distance causes an increase of about 6.9%[n 14] in solar energy reaching the Earth at perihelion relative to aphelion. Since the southern hemisphere is tilted toward the Sun at about the same time that the Earth reaches the closest approach to the Sun, the southern hemisphere receives slightly more energy from the Sun than does the northern over the course of a year. This effect is much less significant than the total energy change due to the axial tilt, and most of the excess energy is absorbed by the higher proportion of water in the southern hemisphere.[141]
Habitability
See also: Planetary habitability
 
This ancient impact crater, now filled with water, marks Earth's surface

A planet that can sustain life is termed habitable, even if life did not originate there. The Earth provides liquid water—an environment where complex organic molecules can assemble and interact, and sufficient energy to sustain metabolism.[142] The distance of the Earth from the Sun, as well as its orbital eccentricity, rate of rotation, axial tilt, geological history, sustaining atmosphere and protective magnetic field all contribute to the current climatic conditions at the surface.[143]
Biosphere
Main article: Biosphere
 
 Coral reef and beach

A planet's life forms are sometimes said to form a "biosphere". The Earth's biosphere is generally believed to have begun evolving about 3.5 bya.[108] The biosphere is divided into a number of biomes, inhabited by broadly similar plants and animals. On land, biomes are separated primarily by differences in latitude, height above sea level and humidity. Terrestrial biomes lying within the Arctic or Antarctic Circles, at high altitudes or in extremely arid areas are relatively barren of plant and animal life; species diversity reaches a peak in humid lowlands at equatorial latitudes.[144]
Evolution of life
Main article: Evolutionary history of life
 
 Speculative phylogenetic tree of life on Earth based on rRNA analysis.

Highly energetic chemistry is thought to have produced a self-replicating molecule around 4 bya and half a billion years later the last common ancestor of all life existed.[145] The development of photosynthesis allowed the Sun's energy to be harvested directly by life forms; the resultant oxygen accumulated in the atmosphere and formed a layer of ozone (a form of molecular oxygen [O3]) in the upper atmosphere.[108] The incorporation of smaller cells within larger ones resulted in the development of complex cells called eukaryotes.[146] True multicellular organisms formed as cells within colonies became increasingly specialized. Aided by the absorption of harmful ultraviolet radiation by the ozone layer, life colonized the surface of Earth.[147] The earliest evidences for life on Earth are graphite found to be biogenic in 3.7 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks discovered in Western Greenland[148] and microbial mat fossils found in 3.48 billion-year-old sandstone discovered in Western Australia.[149][150]

Since the 1960s, it has been hypothesized that severe glacial action between 750 and 580 mya, during the Neoproterozoic, covered much of the planet in a sheet of ice. This hypothesis has been termed "Snowball Earth", and is of particular interest because it preceded the Cambrian explosion, when multicellular life forms began to proliferate.[151]

Following the Cambrian explosion, about 535 mya, there have been five major mass extinctions.[152] The most recent such event was 66 mya, when an asteroid impact triggered the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs and other large reptiles, but spared some small animals such as mammals, which then resembled shrews. Over the past 66 myr, mammalian life has diversified, and several million years ago an African ape-like animal such as Orrorin tugenensis gained the ability to stand upright.[153] This enabled tool use and encouraged communication that provided the nutrition and stimulation needed for a larger brain, which allowed the evolution of the human race. The development of agriculture, and then civilization, allowed humans to influence the Earth in a short time span as no other life form had,[154] affecting both the nature and quantity of other life forms.
Natural resources and land use
Main articles: Natural resource and Land use
Estimated human land use, 2000[155]Land use   Mha
Cropland   1,510–1,611
Pastures   2,500–3,410
Natural forests   3,143–3,871
Planted forests   126–215
Urban areas   66–351
Unused, productive land   356–445


The Earth provides resources that are exploitable by humans for useful purposes. Some of these are non-renewable resources, such as mineral fuels, that are difficult to replenish on a short time scale.

Large deposits of fossil fuels are obtained from the Earth's crust, consisting of coal, petroleum, natural gas and methane clathrate. These deposits are used by humans both for energy production and as feedstock for chemical production. Mineral ore bodies have also been formed in Earth's crust through a process of ore genesis, resulting from actions of erosion and plate tectonics.[156] These bodies form concentrated sources for many metals and other useful elements.

The Earth's biosphere produces many useful biological products for humans, including (but far from limited to) food, wood, pharmaceuticals, oxygen, and the recycling of many organic wastes. The land-based ecosystem depends upon topsoil and fresh water, and the oceanic ecosystem depends upon dissolved nutrients washed down from the land.[157] In 1980, 5,053 Mha (50.53 million km2) of the Earth's land surface consisted of forest and woodlands, 6,788 Mha (67.88 million km2) was grasslands and pasture, and 1,501 Mha (15.01 million km2) was cultivated as croplands.[158] The estimated amount of irrigated land in 1993 was 2,481,250 square kilometres (958,020 sq mi).[15] Humans also live on the land by using building materials to construct shelters.
Natural and environmental hazards

Large areas of the Earth's surface are subject to extreme weather such as tropical cyclones, hurricanes, or typhoons that dominate life in those areas. From 1980 to 2000, these events caused an average of 11,800 deaths per year.[159] Many places are subject to earthquakes, landslides, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, tornadoes, sinkholes, blizzards, floods, droughts, wildfires, and other calamities and disasters.

Many localized areas are subject to human-made pollution of the air and water, acid rain and toxic substances, loss of vegetation (overgrazing, deforestation, desertification), loss of wildlife, species extinction, soil degradation, soil depletion, erosion, and introduction of invasive species.

According to the United Nations, a scientific consensus exists linking human activities to global warming due to industrial carbon dioxide emissions. This is predicted to produce changes such as the melting of glaciers and ice sheets, more extreme temperature ranges, significant changes in weather and a global rise in average sea levels.[160]
Human geography
Main articles: Human geography and World
 
The seven continents of Earth[161]       North America
      South America
      Antarctica         Europe
      Africa         Asia
      Oceania
v · t · e

 
 A composite picture consisting of DMSP/OLS ground-illumination data for 2000 placed on a simulated night-time image of Earth.

Cartography, the study and practice of map-making, and geography, the study of the lands, features, inhabitants and phenomena on Earth, have historically been the disciplines devoted to depicting the Earth. Surveying, the determination of locations and distances, and to a lesser extent navigation, the determination of position and direction, have developed alongside cartography and geography, providing and suitably quantifying the requisite information.

Earth has reached approximately seven billion human inhabitants as of October 31, 2011.[162] Projections indicate that the world's human population will reach 9.2 billion in 2050.[163] Most of the growth is expected to take place in developing nations. Human population density varies widely around the world, but a majority live in Asia. By 2020, 60% of the world's population is expected to be living in urban, rather than rural, areas.[164]

It is estimated that only one-eighth of the surface of the Earth is suitable for humans to live on: three-quarters is covered by oceans, while half of the land area is either desert (14%),[165] high mountains (27%),[166] or other unsuitable terrain. The northernmost permanent settlement in the world is Alert, on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, Canada.[167] (82°28′N) The southernmost is the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, in Antarctica, almost exactly at the South Pole. (90°S)

Independent sovereign nations claim the planet's entire land surface, except for some parts of Antarctica and the odd unclaimed area of Bir Tawil between Egypt and Sudan. As of 2013, there are 206 sovereign states, including the 193 United Nations member states. In addition, there are 59 dependent territories, and a number of autonomous areas, territories under dispute and other entities.[15] Historically, Earth has never had a sovereign government with authority over the entire globe, although a number of nation-states have striven for world domination and failed.[168]

The United Nations is a worldwide intergovernmental organization that was created with the goal of intervening in the disputes between nations, thereby avoiding armed conflict.[169] The U.N. serves primarily as a forum for international diplomacy and international law. When the consensus of the membership permits, it provides a mechanism for armed intervention.[170]
 
 The first "earthrise" ever seen directly by humans, photographed by astronauts on board Apollo 8.

The first human to orbit the Earth was Yuri Gagarin on April 12, 1961.[171] In total, about 487 people have visited outer space and reached Earth orbit as of July 30, 2010, and, of these, twelve have walked on the Moon.[172][173][174] Normally the only humans in space are those on the International Space Station. The station's crew, currently six people, is usually replaced every six months.[175] The furthest humans have travelled from Earth is 400,171 km, achieved during the Apollo 13 mission in 1970.[176]
Cultural and historical viewpoint
Main article: Earth in culture

The standard astronomical symbol of the Earth consists of a cross circumscribed by a circle, .[177]

Unlike the rest of the planets in the Solar System, humankind did not begin to view the Earth as a moving object in orbit around the Sun until the 16th century.[178] Earth has often been personified as a deity, in particular a goddess. In many cultures a mother goddess is also portrayed as a fertility deity. Creation myths in many religions recall a story involving the creation of the Earth by a supernatural deity or deities. A variety of religious groups, often associated with fundamentalist branches of Protestantism[179] or Islam,[180] assert that their interpretations of these creation myths in sacred texts are literal truth and should be considered alongside or replace conventional scientific accounts of the formation of the Earth and the origin and development of life.[181] Such assertions are opposed by the scientific community[182][183] and by other religious groups.[184][185][186] A prominent example is the creation–evolution controversy.

In the past, there were varying levels of belief in a flat Earth,[187] but this was displaced by spherical Earth, a concept that has been credited to Pythagoras (6th century BC).[188] Human cultures have developed many views of the planet, including its personification as a planetary deity, its shape as flat, its position as the center of the universe, and in the modern Gaia Principle, as a single, self-regulating organism in its own right.
Chronology
Formation
Main article: History of the Earth
 
 Artist's impression of the birth of the Solar System

The earliest material found in the Solar System is dated to 4.5672±0.0006 billion years ago (bya);[189] therefore, it is inferred that the Earth must have been formed by accretion around this time. By 4.54±0.04 bya[33] the primordial Earth had formed. The formation and evolution of the Solar System bodies occurred in tandem with the Sun. In theory a solar nebula partitions a volume out of a molecular cloud by gravitational collapse, which begins to spin and flatten into a circumstellar disk, and then the planets grow out of that in tandem with the star. A nebula contains gas, ice grains and dust (including primordial nuclides). In nebular theory planetesimals commence forming as particulate accrues by cohesive clumping and then by gravity. The assembly of the primordial Earth proceeded for 10–20 myr.[190] The Moon formed shortly thereafter, about 4.53 bya.[191]

The formation of the Moon remains a topic of debate. The working hypothesis is that it formed by accretion from material loosed from the Earth after a Mars-sized object, named Theia, impacted with Earth.[192] The model, however, is not self-consistent. In this scenario, the mass of Theia is 10% of the Earth's mass,[193] it impacts with the Earth in a glancing blow,[194] and some of its mass merges with the Earth. Between approximately 3.8 and 4.1 bya, numerous asteroid impacts during the Late Heavy Bombardment caused significant changes to the greater surface environment of the Moon, and by inference, to the Earth.
Geological history
Main article: Geological history of Earth

Earth's atmosphere and oceans formed by volcanic activity and outgassing that included water vapor. The origin of the world's oceans was condensation augmented by water and ice delivered by asteroids, proto-planets, and comets.[195] In this model, atmospheric "greenhouse gases" kept the oceans from freezing while the newly forming Sun was only at 70% luminosity.[196] By 3.5 bya, the Earth's magnetic field was established, which helped prevent the atmosphere from being stripped away by the solar wind.[197] A crust formed when the molten outer layer of the planet Earth cooled to form a solid as the accumulated water vapor began to act in the atmosphere. The two models[198] that explain land mass propose either a steady growth to the present-day forms[199] or, more likely, a rapid growth[200] early in Earth history[201] followed by a long-term steady continental area.[202][203][204] Continents formed by plate tectonics, a process ultimately driven by the continuous loss of heat from the earth's interior. On time scales lasting hundreds of millions of years, the supercontinents have formed and broken up three times. Roughly 750 mya (million years ago), one of the earliest known supercontinents, Rodinia, began to break apart. The continents later recombined to form Pannotia, 600–540 mya, then finally Pangaea, which also broke apart 180 mya.[205]

The present pattern of ice ages began about 40 mya and then intensified during the Pleistocene about 3 mya. High-latitude regions have since undergone repeated cycles of glaciation and thaw, repeating every 40–100000 years. The last continental glaciation ended 10,000 years ago.[206]
Predicted future
Main article: Future of the Earth

Estimates on how much longer the planet will be able to continue to support life range from 500 million years (myr), to as long as 2.3 billion years (byr).[207][208][209] The future of the planet is closely tied to that of the Sun. As a result of the steady accumulation of helium at the Sun's core, the star's total luminosity will slowly increase. The luminosity of the Sun will grow by 10% over the next 1.1 byr and by 40% over the next 3.5 byr.[210] Climate models indicate that the rise in radiation reaching the Earth is likely to have dire consequences, including the loss of the planet's oceans.[211]

The Earth's increasing surface temperature will accelerate the inorganic CO2 cycle, reducing its concentration to levels lethally low for plants (10 ppm for C4 photosynthesis) in approximately 500-900 myr.[207] The lack of vegetation will result in the loss of oxygen in the atmosphere, so animal life will become extinct within several million more years.[212] After another billion years all surface water will have disappeared[208] and the mean global temperature will reach 70 °C[212] (158 °F). The Earth is expected to be effectively habitable for about another 500 myr from that point,[207] although this may be extended up to 2.3 byr if the nitrogen is removed from the atmosphere.[209] Even if the Sun were eternal and stable, 27% of the water in the modern oceans will descend to the mantle in one billion years, due to reduced steam venting from mid-ocean ridges.[213]
 
 Life cycle of the Sun

The Sun, as part of its evolution, will become a red giant in about 5 byr. Models predict that the Sun will expand to roughly 1 AU (150,000,000 km), which is about 250 times its present radius.[210][214] Earth's fate is less clear. As a red giant, the Sun will lose roughly 30% of its mass, so, without tidal effects, the Earth will move to an orbit 1.7 AU (250,000,000 km) from the Sun, when the star reaches its maximum radius. The planet was, therefore, initially expected to escape envelopment by the expanded Sun's sparse outer atmosphere, though most, if not all, remaining life would have been destroyed by the Sun's increased luminosity (peaking at about 5,000 times its present level).[210] A 2008 simulation indicates that the Earth's orbit will decay due to tidal effects and drag, causing it to enter the red giant Sun's atmosphere and be vaporized.[214] After that, the Sun's core will collapse into a white dwarf, as its outer layers are ejected into space as a planetary nebula. The matter that once made up the Earth will be released into interstellar space, where it may one day become incorporated into a new generation of planets and other celestial bodies.
See also: Risks to civilization, humans, and planet Earth
Moon
CharacteristicsDiameter   3,474.8 km
Mass   7.349×1022 kg
Semi-major axis   384,400 km
Orbital period   27 d 7 h 43.7 m

 
 Details of the Earth–Moon system. Besides the radius of each object, the radius to the Earth–Moon barycenter is shown. Photos from NASA. Data from NASA. The Moon's axis is located by Cassini's third law.
 
Full moon as seen from Earth's northern hemisphere
Main article: Moon

The Moon is a relatively large, terrestrial, planet-like satellite, with a diameter about one-quarter of the Earth's. It is the largest moon in the Solar System relative to the size of its planet, although Charon is larger relative to the dwarf planet Pluto. The natural satellites orbiting other planets are called "moons" after Earth's Moon.

The gravitational attraction between the Earth and Moon causes tides on Earth. The same effect on the Moon has led to its tidal locking: its rotation period is the same as the time it takes to orbit the Earth. As a result, it always presents the same face to the planet. As the Moon orbits Earth, different parts of its face are illuminated by the Sun, leading to the lunar phases; the dark part of the face is separated from the light part by the solar terminator.

Due to their tidal interaction, the Moon recedes from Earth at the rate of approximately 38 mm a year. Over millions of years, these tiny modifications—and the lengthening of Earth's day by about 23 µs a year—add up to significant changes.[215] During the Devonian period, for example, (approximately 410 mya) there were 400 days in a year, with each day lasting 21.8 hours.[216]

The Moon may have dramatically affected the development of life by moderating the planet's climate. Paleontological evidence and computer simulations show that Earth's axial tilt is stabilized by tidal interactions with the Moon.[217] Some theorists believe that without this stabilization against the torques applied by the Sun and planets to the Earth's equatorial bulge, the rotational axis might be chaotically unstable, exhibiting chaotic changes over millions of years, as appears to be the case for Mars.[218]

Viewed from Earth, the Moon is just far enough away to have almost the same apparent-sized disk as the Sun. The angular size (or solid angle) of these two bodies match because, although the Sun's diameter is about 400 times as large as the Moon's, it is also 400 times more distant.[134] This allows total and annular solar eclipses to occur on Earth.

The most widely accepted theory of the Moon's origin, the giant impact theory, states that it formed from the collision of a Mars-size protoplanet called Theia with the early Earth. This hypothesis explains (among other things) the Moon's relative lack of iron and volatile elements, and the fact that its composition is nearly identical to that of the Earth's crust.[219]
 
 Scale representation of the relative sizes of, and average distance between, Earth and the Moon
Asteroids and artificial satellites
 
 The International Space Station is an artificial satellite that orbits Earth.

Earth has at least five co-orbital asteroids, including 3753 Cruithne and 2002 AA29.[220][221] A trojan asteroid companion, 2010 TK7, is librating around the leading Lagrange triangular point, L4, of Earth in Earth's orbit around the Sun.[222][223]

As of 2011, there are 931 operational, man-made satellites orbiting the Earth.[224] There are also inoperative satellites and over 300,000 pieces of space debris. Earth's largest artificial satellite is the International Space Station.
See also   Book: Earth
Book: Solar System

Discovery and exploration of the Solar System
Earth Anthem
Earth Day
Earth Hour
Human population
Sun
"I want to be defined by the things that I love. Not the things I'm afraid of, or the things that haunt me in the middle of the night.  I just think that, you are what you love."  Taylor Swift, Daylight.

【 Verax Maneret 】

Smit

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  • Oh, this is suicide! There's nowhere to go.
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Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #2 on: August 09, 2014, 07:17:24 am »
To be, or not to be: that is the question: whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, or to take arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing end them? To die: to sleep; no more; and, by a sleep to say we end the heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep; to sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub; for in that sleep of death what dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause. There's the respect that makes calamity of so long a life; for who would bear the whips and scorns of time, the oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely, the pangs of dispriz'd love, the law's delay, the insolence of office, and the spurns that patient merit of the unworthy takes, when he himself might his quietus make with a bare bodkin? Who would fardels bear, to grunt and sweat under a weary life, but that the dread of something after death, the undiscover'd country from whose bourn no traveller returns, puzzles the will, and makes us rather bear those ills we have, than fly to others that we know not of? Thus consience doth make cowards of us all; and thus the native hue of resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought, and enterprises of great pith and moment with this regard their currents turn awry, and lose the name of action.

Soft-Hedwig

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Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #3 on: August 09, 2014, 07:24:00 am »
:nesquik:

AZ

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Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2014, 07:32:50 am »
Earth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about the planet. For other uses, see Earth (disambiguation).

Earth 
A composite image of Earth produced by NASA.
Orbital characteristics
Epoch J2000.0 [n 1]
Aphelion   152098232 km
(1.01671388 AU) [n 2]
Perihelion   147098290 km
(0.98329134 AU) [n 2]
Semi-major axis   149598261 km
(1.00000261 AU) [1]
Eccentricity   0.01671123[1]
Orbital period   365.256363004 d [2]
(1.000017421 yr)
Average orbital speed   29.78 km/s[3]
(107200 km/h)
Mean anomaly   357.51716 deg[3]
Inclination   7.155 deg to Sun's equator;
1.57869 deg[4] to invariable plane.
Longitude of ascending node   348.73936 deg[3][n 3]
Argument of perihelion   114.20783 deg[3][n 4], precessing at 11.45 "/yr[5]
Satellites   One natural satellite;
1070 operational artificial satellites;
21000 pieces of debris over 10 cm
 in size (as of 24 October 2013).[6]
Physical characteristics
Mean radius   6371.0 km[7]
Equatorial radius   6378.1 km[8][9]
Polar radius   6356.8 km[10]
Flattening   0.0033528[11]
Circumference   40075.017 km (equatorial) [9]
40007.86 km (meridional) [12][13]
Surface area   510072000 km2[14][15][n 5]
 (148940000 km2 (29.2%) land
  361132000 km2 (70.8%) water)
Volume   1.08321×1012 km3[3]
Mass   5.97219×1024 kg[16]
(3.0×10-6 Suns)
Mean density   5.515 g/cm3[3]
Surface gravity   9.798 m/s2[17]
(0.99732 g)
Moment of inertia factor   0.3307[18]
Escape velocity   11.186 km/s[3]
Sidereal rotation period   0.99726968 d[19]
(23h 56m 4.100s)
Equatorial rotation velocity   1,674.4 km/h (465.1 m/s)[20]
Axial tilt   23 deg 26 min 21.4119 s [2]
Albedo   0.367 geometric[3]
0.306 Bond[3]
Surface temp.   min   mean   max
Kelvin   184 K[21]   288 K[22]   330 K[23]
Celsius   −89.2 °C   15 °C   56.7 °C

Atmosphere
Surface pressure   101.325 kPa (at MSL)
Composition   78.08% nitrogen (N2)[3] (dry air)
20.95% oxygen (O2)
0.930% argon
0.039% carbon dioxide[24]
~ 1% water vapor (climate-variable)


Earth, also known as the world,[26] Terra,[28] or Gaia,[30] is the third planet from the Sun, the densest planet in the Solar System, the largest of the Solar System's four terrestrial planets, and the only celestial body known to accommodate life. It is home to millions of species,[31] including billions of humans[32] who depend upon its biosphere and minerals. The Earth's human population is divided among about two hundred independent states that interact through diplomacy, conflict, travel, trade, and media.

According to evidence from sources such as radiometric dating, Earth was formed around four and a half billion years ago. Within its first billion years,[33] life appeared in its oceans and began to affect its atmosphere and surface, promoting the proliferation of aerobic as well as anaerobic organisms and causing the formation of the atmosphere's ozone layer. This layer and Earth's magnetic field block the most life-threatening parts of the Sun's radiation, so life was able to flourish on land as well as in water.[34] Since then, Earth's position in the Solar System, its physical properties and its geological history have allowed life to persist.

Earth's lithosphere is divided into several rigid segments, or tectonic plates, that migrate across the surface over periods of many millions of years. Over 70% percent of Earth's surface is covered with water,[35] with the remainder consisting of continents and islands which together have many lakes and other sources of water that contribute to the hydrosphere. Earth's poles are mostly covered with ice that is the solid ice of the Antarctic ice sheet and the sea ice that is the polar ice packs. The planet's interior remains active, with a solid iron inner core, a liquid outer core that generates the magnetic field, and a thick layer of relatively solid mantle.

Earth gravitationally interacts with other objects in space, especially the Sun and the Moon. During one orbit around the Sun, the Earth rotates about its own axis 366.26 times, creating 365.26 solar days, or one sidereal year.[n 6] The Earth's axis of rotation is tilted 23.4° away from the perpendicular of its orbital plane, producing seasonal variations on the planet's surface with a period of one tropical year (365.24 solar days).[36] The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It began orbiting the Earth about 4.53 billion years ago (bya). The Moon's gravitational interaction with Earth stimulates ocean tides, stabilizes the axial tilt, and gradually slows the planet's rotation.


Contents  [hide]
1 Name and etymology
2 Composition and structure
2.1 Shape
2.2 Chemical composition
2.3 Internal structure
2.4 Heat
2.5 Tectonic plates
2.6 Surface
2.7 Hydrosphere
2.8 Atmosphere
2.8.1 Weather and climate
2.8.2 Upper atmosphere
2.9 Magnetic field
3 Orbit and rotation
3.1 Rotation
3.2 Orbit
3.3 Axial tilt and seasons
4 Habitability
4.1 Biosphere
4.2 Evolution of life
4.3 Natural resources and land use
4.4 Natural and environmental hazards
4.5 Human geography
5 Cultural and historical viewpoint
6 Chronology
6.1 Formation
6.2 Geological history
6.3 Predicted future
7 Moon
8 Asteroids and artificial satellites
9 See also
10 Notes
11 References
12 Further reading
13 External links


Name and etymology
 
NASA's 2014 Earth Day "Global Selfie" mosaic, composed of more than 50,000 photographs from around the world.

The modern English Earth developed from a wide variety of Middle English forms,[38] which derived from an Old English noun most often spelled eorðe.[37] It has cognates in every Germanic language and their proto-Germanic root has been reconstructed as *erþō. In its earliest appearances, eorðe was already being used to translate the many senses of Latin terra and Greek γῆ (gē): the ground,[40] its soil,[42] dry land,[45] the human world,[47] the surface of the world (including the sea),[50] and the globe itself.[52] As with Terra and Gaia, Earth was a personified goddess in Germanic paganism: the Angles were listed by Tacitus among the devotees of Nerthus[53] and later Norse mythology included Jörð, a giantess often given as the mother of Thor.[54]

Originally, earth was written in lowercase and, from early Middle English, its definite sense as "the globe" was expressed as the earth. By early Modern English, many nouns were capitalized and the earth became (and often remained) the Earth, particularly when referenced along with other heavenly bodies. More recently, the name is simply given as Earth, by analogy with the names of the other planets.[37] House styles now vary: Oxford spelling recognizes the lowercase form as the most common, with the capitalized form an acceptable variant. Another convention capitalizes Earth when appearing as a name (e.g., "Earth's atmosphere") but writes it in lowercase when preceded by the (e.g., "the atmosphere of the earth"). It almost always appears in lowercase in colloquial expressions such as "what on earth are you doing?"[55]
Composition and structure
Main article: Earth science
Further information: Earth physical characteristics tables

Earth is a terrestrial planet, meaning that it is a rocky body, rather than a gas giant like Jupiter. It is the largest of the four terrestrial planets in size and mass. Of these four planets, Earth also has the highest density, the highest surface gravity, the strongest magnetic field, and fastest rotation,[56] and is probably the only one with active plate tectonics.[57]
Shape
Main article: Figure of the Earth
 
 Stratocumulus clouds over the Pacific, viewed from orbit

The shape of the Earth approximates an oblate spheroid, a sphere flattened along the axis from pole to pole such that there is a bulge around the equator.[58] This bulge results from the rotation of the Earth, and causes the diameter at the equator to be 43 km (kilometer) larger than the pole-to-pole diameter.[59] For this reason the furthest point on the surface from the Earth's center of mass is the Chimborazo volcano in Ecuador.[60] The average diameter of the reference spheroid is about 12742 km, which is approximately 40,000 km/π, as the meter was originally defined as 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the North Pole through Paris, France.[61]

Local topography deviates from this idealized spheroid, although on a global scale, these deviations are small: Earth has a tolerance of about one part in about 584, or 0.17%, from the reference spheroid, which is less than the 0.22% tolerance allowed in billiard balls.[62] The largest local deviations in the rocky surface of the Earth are Mount Everest (8,848 m above local sea level) and the Mariana Trench (10911 m below local sea level). Due to the equatorial bulge, the surface locations farthest from the center of the Earth are the summits of Mount Chimborazo in Ecuador and Huascarán in Peru.[63][64][65]
Chemical composition of the crust[66]Compound   Formula   Composition
Continental   Oceanic
silica   SiO2   60.2%   48.6%
alumina   Al2O3   15.2%   16.5%
lime   CaO   5.5%   12.3%
magnesia   MgO   3.1%   6.8%
iron(II) oxide   FeO   3.8%   6.2%
sodium oxide   Na2O   3.0%   2.6%
potassium oxide   K2O   2.8%   0.4%
iron(III) oxide   Fe2O3   2.5%   2.3%
water   H2O   1.4%   1.1%
carbon dioxide   CO2   1.2%   1.4%
titanium dioxide   TiO2   0.7%   1.4%
phosphorus pentoxide   P2O5   0.2%   0.3%
Total   99.6%   99.9%

Chemical composition
See also: Abundance of elements on Earth

The mass of the Earth is approximately 5.98×1024 kg. It is composed mostly of iron (32.1%), oxygen (30.1%), silicon (15.1%), magnesium (13.9%), sulfur (2.9%), nickel (1.8%), calcium (1.5%), and aluminium (1.4%); with the remaining 1.2% consisting of trace amounts of other elements. Due to mass segregation, the core region is believed to be primarily composed of iron (88.8%), with smaller amounts of nickel (5.8%), sulfur (4.5%), and less than 1% trace elements.[67]

The geochemist F. W. Clarke calculated that a little more than 47% of the Earth's crust consists of oxygen. The more common rock constituents of the Earth's crust are nearly all oxides; chlorine, sulfur and fluorine are the only important exceptions to this and their total amount in any rock is usually much less than 1%. The principal oxides are silica, alumina, iron oxides, lime, magnesia, potash and soda. The silica functions principally as an acid, forming silicates, and all the commonest minerals of igneous rocks are of this nature. From a computation based on 1,672 analyses of all kinds of rocks, Clarke deduced that 99.22% were composed of 11 oxides (see the table at right), with the other constituents occurring in minute quantities.[68]
Internal structure
Main article: Structure of the Earth

The interior of the Earth, like that of the other terrestrial planets, is divided into layers by their chemical or physical (rheological) properties, but unlike the other terrestrial planets, it has a distinct outer and inner core. The outer layer of the Earth is a chemically distinct silicate solid crust, which is underlain by a highly viscous solid mantle. The crust is separated from the mantle by the Mohorovičić discontinuity, and the thickness of the crust varies: averaging 6 km (kilometers) under the oceans and 30-50 km on the continents. The crust and the cold, rigid, top of the upper mantle are collectively known as the lithosphere, and it is of the lithosphere that the tectonic plates are comprised. Beneath the lithosphere is the asthenosphere, a relatively low-viscosity layer on which the lithosphere rides. Important changes in crystal structure within the mantle occur at 410 and 660 km below the surface, spanning a transition zone that separates the upper and lower mantle. Beneath the mantle, an extremely low viscosity liquid outer core lies above a solid inner core.[69] The inner core may rotate at a slightly higher angular velocity than the remainder of the planet, advancing by 0.1–0.5° per year.[70]
Geologic layers of the Earth[71]

 Earth cutaway from core to exosphere. Not to scale.   Depth[72]
km   Component Layer   Density
g/cm3
0–60   Lithosphere[n 7]   —
0–35   Crust[n 8]   2.2–2.9
35–60   Upper mantle   3.4–4.4
  35–2890   Mantle   3.4–5.6
100–700   Asthenosphere   —
2890–5100   Outer core   9.9–12.2
5100–6378   Inner core   12.8–13.1

Heat

Earth's internal heat comes from a combination of residual heat from planetary accretion (about 20%) and heat produced through radioactive decay (80%).[73] The major heat-producing isotopes in Earth are potassium-40, uranium-238, uranium-235, and thorium-232.[74] At the center, the temperature may be up to 6,000 °C (10,830 °F),[75] and the pressure could reach 360 GPa.[76] Because much of the heat is provided by radioactive decay, scientists believe that early in Earth's history, before isotopes with short half-lives had been depleted, Earth's heat production would have been much higher. This extra heat production, twice present-day at approximately 3 byr,[73] would have increased temperature gradients within Earth, increasing the rates of mantle convection and plate tectonics, and allowing the production of igneous rocks such as komatiites that are not formed today.[77]
Present-day major heat-producing isotopes[78]Isotope   Heat release
W
/
kg isotope   Half-life

years   Mean mantle concentration
kg isotope
/
kg mantle   Heat release
W
/
kg mantle
238U   9.46 × 10−5   4.47 × 109   30.8 × 10−9   2.91 × 10−12
235U   5.69 × 10−4   7.04 × 108   0.22 × 10−9   1.25 × 10−13
232Th   2.64 × 10−5   1.40 × 1010   124 × 10−9   3.27 × 10−12
40K   2.92 × 10−5   1.25 × 109   36.9 × 10−9   1.08 × 10−12


The mean heat loss from Earth is 87 mW m−2, for a global heat loss of 4.42 × 1013 W.[79] A portion of the core's thermal energy is transported toward the crust by mantle plumes; a form of convection consisting of upwellings of higher-temperature rock. These plumes can produce hotspots and flood basalts.[80] More of the heat in Earth is lost through plate tectonics, by mantle upwelling associated with mid-ocean ridges. The final major mode of heat loss is through conduction through the lithosphere, the majority of which occurs in the oceans because the crust there is much thinner than that of the continents.[81]
Tectonic plates
Earth's main plates[82]
Plate name   Area
106 km2
  Pacific Plate   103.3
  African Plate[n 9]   78.0
  North American Plate   75.9
  Eurasian Plate   67.8
  Antarctic Plate   60.9
  Indo-Australian Plate   47.2
  South American Plate   43.6

Main article: Plate tectonics

The mechanically rigid outer layer of the Earth, the lithosphere, is broken into pieces called tectonic plates. These plates are rigid segments that move in relation to one another at one of three types of plate boundaries: Convergent boundaries, at which two plates come together, Divergent boundaries, at which two plates are pulled apart, and Transform boundaries, in which two plates slide past one another laterally. Earthquakes, volcanic activity, mountain-building, and oceanic trench formation can occur along these plate boundaries.[83] The tectonic plates ride on top of the asthenosphere, the solid but less-viscous part of the upper mantle that can flow and move along with the plates,[84] and their motion is strongly coupled with convection patterns inside the Earth's mantle.

As the tectonic plates migrate across the planet, the ocean floor is subducted under the leading edges of the plates at convergent boundaries. At the same time, the upwelling of mantle material at divergent boundaries creates mid-ocean ridges. The combination of these processes continually recycles the oceanic crust back into the mantle. Due to this recycling, most of the ocean floor is less than 100 myr old in age. The oldest oceanic crust is located in the Western Pacific, and has an estimated age of about 200 myr.[85][86] By comparison, the oldest dated continental crust is 4030 myr.[87]

The seven major plates are the Pacific, North American, Eurasian, African, Antarctic, Indo-Australian, and South American. Other notable plates include the Arabian Plate, the Caribbean Plate, the Nazca Plate off the west coast of South America and the Scotia Plate in the southern Atlantic Ocean. The Australian Plate fused with the Indian Plate between 50 and 55 mya. The fastest-moving plates are the oceanic plates, with the Cocos Plate advancing at a rate of 75 mm/year[88] and the Pacific Plate moving 52–69 mm/year. At the other extreme, the slowest-moving plate is the Eurasian Plate, progressing at a typical rate of about 21 mm/year.[89]
Surface
Main articles: Lithosphere, Landform and Extreme points of Earth




Features of Earth's solid surface shown as percentages of the planet's total surface area
  Oceanic ridges (22.1%)
  Ocean basin floors (29.8%)
  Continental mountains (10.3%)
  Continental lowlands (18.9%)
  Continental shelves and
slopes (11.4%)
  Continental rise (3.8%)
  Volcanic island arcs, trenches,
submarine volcanoes, and hills (3.7%)

The Earth's terrain varies greatly from place to place. About 70.8%[14] of the surface is covered by water, with much of the continental shelf below sea level. This equates to 361.132 million km2 (139.43 million sq mi).[90] The submerged surface has mountainous features, including a globe-spanning mid-ocean ridge system, as well as undersea volcanoes,[59] oceanic trenches, submarine canyons, oceanic plateaus and abyssal plains. The remaining 29.2% (148.94 million km2, or 57.51 million sq mi) not covered by water consists of mountains, deserts, plains, plateaus, and other geomorphologies.

The planetary surface undergoes reshaping over geological time periods due to tectonics and erosion. The surface features built up or deformed through plate tectonics are subject to steady weathering from precipitation, thermal cycles, and chemical effects. Glaciation, coastal erosion, the build-up of coral reefs, and large meteorite impacts[91] also act to reshape the landscape.
 
 Present-day Earth altimetry and bathymetry. Data from the National Geophysical Data Center's TerrainBase Digital Terrain Model.

The continental crust consists of lower density material such as the igneous rocks granite and andesite. Less common is basalt, a denser volcanic rock that is the primary constituent of the ocean floors.[92] Sedimentary rock is formed from the accumulation of sediment that becomes compacted together. Nearly 75% of the continental surfaces are covered by sedimentary rocks, although they form only about 5% of the crust.[93] The third form of rock material found on Earth is metamorphic rock, which is created from the transformation of pre-existing rock types through high pressures, high temperatures, or both. The most abundant silicate minerals on the Earth's surface include quartz, the feldspars, amphibole, mica, pyroxene and olivine.[94] Common carbonate minerals include calcite (found in limestone) and dolomite.[95]

The pedosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth that is composed of soil and subject to soil formation processes. It exists at the interface of the lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere. Currently the total arable land is 13.31% of the land surface, with only 4.71% supporting permanent crops.[15] Close to 40% of the Earth's land surface is presently used for cropland and pasture, or an estimated 1.3×107 km2 of cropland and 3.4×107 km2 of pastureland.[96]

The elevation of the land surface of the Earth varies from the low point of −418 m at the Dead Sea, to a 2005-estimated maximum altitude of 8,848 m at the top of Mount Everest. The mean height of land above sea level is 840 m.[97]

Besides being divided logically into Northern and Southern Hemispheres centered on the earths poles, the earth has been divided arbitrarily into Eastern and Western Hemispheres. The surface of the Earth is traditionally divided into seven continents and various seas. As people settled and organized the planet, nearly all the land was divided into nations. As of 2013, there are about 196 recognized nations.[98] An example of how major geographical regions can be broken down is Africa, America, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, and Europe.
Hydrosphere
Main article: Hydrosphere
 
 Elevation histogram of the surface of the Earth

The abundance of water on Earth's surface is a unique feature that distinguishes the "Blue Planet" from others in the Solar System. The Earth's hydrosphere consists chiefly of the oceans, but technically includes all water surfaces in the world, including inland seas, lakes, rivers, and underground waters down to a depth of 2,000 m. The deepest underwater location is Challenger Deep of the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean with a depth of 10,911.4 m.[n 10][99]

The mass of the oceans is approximately 1.35×1018 metric tons, or about 1/4400 of the total mass of the Earth. The oceans cover an area of 3.618×108 km2 with a mean depth of 3682 m, resulting in an estimated volume of 1.332×109 km3.[100] If all the land on Earth were spread evenly, water would rise to an altitude of more than 2.7 km.[n 11] About 97.5% of the water is saline, while the remaining 2.5% is fresh water. Most fresh water, about 68.7%, is currently ice.[101]

The average salinity of the Earth's oceans is about 35 grams of salt per kilogram of sea water (3.5% salt).[102] Most of this salt was released from volcanic activity or extracted from cool, igneous rocks.[103] The oceans are also a reservoir of dissolved atmospheric gases, which are essential for the survival of many aquatic life forms.[104] Sea water has an important influence on the world's climate, with the oceans acting as a large heat reservoir.[105] Shifts in the oceanic temperature distribution can cause significant weather shifts, such as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation.[106]
Atmosphere
Main article: Atmosphere of Earth

The atmospheric pressure on the surface of the Earth averages 101.325 kPa, with a scale height of about 8.5 km.[3] It is 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, with trace amounts of water vapor, carbon dioxide and other gaseous molecules. The height of the troposphere varies with latitude, ranging between 8 km at the poles to 17 km at the equator, with some variation resulting from weather and seasonal factors.[107]

Earth's biosphere has significantly altered its atmosphere. Oxygenic photosynthesis evolved 2.7 bya, forming the primarily nitrogen–oxygen atmosphere of today.[108] This change enabled the proliferation of aerobic organisms as well as the formation of the ozone layer which blocks ultraviolet solar radiation, permitting life on land. Other atmospheric functions important to life on Earth include transporting water vapor, providing useful gases, causing small meteors to burn up before they strike the surface, and moderating temperature.[109] This last phenomenon is known as the greenhouse effect: trace molecules within the atmosphere serve to capture thermal energy emitted from the ground, thereby raising the average temperature. Water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane and ozone are the primary greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere. Without this heat-retention effect, the average surface would be −18 °C, in contrast to the current +15 °C, and life would likely not exist.[110]
Weather and climate
Main articles: Weather and Climate
 
 Satellite cloud cover image of Earth using NASA's Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer

The Earth's atmosphere has no definite boundary, slowly becoming thinner and fading into outer space. Three-quarters of the atmosphere's mass is contained within the first 11 km of the planet's surface. This lowest layer is called the troposphere. Energy from the Sun heats this layer, and the surface below, causing expansion of the air. This lower-density air then rises, and is replaced by cooler, higher-density air. The result is atmospheric circulation that drives the weather and climate through redistribution of thermal energy.[111]

The primary atmospheric circulation bands consist of the trade winds in the equatorial region below 30° latitude and the westerlies in the mid-latitudes between 30° and 60°.[112] Ocean currents are also important factors in determining climate, particularly the thermohaline circulation that distributes thermal energy from the equatorial oceans to the polar regions.[113]

Water vapor generated through surface evaporation is transported by circulatory patterns in the atmosphere. When atmospheric conditions permit an uplift of warm, humid air, this water condenses and settles to the surface as precipitation.[111] Most of the water is then transported to lower elevations by river systems and usually returned to the oceans or deposited into lakes. This water cycle is a vital mechanism for supporting life on land, and is a primary factor in the erosion of surface features over geological periods. Precipitation patterns vary widely, ranging from several meters of water per year to less than a millimeter. Atmospheric circulation, topological features and temperature differences determine the average precipitation that falls in each region.[114]

The amount of solar energy reaching the Earth's decreases with increasing latitude. At higher latitudes the sunlight reaches the surface at lower angles and it must pass through thicker columns of the atmosphere. As a result, the mean annual air temperature at sea level decreases by about 0.4 °C per degree of latitude away from the equator.[115] The Earth can be subdivided into specific latitudinal belts of approximately homogeneous climate. Ranging from the equator to the polar regions, these are the tropical (or equatorial), subtropical, temperate and polar climates.[116] Climate can also be classified based on the temperature and precipitation, with the climate regions characterized by fairly uniform air masses. The commonly used Köppen climate classification system (as modified by Wladimir Köppen's student Rudolph Geiger) has five broad groups (humid tropics, arid, humid middle latitudes, continental and cold polar), which are further divided into more specific subtypes.[112]
Upper atmosphere
 
 This view from orbit shows the full Moon partially obscured and deformed by the Earth's atmosphere. NASA image
See also: Outer space

Above the troposphere, the atmosphere is usually divided into the stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere.[109] Each layer has a different lapse rate, defining the rate of change in temperature with height. Beyond these, the exosphere thins out into the magnetosphere, where the Earth's magnetic fields interact with the solar wind.[117] Within the stratosphere is the ozone layer, a component that partially shields the surface from ultraviolet light and thus is important for life on Earth. The Kármán line, defined as 100 km above the Earth's surface, is a working definition for the boundary between atmosphere and space.[118]

Thermal energy causes some of the molecules at the outer edge of the Earth's atmosphere to increase their velocity to the point where they can escape from the planet's gravity. This causes a slow but steady leakage of the atmosphere into space. Because unfixed hydrogen has a low molecular weight, it can achieve escape velocity more readily and it leaks into outer space at a greater rate than other gasses.[119] The leakage of hydrogen into space contributes to the pushing of the Earth from an initially reducing state to its current oxidizing one. Photosynthesis provided a source of free oxygen, but the loss of reducing agents such as hydrogen is believed to have been a necessary precondition for the widespread accumulation of oxygen in the atmosphere.[120] Hence the ability of hydrogen to escape from the Earth's atmosphere may have influenced the nature of life that developed on the planet.[121] In the current, oxygen-rich atmosphere most hydrogen is converted into water before it has an opportunity to escape. Instead, most of the hydrogen loss comes from the destruction of methane in the upper atmosphere.[122]
Magnetic field
 
 Schematic of Earth's magnetosphere. The solar wind flows from left to right
Main article: Earth's magnetic field

The Earth's magnetic field is shaped roughly as a magnetic dipole, with the poles currently located proximate to the planet's geographic poles. At the equator of the magnetic field, the magnetic field strength at the planet's surface is 3.05 × 10−5 T, with global magnetic dipole moment of 7.91 × 1015 T m3.[123] According to dynamo theory, the field is generated within the molten outer core region where heat creates convection motions of conducting materials, generating electric currents. These in turn produce the Earth's magnetic field. The convection movements in the core are chaotic; the magnetic poles drift and periodically change alignment. This causes field reversals at irregular intervals averaging a few times every million years. The most recent reversal occurred approximately 700,000 years ago.[124][125]

The field forms the magnetosphere, which deflects particles in the solar wind. The sunward edge of the bow shock is located at about 13 times the radius of the Earth. The collision between the magnetic field and the solar wind forms the Van Allen radiation belts, a pair of concentric, torus-shaped regions of energetic charged particles. When the plasma enters the Earth's atmosphere at the magnetic poles, it forms the aurora.[126]
Orbit and rotation
Rotation
Main article: Earth's rotation
 
 Earth's axial tilt (or obliquity) and its relation to the rotation axis and plane of orbit

Earth's rotation period relative to the Sun—its mean solar day—is 86,400 seconds of mean solar time (86,400.0025 SI seconds).[127] As the Earth's solar day is now slightly longer than it was during the 19th century due to tidal acceleration, each day varies between 0 and 2 SI ms longer.[128][129]

Earth's rotation period relative to the fixed stars, called its stellar day by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS), is 86,164.098903691 seconds of mean solar time (UT1), or 23h 56m 4.098903691s.[2][n 12] Earth's rotation period relative to the precessing or moving mean vernal equinox, misnamed its sidereal day, is 86,164.09053083288 seconds of mean solar time (UT1) (23h 56m 4.09053083288s) as of 1982.[2] Thus the sidereal day is shorter than the stellar day by about 8.4 ms.[130] The length of the mean solar day in SI seconds is available from the IERS for the periods 1623–2005[131] and 1962–2005.[132]

Apart from meteors within the atmosphere and low-orbiting satellites, the main apparent motion of celestial bodies in the Earth's sky is to the west at a rate of 15°/h = 15'/min. For bodies near the celestial equator, this is equivalent to an apparent diameter of the Sun or Moon every two minutes; from the planet's surface, the apparent sizes of the Sun and the Moon are approximately the same.[133][134]
Orbit
Main article: Earth's orbit

Earth orbits the Sun at an average distance of about 150 million kilometers every 365.2564 mean solar days, or one sidereal year. From Earth, this gives an apparent movement of the Sun eastward with respect to the stars at a rate of about 1°/day, which is one apparent Sun or Moon diameter every 12 hours. Due to this motion, on average it takes 24 hours—a solar day—for Earth to complete a full rotation about its axis so that the Sun returns to the meridian. The orbital speed of the Earth averages about 29.8 km/s (107,000 km/h), which is fast enough to travel a distance equal to the planet's diameter, about 12,742 km, in seven minutes, and the distance to the Moon, 384,000 km, in about 3.5 hours.[3]

The Moon revolves with the Earth around a common barycenter every 27.32 days relative to the background stars. When combined with the Earth–Moon system's common revolution around the Sun, the period of the synodic month, from new moon to new moon, is 29.53 days. Viewed from the celestial north pole, the motion of Earth, the Moon and their axial rotations are all counterclockwise. Viewed from a vantage point above the north poles of both the Sun and the Earth, the Earth revolves in a counterclockwise direction about the Sun. The orbital and axial planes are not precisely aligned: Earth's axis is tilted some 23.4 degrees from the perpendicular to the Earth–Sun plane (the ecliptic), and the Earth–Moon plane is tilted up to ±5.1 degrees against the Earth–Sun plane. Without this tilt, there would be an eclipse every two weeks, alternating between lunar eclipses and solar eclipses.[3][135]

The Hill sphere, or gravitational sphere of influence, of the Earth is about 1.5 Gm or 1,500,000 km in radius.[136][n 13] This is the maximum distance at which the Earth's gravitational influence is stronger than the more distant Sun and planets. Objects must orbit the Earth within this radius, or they can become unbound by the gravitational perturbation of the Sun.

Earth, along with the Solar System, is situated in the Milky Way galaxy and orbits about 28,000 light years from the center of the galaxy. It is currently about 20 light years above the galactic plane in the Orion spiral arm.[137]
Axial tilt and seasons
Main article: Axial tilt

Due to the axial tilt of the Earth, the amount of sunlight reaching any given point on the surface varies over the course of the year. This causes seasonal change in climate, with summer in the northern hemisphere occurring when the North Pole is pointing toward the Sun, and winter taking place when the pole is pointed away. During the summer, the day lasts longer and the Sun climbs higher in the sky. In winter, the climate becomes generally cooler and the days shorter. Above the Arctic Circle, an extreme case is reached where there is no daylight at all for part of the year—a polar night. In the southern hemisphere the situation is exactly reversed, with the South Pole oriented opposite the direction of the North Pole.

By astronomical convention, the four seasons are determined by the solstices—the point in the orbit of maximum axial tilt toward or away from the Sun—and the equinoxes, when the direction of the tilt and the direction to the Sun are perpendicular. In the northern hemisphere, Winter Solstice occurs on about December 21, Summer Solstice is near June 21, Spring Equinox is around March 20 and Autumnal Equinox is about September 23. In the Southern hemisphere, the situation is reversed, with the Summer and Winter Solstices exchanged and the Spring and Autumnal Equinox dates switched.[138]
 
 NASA's Cassini spacecraft photographs the Earth and Moon (visible bottom-right) from Saturn (July 19, 2013).

The angle of the Earth's tilt is relatively stable over long periods of time. The tilt does undergo nutation; a slight, irregular motion with a main period of 18.6 years.[139] The orientation (rather than the angle) of the Earth's axis also changes over time, precessing around in a complete circle over each 25,800 year cycle; this precession is the reason for the difference between a sidereal year and a tropical year. Both of these motions are caused by the varying attraction of the Sun and Moon on the Earth's equatorial bulge. From the perspective of the Earth, the poles also migrate a few meters across the surface. This polar motion has multiple, cyclical components, which collectively are termed quasiperiodic motion. In addition to an annual component to this motion, there is a 14-month cycle called the Chandler wobble. The rotational velocity of the Earth also varies in a phenomenon known as length of day variation.[140]

In modern times, Earth's perihelion occurs around January 3, and the aphelion around July 4. These dates change over time due to precession and other orbital factors, which follow cyclical patterns known as Milankovitch cycles. The changing Earth–Sun distance causes an increase of about 6.9%[n 14] in solar energy reaching the Earth at perihelion relative to aphelion. Since the southern hemisphere is tilted toward the Sun at about the same time that the Earth reaches the closest approach to the Sun, the southern hemisphere receives slightly more energy from the Sun than does the northern over the course of a year. This effect is much less significant than the total energy change due to the axial tilt, and most of the excess energy is absorbed by the higher proportion of water in the southern hemisphere.[141]
Habitability
See also: Planetary habitability
 
This ancient impact crater, now filled with water, marks Earth's surface

A planet that can sustain life is termed habitable, even if life did not originate there. The Earth provides liquid water—an environment where complex organic molecules can assemble and interact, and sufficient energy to sustain metabolism.[142] The distance of the Earth from the Sun, as well as its orbital eccentricity, rate of rotation, axial tilt, geological history, sustaining atmosphere and protective magnetic field all contribute to the current climatic conditions at the surface.[143]
Biosphere
Main article: Biosphere
 
 Coral reef and beach

A planet's life forms are sometimes said to form a "biosphere". The Earth's biosphere is generally believed to have begun evolving about 3.5 bya.[108] The biosphere is divided into a number of biomes, inhabited by broadly similar plants and animals. On land, biomes are separated primarily by differences in latitude, height above sea level and humidity. Terrestrial biomes lying within the Arctic or Antarctic Circles, at high altitudes or in extremely arid areas are relatively barren of plant and animal life; species diversity reaches a peak in humid lowlands at equatorial latitudes.[144]
Evolution of life
Main article: Evolutionary history of life
 
 Speculative phylogenetic tree of life on Earth based on rRNA analysis.

Highly energetic chemistry is thought to have produced a self-replicating molecule around 4 bya and half a billion years later the last common ancestor of all life existed.[145] The development of photosynthesis allowed the Sun's energy to be harvested directly by life forms; the resultant oxygen accumulated in the atmosphere and formed a layer of ozone (a form of molecular oxygen [O3]) in the upper atmosphere.[108] The incorporation of smaller cells within larger ones resulted in the development of complex cells called eukaryotes.[146] True multicellular organisms formed as cells within colonies became increasingly specialized. Aided by the absorption of harmful ultraviolet radiation by the ozone layer, life colonized the surface of Earth.[147] The earliest evidences for life on Earth are graphite found to be biogenic in 3.7 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks discovered in Western Greenland[148] and microbial mat fossils found in 3.48 billion-year-old sandstone discovered in Western Australia.[149][150]

Since the 1960s, it has been hypothesized that severe glacial action between 750 and 580 mya, during the Neoproterozoic, covered much of the planet in a sheet of ice. This hypothesis has been termed "Snowball Earth", and is of particular interest because it preceded the Cambrian explosion, when multicellular life forms began to proliferate.[151]

Following the Cambrian explosion, about 535 mya, there have been five major mass extinctions.[152] The most recent such event was 66 mya, when an asteroid impact triggered the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs and other large reptiles, but spared some small animals such as mammals, which then resembled shrews. Over the past 66 myr, mammalian life has diversified, and several million years ago an African ape-like animal such as Orrorin tugenensis gained the ability to stand upright.[153] This enabled tool use and encouraged communication that provided the nutrition and stimulation needed for a larger brain, which allowed the evolution of the human race. The development of agriculture, and then civilization, allowed humans to influence the Earth in a short time span as no other life form had,[154] affecting both the nature and quantity of other life forms.
Natural resources and land use
Main articles: Natural resource and Land use
Estimated human land use, 2000[155]Land use   Mha
Cropland   1,510–1,611
Pastures   2,500–3,410
Natural forests   3,143–3,871
Planted forests   126–215
Urban areas   66–351
Unused, productive land   356–445


The Earth provides resources that are exploitable by humans for useful purposes. Some of these are non-renewable resources, such as mineral fuels, that are difficult to replenish on a short time scale.

Large deposits of fossil fuels are obtained from the Earth's crust, consisting of coal, petroleum, natural gas and methane clathrate. These deposits are used by humans both for energy production and as feedstock for chemical production. Mineral ore bodies have also been formed in Earth's crust through a process of ore genesis, resulting from actions of erosion and plate tectonics.[156] These bodies form concentrated sources for many metals and other useful elements.

The Earth's biosphere produces many useful biological products for humans, including (but far from limited to) food, wood, pharmaceuticals, oxygen, and the recycling of many organic wastes. The land-based ecosystem depends upon topsoil and fresh water, and the oceanic ecosystem depends upon dissolved nutrients washed down from the land.[157] In 1980, 5,053 Mha (50.53 million km2) of the Earth's land surface consisted of forest and woodlands, 6,788 Mha (67.88 million km2) was grasslands and pasture, and 1,501 Mha (15.01 million km2) was cultivated as croplands.[158] The estimated amount of irrigated land in 1993 was 2,481,250 square kilometres (958,020 sq mi).[15] Humans also live on the land by using building materials to construct shelters.
Natural and environmental hazards

Large areas of the Earth's surface are subject to extreme weather such as tropical cyclones, hurricanes, or typhoons that dominate life in those areas. From 1980 to 2000, these events caused an average of 11,800 deaths per year.[159] Many places are subject to earthquakes, landslides, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, tornadoes, sinkholes, blizzards, floods, droughts, wildfires, and other calamities and disasters.

Many localized areas are subject to human-made pollution of the air and water, acid rain and toxic substances, loss of vegetation (overgrazing, deforestation, desertification), loss of wildlife, species extinction, soil degradation, soil depletion, erosion, and introduction of invasive species.

According to the United Nations, a scientific consensus exists linking human activities to global warming due to industrial carbon dioxide emissions. This is predicted to produce changes such as the melting of glaciers and ice sheets, more extreme temperature ranges, significant changes in weather and a global rise in average sea levels.[160]
Human geography
Main articles: Human geography and World
 
The seven continents of Earth[161]       North America
      South America
      Antarctica         Europe
      Africa         Asia
      Oceania
v · t · e

 
 A composite picture consisting of DMSP/OLS ground-illumination data for 2000 placed on a simulated night-time image of Earth.

Cartography, the study and practice of map-making, and geography, the study of the lands, features, inhabitants and phenomena on Earth, have historically been the disciplines devoted to depicting the Earth. Surveying, the determination of locations and distances, and to a lesser extent navigation, the determination of position and direction, have developed alongside cartography and geography, providing and suitably quantifying the requisite information.

Earth has reached approximately seven billion human inhabitants as of October 31, 2011.[162] Projections indicate that the world's human population will reach 9.2 billion in 2050.[163] Most of the growth is expected to take place in developing nations. Human population density varies widely around the world, but a majority live in Asia. By 2020, 60% of the world's population is expected to be living in urban, rather than rural, areas.[164]

It is estimated that only one-eighth of the surface of the Earth is suitable for humans to live on: three-quarters is covered by oceans, while half of the land area is either desert (14%),[165] high mountains (27%),[166] or other unsuitable terrain. The northernmost permanent settlement in the world is Alert, on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, Canada.[167] (82°28′N) The southernmost is the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, in Antarctica, almost exactly at the South Pole. (90°S)

Independent sovereign nations claim the planet's entire land surface, except for some parts of Antarctica and the odd unclaimed area of Bir Tawil between Egypt and Sudan. As of 2013, there are 206 sovereign states, including the 193 United Nations member states. In addition, there are 59 dependent territories, and a number of autonomous areas, territories under dispute and other entities.[15] Historically, Earth has never had a sovereign government with authority over the entire globe, although a number of nation-states have striven for world domination and failed.[168]

The United Nations is a worldwide intergovernmental organization that was created with the goal of intervening in the disputes between nations, thereby avoiding armed conflict.[169] The U.N. serves primarily as a forum for international diplomacy and international law. When the consensus of the membership permits, it provides a mechanism for armed intervention.[170]
 
 The first "earthrise" ever seen directly by humans, photographed by astronauts on board Apollo 8.

The first human to orbit the Earth was Yuri Gagarin on April 12, 1961.[171] In total, about 487 people have visited outer space and reached Earth orbit as of July 30, 2010, and, of these, twelve have walked on the Moon.[172][173][174] Normally the only humans in space are those on the International Space Station. The station's crew, currently six people, is usually replaced every six months.[175] The furthest humans have travelled from Earth is 400,171 km, achieved during the Apollo 13 mission in 1970.[176]
Cultural and historical viewpoint
Main article: Earth in culture

The standard astronomical symbol of the Earth consists of a cross circumscribed by a circle, .[177]

Unlike the rest of the planets in the Solar System, humankind did not begin to view the Earth as a moving object in orbit around the Sun until the 16th century.[178] Earth has often been personified as a deity, in particular a goddess. In many cultures a mother goddess is also portrayed as a fertility deity. Creation myths in many religions recall a story involving the creation of the Earth by a supernatural deity or deities. A variety of religious groups, often associated with fundamentalist branches of Protestantism[179] or Islam,[180] assert that their interpretations of these creation myths in sacred texts are literal truth and should be considered alongside or replace conventional scientific accounts of the formation of the Earth and the origin and development of life.[181] Such assertions are opposed by the scientific community[182][183] and by other religious groups.[184][185][186] A prominent example is the creation–evolution controversy.

In the past, there were varying levels of belief in a flat Earth,[187] but this was displaced by spherical Earth, a concept that has been credited to Pythagoras (6th century BC).[188] Human cultures have developed many views of the planet, including its personification as a planetary deity, its shape as flat, its position as the center of the universe, and in the modern Gaia Principle, as a single, self-regulating organism in its own right.
Chronology
Formation
Main article: History of the Earth
 
 Artist's impression of the birth of the Solar System

The earliest material found in the Solar System is dated to 4.5672±0.0006 billion years ago (bya);[189] therefore, it is inferred that the Earth must have been formed by accretion around this time. By 4.54±0.04 bya[33] the primordial Earth had formed. The formation and evolution of the Solar System bodies occurred in tandem with the Sun. In theory a solar nebula partitions a volume out of a molecular cloud by gravitational collapse, which begins to spin and flatten into a circumstellar disk, and then the planets grow out of that in tandem with the star. A nebula contains gas, ice grains and dust (including primordial nuclides). In nebular theory planetesimals commence forming as particulate accrues by cohesive clumping and then by gravity. The assembly of the primordial Earth proceeded for 10–20 myr.[190] The Moon formed shortly thereafter, about 4.53 bya.[191]

The formation of the Moon remains a topic of debate. The working hypothesis is that it formed by accretion from material loosed from the Earth after a Mars-sized object, named Theia, impacted with Earth.[192] The model, however, is not self-consistent. In this scenario, the mass of Theia is 10% of the Earth's mass,[193] it impacts with the Earth in a glancing blow,[194] and some of its mass merges with the Earth. Between approximately 3.8 and 4.1 bya, numerous asteroid impacts during the Late Heavy Bombardment caused significant changes to the greater surface environment of the Moon, and by inference, to the Earth.
Geological history
Main article: Geological history of Earth

Earth's atmosphere and oceans formed by volcanic activity and outgassing that included water vapor. The origin of the world's oceans was condensation augmented by water and ice delivered by asteroids, proto-planets, and comets.[195] In this model, atmospheric "greenhouse gases" kept the oceans from freezing while the newly forming Sun was only at 70% luminosity.[196] By 3.5 bya, the Earth's magnetic field was established, which helped prevent the atmosphere from being stripped away by the solar wind.[197] A crust formed when the molten outer layer of the planet Earth cooled to form a solid as the accumulated water vapor began to act in the atmosphere. The two models[198] that explain land mass propose either a steady growth to the present-day forms[199] or, more likely, a rapid growth[200] early in Earth history[201] followed by a long-term steady continental area.[202][203][204] Continents formed by plate tectonics, a process ultimately driven by the continuous loss of heat from the earth's interior. On time scales lasting hundreds of millions of years, the supercontinents have formed and broken up three times. Roughly 750 mya (million years ago), one of the earliest known supercontinents, Rodinia, began to break apart. The continents later recombined to form Pannotia, 600–540 mya, then finally Pangaea, which also broke apart 180 mya.[205]

The present pattern of ice ages began about 40 mya and then intensified during the Pleistocene about 3 mya. High-latitude regions have since undergone repeated cycles of glaciation and thaw, repeating every 40–100000 years. The last continental glaciation ended 10,000 years ago.[206]
Predicted future
Main article: Future of the Earth

Estimates on how much longer the planet will be able to continue to support life range from 500 million years (myr), to as long as 2.3 billion years (byr).[207][208][209] The future of the planet is closely tied to that of the Sun. As a result of the steady accumulation of helium at the Sun's core, the star's total luminosity will slowly increase. The luminosity of the Sun will grow by 10% over the next 1.1 byr and by 40% over the next 3.5 byr.[210] Climate models indicate that the rise in radiation reaching the Earth is likely to have dire consequences, including the loss of the planet's oceans.[211]

The Earth's increasing surface temperature will accelerate the inorganic CO2 cycle, reducing its concentration to levels lethally low for plants (10 ppm for C4 photosynthesis) in approximately 500-900 myr.[207] The lack of vegetation will result in the loss of oxygen in the atmosphere, so animal life will become extinct within several million more years.[212] After another billion years all surface water will have disappeared[208] and the mean global temperature will reach 70 °C[212] (158 °F). The Earth is expected to be effectively habitable for about another 500 myr from that point,[207] although this may be extended up to 2.3 byr if the nitrogen is removed from the atmosphere.[209] Even if the Sun were eternal and stable, 27% of the water in the modern oceans will descend to the mantle in one billion years, due to reduced steam venting from mid-ocean ridges.[213]
 
 Life cycle of the Sun

The Sun, as part of its evolution, will become a red giant in about 5 byr. Models predict that the Sun will expand to roughly 1 AU (150,000,000 km), which is about 250 times its present radius.[210][214] Earth's fate is less clear. As a red giant, the Sun will lose roughly 30% of its mass, so, without tidal effects, the Earth will move to an orbit 1.7 AU (250,000,000 km) from the Sun, when the star reaches its maximum radius. The planet was, therefore, initially expected to escape envelopment by the expanded Sun's sparse outer atmosphere, though most, if not all, remaining life would have been destroyed by the Sun's increased luminosity (peaking at about 5,000 times its present level).[210] A 2008 simulation indicates that the Earth's orbit will decay due to tidal effects and drag, causing it to enter the red giant Sun's atmosphere and be vaporized.[214] After that, the Sun's core will collapse into a white dwarf, as its outer layers are ejected into space as a planetary nebula. The matter that once made up the Earth will be released into interstellar space, where it may one day become incorporated into a new generation of planets and other celestial bodies.
See also: Risks to civilization, humans, and planet Earth
Moon
CharacteristicsDiameter   3,474.8 km
Mass   7.349×1022 kg
Semi-major axis   384,400 km
Orbital period   27 d 7 h 43.7 m

 
 Details of the Earth–Moon system. Besides the radius of each object, the radius to the Earth–Moon barycenter is shown. Photos from NASA. Data from NASA. The Moon's axis is located by Cassini's third law.
 
Full moon as seen from Earth's northern hemisphere
Main article: Moon

The Moon is a relatively large, terrestrial, planet-like satellite, with a diameter about one-quarter of the Earth's. It is the largest moon in the Solar System relative to the size of its planet, although Charon is larger relative to the dwarf planet Pluto. The natural satellites orbiting other planets are called "moons" after Earth's Moon.

The gravitational attraction between the Earth and Moon causes tides on Earth. The same effect on the Moon has led to its tidal locking: its rotation period is the same as the time it takes to orbit the Earth. As a result, it always presents the same face to the planet. As the Moon orbits Earth, different parts of its face are illuminated by the Sun, leading to the lunar phases; the dark part of the face is separated from the light part by the solar terminator.

Due to their tidal interaction, the Moon recedes from Earth at the rate of approximately 38 mm a year. Over millions of years, these tiny modifications—and the lengthening of Earth's day by about 23 µs a year—add up to significant changes.[215] During the Devonian period, for example, (approximately 410 mya) there were 400 days in a year, with each day lasting 21.8 hours.[216]

The Moon may have dramatically affected the development of life by moderating the planet's climate. Paleontological evidence and computer simulations show that Earth's axial tilt is stabilized by tidal interactions with the Moon.[217] Some theorists believe that without this stabilization against the torques applied by the Sun and planets to the Earth's equatorial bulge, the rotational axis might be chaotically unstable, exhibiting chaotic changes over millions of years, as appears to be the case for Mars.[218]

Viewed from Earth, the Moon is just far enough away to have almost the same apparent-sized disk as the Sun. The angular size (or solid angle) of these two bodies match because, although the Sun's diameter is about 400 times as large as the Moon's, it is also 400 times more distant.[134] This allows total and annular solar eclipses to occur on Earth.

The most widely accepted theory of the Moon's origin, the giant impact theory, states that it formed from the collision of a Mars-size protoplanet called Theia with the early Earth. This hypothesis explains (among other things) the Moon's relative lack of iron and volatile elements, and the fact that its composition is nearly identical to that of the Earth's crust.[219]
 
 Scale representation of the relative sizes of, and average distance between, Earth and the Moon
Asteroids and artificial satellites
 
 The International Space Station is an artificial satellite that orbits Earth.

Earth has at least five co-orbital asteroids, including 3753 Cruithne and 2002 AA29.[220][221] A trojan asteroid companion, 2010 TK7, is librating around the leading Lagrange triangular point, L4, of Earth in Earth's orbit around the Sun.[222][223]

As of 2011, there are 931 operational, man-made satellites orbiting the Earth.[224] There are also inoperative satellites and over 300,000 pieces of space debris. Earth's largest artificial satellite is the International Space Station.
See also   Book: Earth
Book: Solar System

Discovery and exploration of the Solar System
Earth Anthem
Earth Day
Earth Hour
Human population
Sun

Spec

  • Posts: 1220
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    • twitch
Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #5 on: August 09, 2014, 12:58:25 pm »
I feel like shit tonight. I'm standing out back at the Rio, two vodka tonics in each hand, stacked on each other precariously. I've been sick this week. Several times tonight, I've coughed on the girls, causing them to become upset and leave. Burning the candle at both ends has weakened my immune system; between RSD and the hotel, I've worked 24 days straight and counting. Not to mention the fact that I've been going out, getting hammered and making out with strangers practically every night for the past three years. Come to think of it, I've been getting sick a LOT lately. This isn't good at all. My voice isn't as crispy and hitting, people are able to talk over me. Beyond that, I'm just fucking things up in general. Last weekend, I conducted a workshop in Chicago which culminated in a drunken fight with a frat boy in a pizza shop during debrief. He threw a slice of pizza at me and I ducked, causing it to hit an elderly student in the face. A fucking disaster. Earlier this afternoon, I called up a few chicks whose numbers I got over the weekend. All of them were flake; this was mildly upsetting since at the time, they had seemed fairly solid. Just goes to show, YOU NEVER KNOW WHICH NUMBERS ARE GOING TO FLAKE. Like, the one that you had screaming and pawing you for two hours can straight flake, and the one you got on the bus that you talked to for three minutes answers on the first ring and screams, "Oh my God, I'm so glad you called, let's hang out! !" Knowing this, it didn't really bother me all that much, but it's sort of set the tone for the evening. Christophe is in Europe, so in lieu of a solid wing, I invited a "civilian" friend, Pasquale. He's a youngster who has a lot of potential, but not much else. He has no finesse, he blurts counterproductive nonsense a lot. No concept of wing tactics; he has a tendency to contradict me, making me look like some bullshit chode in front of the girls. Social pressure I can handle, but when your own "wing" is undermining you, that can take a toll. I would have been better off going solo. Lie down with dogs, wake up chode. It's also clear that we arrived too early. El Rio doesn't even get cool until 11, we rolled in at 9. That's TWO HOURS of $l drinks before the targets arrive. By the time 11 rolls around, I'm already wasted. I usually take a disco nap, wake up at 1 0, get ready and roll in stone sober to go to work. Not tonight. As a result, my calibration is WAY off; I'm yelling stupid shit and acting a fool. I'm standing on the deck peering and leering around, coughing and wasted. I see four girls that look okay, and open them with Dental Floss. It goes fine, until Pasquale comes in and blows it by saying, "Why are you asking them about floss?" Fuck it, I just plow. More women enter the group. One is an 8, probably the hottest chick in the club. I ignore her and game the peers. She starts busting my balls, I bust her ass back, but my delivery and rhythm is off and it doesn't work very well. They're not entranced like they usually are. I feel like one of those random Lair guys I see out sometimes, where you can tell the chicks are just humoring them and waiting for them to leave. It's a bizarre feeling and I am NOT used to it. I continue to game the less-hot friends, but then I cough in their faces and they get pissed. I mention Journey and one of them becomes all excited. I sing a few bars of "Faithfully," but my voice sucks. Pasquale says, "Nobody wants to hear that," and the hot one starts to tool me. I make a lame comeback and basically get blown out. Shit, I haven't gotten blown out in a long fucking time, it sucks. I shake it off and tum to see an ex-student and his bro just standing there doing nothing. I tell him to go talk to some girls. He approaches a couple standing off to the side, meanwhile his friend asks me what I'm doing. I shrug and say, "Eh, not much, there 's no hot chicks here." He says, "What about that set?" indicating the one I got blown out of. "That was a warm-up." He says, "Pretty hot for a warm-up." I resist the urge to kick him in the teeth. What the luck have you done tonight but sit there and watch me, bitch? I reply, "Yeah." Eventually, I decide that it's probably best to fold 'em and pack it in. As I'm leaving, I see Nikki and Deb, these two hotties I met last week. They're standing in line, and they call my name. The hotter one, Nikki, is ON POINT as FUCK, and during the initial interaction she was super into me. Apparently, they've come specifically to see me, and now I'm fucked because I'm already leaving. What, am I gonna go back in and game them all fucked up? Not gonna happen. I weakly tell them I'll "see them around" and I go get a taco, head home and pass out. I wake up the following morning in bed fully clothed, with my boots on. This was my first "off night" since getting back into the game for real (i.e. breaking up with Heather). I 've been having all this great success, I was riding high, and I forgot that this kind of shit is inevitable. Part of the game. So, rather than beat myself up over it, I'll just do up a quick post-mortem, file it, and let it go. Every failure is a brick in my palace. I'm taking the next couple of nights off, going to bed early and taking my vitamins to shake this sickness. Next week, I won't go early, and I'll leave the civilians at home. Stick to the fuckin' script like Hova, get some more numbers and work that shit. One night is nothing ... as long as it doesn't become a trend.

I lost my voice over the weekend. For a "motivational speaker," this is tantamount to catastrophe. By Monday I couldn't even swallow (insert crass joke here). My tonsils are swollen up to the size of golf balls. This isn't the first time this has happened. For the past half year, I've been getting sick once a month, without fail. I'm falling apart. My "moobs" have grown heavy and pendulous, jiggling each time I mount the stairs. I have a thick double chin, and mysterious pains shoot through my torso without warning; most likely impending liver failure. It is time to seek some professional medical attention. I go down to SF General. As soon as I walk in, I'm taken aback by the heavy police presence. Several of the patients are sporting orange jumpsuits and shackles, with cops in tow. I sit down, waiting for the triage nurse. At this point, I'm feeling gregarious and strike up a conversation with the lady next to me, a chubby, toothless Asian with severe psoriasis who keeps stuttering about "dentist, dentist." She claims to be a dancer before stating, "You no jew? You look like the jew." I am sent up to urgent care. I take a number and enter the waiting room. It smells like farts ... like rancid salami. Sure enough, one of the chodes sitting there exclaims, not two minutes later, "Bologna has a lot of sulfites." Glancing about as I sit down, I am surprised that anyone in here even knows what the fuck a sulfite is. They are all dressed in non-ironic hipster gear; faded North Face jackets and polyester vests. Everybody in the room seems to know each other. From what I can gather, it's from jail or the halfway house. A gaggle of white trash tweeker chicks begin reading aloud from what appears to be a pamphlet about clitoral stimulation. While this goes on, a group of crusty black women alternately praise and threaten violence against their children. Now the tweekers are discussing "handjobs with vibrating gloves." The least fucked-up-looking one announces, "We is some obstinate girls up in here !" Over the course of the next hour she will use the word "obstinate" several more times. She is the smart one. Someone asks her if she is pregnant and she takes offense. "How the hell I be pregnant muthafukka, I been in jail !" Meanwhile, her friend dismisses the vibrating glove idea: "Just give me an old-fashioned Harley!" The elder tweekchick of the group pipes in, "Aw hells nah, just give me a bicycle and a dirt road." A voice erupts from the comer: "You cussin? ! Sit yo ass da fuck down befo granma GETS YOU!" Tweeker Chick 1 asks Granma, "That yo boy? Those eyes are god damn beautiful." Now, a new character enters. It appears to be a crackheaded Indian of indeterminate gender. It shuffles about muttering gibberish and saying hello to people, as, again, it seems to know everybody from "the home." I can make out a few snippets of English, which include something about its sweater getting stolen while doing "tae bo at the learning center," and the phrase, "I LOVE dem pizza rolls!" It then begins outlining a crude conspiracy theory about 2Pac's death. An elderly dude pipes up, "His name MAKAVELI! MAKA VELI!!" A scary chick with crazyeyes, camo pants and a santa hat goes, "Pfft." A 350 pound woman begins telling her friends in a disgusted tone about the "fat and nasty Mexican" whom she encountered earlier, and she's dead serious. I'm starting to feel not-so-gregarious. Just when I think things can't get any worse (better?), fucking NAZIS come in and sit down. Yes, that's right: Nazis. A man with a shaved head and his girl, all covered in tats and wearing bomber jackets. Surprisingly, THEY also know everybody in the room. The elderly "Makaveli" guy, however, begins to glare and freak out, and CrackheadIndian mediates the situation by saying, "Calm down mayeng, they ain't botherin nobody, they just Nazi." You can not make this shit up. I find myself pondering why everybody here speaks in this ghetto patois. White, black, tranny, they all be talk like dis. I realize: THIS is America. The entire time, the soap opera "General Hospital" is playing on the television mounted up in the comer. Several of the people in the room comment on the show and demonstrate knowledge of the plot and characters. CrackheadIndian even says, "Dis my FAVORITE ... Luke an Laura." I start to watch the show, with its depictions of whitebread affiuence, and ponder the fact that for most of my fellow patients, it portrays a world and a lifestyle they will never experience. To them, that world is as ridiculous and amusing as theirs is to me. Nazi Dude sums it up best: "Yo, THIS is General Hospital. We in it NOW." We all laugh together.

A Monday night sometime in September. My venereal tests came out clean. It's like I won the sexual lottery. Strong like bull! For now at least. I have some vegan Sloppy Joes at Che 's house, then bounce to the spot. I get there and there is a LONG LINE out front. Holy shit. I haven't seen a line here since the old glory days of Rio. Awesome. I walk directly to the front of the line and push my way through. But the timing is wack, and right as I get up, the door guy is yelling at people to back up, and I get rebuffed. I'm stunned, I walk back outside and pretend to be on my cell phone so I don't look like a chode. Lame. Heather walks up while I'm standing in line. It's been a month since I broke it off with her. This is the first time I've seen her in a social setting since the breakup. I say hello. I ask her if she wants to try some game out together; if it doesn't work out, we' ll split up and it's every man for himself, no hard feelings. She agrees. This other chick appears, some girl I opened on program a long time ago, who Chessy and I had been trying to bang. We call her "FakeBi." Sometimes, you get one of these chicks who likes the IDEA of a threesome, but when push comes to shove will not do it. Like, every time we would have her meet us, she would have at least one friend in tow. The sister, the co-worker, sometimes even the boyfriend. The chick gets off on the WHIFF of kinky sexuality, but is in reality a fucking pussy. Sure enough, tonight she's here with four guys, including the boyfriend. After we greet her and she wanders off, I tum to Heather and say, "Fuck this chick, I've had it. Fresh chicks only tonight. Fuck this bitch ... GANGSTA!" This will be my catch phrase for the evening, along with "Need mah DRANK! !" But I'm still stunned from not getting in, and the fact that I'm stoned out of my fucking mind isn't helping, either. I call Christophe, who's already inside. "Wherrre ze fuck ahr zhou?" he says. It sounds super loud in there, like an F -16 taking off. "I couldn't get past the line, what should I do?""What ze FU CK mahhn, just walk past ze lahn! What zze fuck ahr zhou theeenkeeen Djzhefphheee?" It occurs to me that he is correct, and simply walk up again. Thugs are staring me down as I brush past. I just shout, "GANGSTA! Need mah DRANK! ! ! " The door guy sees me this time and lets me slide in, along with Chessy. We leave the FakeBi outside. "See you in there !" It is PACKED, nice. It's the dead of summer and the crowd can probably be attributed to the weather. Hot fun in the summertime. I get mah drank, two vodka tonics, no straw. $2. There are tons of "pickup guys" here. Looks like EI Rio has garnered quite the cachet as a result of my online reports. I am amused as I watch all of them greet "Chessy" quite warmly. "Heeeey girl ! ! ! " Big hugs. Funny, I mention the breakup offhanded once in chat and somehow everyone knows a day later. Hey, it's all good, they can have at it. .. if they dare. We post up out back on the deck and start scanning the crowd. FakeBi finally gets in, and I'm being fairly dismissive of her. Some dude she 's with asks me how we know her. I say, "Her? We fucked her." He looks really disturbed, hopefully he will tell the boyfriend. I laugh, then we start scoping targets. Christophe is in a mood. He shouts, "Hey mahn, peek zee hardezd set een hair, I don geeva FUCK!" I point, he shoots, blows some dumbass out. I laugh and stop paying attention after that, opening some drunk chicks halfheartedly. Time passes. We 're just standing there. I haven't really done shit all night. Meanwhile every other pickup dork is deep in set, they're probably thinking to themselves,jlaix ain 't shit, he s all hype, he s just been standing there talking to guys all night. Yeah right. A little hottie in a sun dress walks by, an 8, and I bark, "HEY. HEY," at her. Opened. She asks, "Where can I find a lesbian?" I tell her, "Ho shit, you're in luck. I'm a lesbian." She thinks I'm just a dumbass until l follow up with, "Allow me to introduce myself: k.d. Lang." I sing a few bars of "Constant Craving" and she cracks up. Then I say, "And this bitch here," gesturing to Chessy, "well, she's not a lesbian exactly, but she does lick a mean pussy! Ain't that right?" I sock her on the arm. The target laughs. I say, "So, are you like a straight dyke or what? Do you bang guys?" "Only in threesomes." You gotta be fucking kidding me. Boom. I start stacking game. She's starry eyed. I command them to make out. They do it. I spit some more game, then 1 kiss her. We go out back and meet her friends. We find out the chick just turned 1 8 ; 1 get pre-cum on my boxers and choke on a piece of ice. Some big thug-looking dude walks up to me and starts to compliment me on how 1 cut the line. "Were you in here before? ' Cause 1 was like yo, they was in here before so 1 didn't trip on you." 1 tell him that no, in fact, we had only just arrived. "Just be confident man!" He laughs and says, "Yo mayeng 1 like yo style mayeng!" "GANGSTA! ! Need mah DRANK! ! ! " Time to venue change. 1 suggest we go to Phone Bizzle. She protests, "My friends are going to give me a ride home !" 1 tell her 1 will "give her a ride." She finds her friends and tells them she 's leaving with us. What the fuck, this seems too easy. Gatta love the power of rudimentary game on teenagers. As we walk out, the FakeBi comes up and says to me, "You guys are a piece of work." 1 wink and say, "Right back at ya." Buh-bye ! Bizzle. The girls sit, 1 get drinks. 1 force her to make animal noises in exchange for the drink. 1 languidly reel out gibberish, there's no passion behind it. The girls make out. Then 1 make out with the target. Then we have a three way make out, and after this we take turns attempting to throw popcorn in each others' mouths. The bar closes. Club Jeffy time. She 's like, "I have to go home !" 1 keep saying, "Yeah, later." When we get there, 1 basically go STRAIGHT into it. The girls start making out, but something's not right. The girl claims to be a virgin and puts up massive resistance when 1 go for her pants. The vibe sours. 1 try to tum it back around, without much enthusiasm. Finally, the girl gets a call from her friends and takes this opportunity to leave. Numbers are exchanged, but I know it's not going anywhere. She 's gone. Heather and I make uneasy conversation for a bit, then she decides to go home as well. Sitting alone, I type up my customary field report of the evening. When I get to the part where the chick leaves, however, I can't continue. I pause for a moment, then write an entirely different ending, one where Chessy and I actually fuck the girl at the end. I post it online. Immediately after hitting the "submit" button, I am overwhelmed with a sense of shame. In the thousands of reports I have posted, never ONCE have I deviated from my policy of telling nothing but the unvarnished truth. Why I decided to violate my code now, I have no idea. Regardless, I leave the post as it is, and prepare for bed. As I brush my teeth and stare at myself in the mirror, one word continues to reverberate through my skull:

PATHETIC.

Thiradell

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Re: Here is Practical Explanation about Next Life, Purpose of Human Life -
« Reply #6 on: August 09, 2014, 03:30:15 pm »
O, reason not the need: our basest beggars
Are in the poorest thing superfluous:
Allow not nature more than nature needs,
Man's life's as cheap as beast's: thou art a lady;
If only to go warm were gorgeous,
Why, nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear'st,
Which scarcely keeps thee warm. But, for true need,--
You heavens, give me that patience, patience I need!
You see me here, you gods, a poor old man,
As full of grief as age; wretched in both!
If it be you that stir these daughters' hearts
Against their father, fool me not so much
To bear it tamely; touch me with noble anger,
And let not women's weapons, water-drops,
Stain my man's cheeks! No, you unnatural hags,
I will have such revenges on you both,
That all the world shall--I will do such things,--
What they are, yet I know not: but they shall be
The terrors of the earth. You think I'll weep
No, I'll not weep:
I have full cause of weeping; but this heart
Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws,
Or ere I'll weep. O fool, I shall go mad!
nothin' moves me more than a groove that soothes me
nothin' soothes me more than a groove that boosts me
nothin' boosts me more, or suits me beautifully
there's nothin' you can do to me; stab me, shoot me