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  • What Earth do you live on?

  • A round one?

  • Flat one?

  • What about a hollow Earth?

  • Just a planet's shell levitating around absolutely nothing.

  • This is WHAT IF,

  • and here's what would happen

  • if the Earth was hollow.

  • We've never made the journey to the Earth's core, but...

  • we have been studying earthquakes and our geomagnetic field

  • long enough to know what's inside our planet.

  • Spoiler alert - it's dense and boiling hot.

  • But we didn't always know that.

  • Learning about how our world works took a lot of time,

  • and brought out some bizarre theories.

  • One scientist even decided that the Earth was an inverted sphere,

  • with the entire Universe hidden inside.

  • Hollow Earth was also on the list of possibilities.

  • But how would a planet like that work?

  • The quick answer is - it wouldn't.

  • A hollow Earth would collapse inwards on itself

  • and become a smaller sphere.

  • Why?

  • Because of gravity,

  • one of the four fundamental forces in the Universe.

  • Gravity would bring all parts of the crust toward one another,

  • making the hollow Earth just impossible.

  • But where's the fun in that?

  • Let's assume, somehow the Earth's crust could levitate without collapsing on itself.

  • Well, that wouldn't be much fun for us either.

  • Most likely, there would be absolutely no life on the planet.

  • Because, for starters, there would be no atmosphere.

  • The atmosphere of the Earth protects us from solar winds and space radiation.

  • It needs a magnetic field and the planet's gravity to keep it in place.

  • The magnetic field is generated in the Earth's core,

  • which would be absent in a hollow planet.

  • No core means no magnetic field,

  • and no magnetic field means that the Earth would be pretty dead.

  • A hollow Earth would also lose a whole lot of mass,

  • since most of it is accumulated in the planet's inner part -

  • the core and the mantle.

  • And we're not just talking a few kilos,

  • like what you put on during your last visit to Grandma's,

  • but rather 5.9 sextillion tonnes.

  • A hollow Earth would be less than 0.4% of its current mass.

  • The gravity on a hollow Earth would be so weak,

  • it wouldn't be enough for you to stick to the planet.

  • You'd fly away into space.

  • That's, of course, if you could make it through all the solar radiation.

  • Now, let's imagine that the hollow Earth's mass and gravity

  • were no different from a real-life Earth.

  • We'd still have no atmosphere due to the lack of a geomagnetic field,

  • but at least we'd solve the gravity problem so that you could stay on the planet.

  • The surface of that hollow Earth would be a very hostile place.

  • Drilling through the Earth's crust would be much harder,

  • as it would have to be formed

  • from a very dense material

  • to make up such a mass.

  • When you finally managed to dig through the 30-km thick crust (18-mile),

  • and stepped into the interior of the planet,

  • you'd experience zero-gravity.

  • Since any gravity in a hollow Earth would have to be coming from the crust,

  • gravity would just cancel itself out, and it's influence on you would be zero.

  • You'd be floating back and forth, forever lost inside an empty planet.

  • Don't forget your spacesuit.

  • You'll need it to provide oxygen, and pressure to keep breathing -

  • until you run out of oxygen.

  • Drifting inside the Earth without a spacesuit

  • would be like stepping into the vacuum of space.

  • Trust me, you don't want to experience that.

  • And next time you feel empty inside -

  • remember that the Earth you're sitting on isn't.

  • Maybe in the future we'll travel beyond Earth

  • and stumble across the planet that is hollow.

  • But that's the story for another WHAT IF.

What Earth do you live on?

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