Climate Change Slows Earth's Spin, Lengthens Days by 1.33ms per Century, Study Reveals

March 13, 2026
Climate Change Slows Earth's Spin, Lengthens Days by 1.33ms per Century, Study Reveals
  • A new study finds Earth's rotation is slowing due to climate-change–induced sea-level rise, lengthening the average day by about 1.33 milliseconds per century, in a rate unseen for 3.6 million years.

  • The slowing is explained through angular momentum: melting ice redistributes mass away from the rotation axis, causing a slower spin and longer days, with the effect potentially intensifying toward the century's end.

  • Scientists compare the process to a figure skater extending or drawing in their arms to alter spin, illustrating how mass distribution affects rotation.

  • While biological effects on humans are unlikely, the biggest concern is for technologies that require extremely precise timekeeping.

  • The study appears in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, with quotes from Mostafa Kiani Shahvandi and Benedikt Soja about its significance and future implications.

  • Researchers emphasize this rapid change signals a broader shift in the climate system and its deeper physical processes, with relevance to daily life and future tech.

  • The current rapid change in day length is mainly driven by human greenhouse gas emissions, and this impact is expected to grow by the end of the century.

  • Natural factors also influence day length, but emissions from greenhouse gases are accelerating changes more quickly, especially since 2000–2020.

  • The study uses fossil records and a probabilistic deep-learning model to reconstruct past sea levels and infer historical day-length changes, showing current rates are anomalously high.

  • Researchers Soja and Shahvandi used benthic foraminifera fossil data and a Physics-Informed Diffusion Model to translate sea-level fluctuations into changes in day length.

  • Findings published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth reinforce the link between anthropogenic climate change and measurable shifts in Earth's rotation.

  • The reporting underscores the importance of science journalism to understand and communicate these complex climate-related changes.

Summary based on 8 sources


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