<P> The Earth's inner core is the Earth's innermost part . It is primarily a solid ball with a radius of about 1,220 kilometres (760 miles), which is about 70% of the Moon's radius . It is composed of an iron--nickel alloy and some other elements . The temperature at the inner core's surface is approximately 5,700 K (5,430 ° C) or 9806 ° F, which is about the temperature at the surface of the Sun . </P> <P> The Earth was discovered to have a solid inner core distinct from its molten outer core in 1936, by the Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann, who deduced its presence by studying seismograms from earthquakes in New Zealand . She observed that the seismic waves reflect off the boundary of the inner core and can be detected by sensitive seismographs on the Earth's surface . This boundary is known as the Bullen discontinuity, or sometimes as the Lehmann discontinuity . A few years later, in 1940, it was hypothesized that this inner core was made of solid iron; its rigidity was confirmed in 1971 . </P> <P> The outer core was determined to be molten from observations showing that compressional waves pass through it, but elastic shear waves do not--or do so only very weakly . The solidity of the inner core had been difficult to establish because the elastic shear waves that are expected to pass through a solid mass are very weak and difficult for seismographs on the Earth's surface to detect, since they become so attenuated on their way from the inner core to the surface by their passage through the liquid outer core . Dziewonski and Gilbert established that measurements of normal modes of vibration of Earth caused by large earthquakes were consistent with a liquid outer core . In 2005, shear waves were detected passing through the inner core; these claims were initially controversial, but are now gaining acceptance . </P>

Who discovered the inner core of the earth