From the reduction of green house gas emission to the sudden drop in air pollution the Coronavirus pandemic has led some fabulous effect on nature.

A new study has revealed that Coronavirus pandemic has actually changed the way the earth physically moves.

Scientists from the Royal observatory of Belgium have reported a drop in seismic noise ( the hum of vibrations in earth crust ) .

The scientists believe that this could be the result of shutdown across the world leading to transportation and human activities being shut down.

Lockdowns are making earth less noisy

In the research, researchers used a seismometer to analyse the movement of mother Earth. Their research revealed that seismic noise in Brussel had fallen by about one third since the Coronavirus lockdown was introduced to the world.

Thomas Lecocq tweeted , the current mean noise level is 33% lower than the previous one.

I've updated the graph, including the whole 2020 data, so we can compare with other weeks of lower activity, like school holidays in Feb or XMas holidays. The current mean noise level is 33% lower than before the #StayHomeBelgium measures. https://t.co/mL9j48e134 — Thomas Lecocq (@seismotom) March 27, 2020

On the other side researchers of the California Institute of Technology also observed similar findings in Los Angeles.

Celeste Labetz who worked on the research tweeted a graph , writing here's the graph of daily mode noise power from a station of Los Angels , the drop is seriously wild.

The researchers also believe that this fall in noise could lead the sensitivity of detectors for natural Waves. Later Lecocq also added that there's a big chance that it could lead to the better measurement.

If the Coronavirus lockdown extends longer, scientists said that they could continue to measure new way their instruments readings are change.

The fall in sound might likewise help seismologist who utilise normally occuring history resonances . Just like as those from crashing sea waves , to probe Earth's crust. Because transforming water tables influence and volcanic tasks just how fast these natural Waves travel .

Scientists can study these occasions by studying how fast time waves takes to reach a provided detector. A fall in human generated sound might increase the level of sensitivity of detectors to natural Waves at same frequency, claims Lecocq.