The earliest credible account on the age of the Earth came from William Thomson, better known as Lord Kelvin and from his assistant John Perry. They estimated the Earth age by taking into account heat measurements. Kelvin used the Fourier transformation which had shown that diffusion equation, in which the rate of change of temperature at a point is proportional to the second spatial derivative of the temperature, with the constant of proportionality being a property of the material called thermal diffusivity. His initial estimate of the age of the Earth was between 24 million and 400 million years. Geologists now know that the Earth is some 4.5 billion years old. Although using exacting mathematics, the problem is where Kelvin went wrong. ...
It is not surprising that humans have wondered how long Earth has existed. At one extreme, there wer...
http://www.springerlink.com/content/g11878m4872452t7/We address the first several hundred million ye...
Abstract: This paper presents a brief historical review of various attempts to estimate the age of t...
Many readers know the tale of how William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) calculated the age of the Eart...
‘For having, in the natural history of this earth, seen a succession of worlds, we may from this con...
Lord Kelvin argued that the Sun had to be between 20 and 100 million years old, based on t...
The early thermal history of the Earth is reconsidered with the constraint that core formation occur...
Thermodynamics developed as a new branch of physics in the 19th century helping to go beyond a purel...
Kelvin calculated the age of the Earth to be about 24 million years by assuming conductive cooling f...
William Thomson (1824-1907), an eminent physicist who contributed to the formulation of the second l...
Lord Kelvin calculated that Earth began to solidify 40 million years ago, thus starting a long-tim...
The best estimate for the age of the material which forms the Earth is 4,566 million years, which i...
Ideas for Earth evolution emerge from our recognition that the process of formation was one that was...
William Thomson was among the first scientists to try to understand thermogeology: the flow and stor...
We address the first several hundred million years of Earth's history. The Moon-forming impact left ...
It is not surprising that humans have wondered how long Earth has existed. At one extreme, there wer...
http://www.springerlink.com/content/g11878m4872452t7/We address the first several hundred million ye...
Abstract: This paper presents a brief historical review of various attempts to estimate the age of t...
Many readers know the tale of how William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) calculated the age of the Eart...
‘For having, in the natural history of this earth, seen a succession of worlds, we may from this con...
Lord Kelvin argued that the Sun had to be between 20 and 100 million years old, based on t...
The early thermal history of the Earth is reconsidered with the constraint that core formation occur...
Thermodynamics developed as a new branch of physics in the 19th century helping to go beyond a purel...
Kelvin calculated the age of the Earth to be about 24 million years by assuming conductive cooling f...
William Thomson (1824-1907), an eminent physicist who contributed to the formulation of the second l...
Lord Kelvin calculated that Earth began to solidify 40 million years ago, thus starting a long-tim...
The best estimate for the age of the material which forms the Earth is 4,566 million years, which i...
Ideas for Earth evolution emerge from our recognition that the process of formation was one that was...
William Thomson was among the first scientists to try to understand thermogeology: the flow and stor...
We address the first several hundred million years of Earth's history. The Moon-forming impact left ...
It is not surprising that humans have wondered how long Earth has existed. At one extreme, there wer...
http://www.springerlink.com/content/g11878m4872452t7/We address the first several hundred million ye...
Abstract: This paper presents a brief historical review of various attempts to estimate the age of t...