“…While it has been recognized for quite some time that the core is the only viable Observed Jackson et al (1993) Stephenson and Morrison (1984) McCarthy and Babcock (1986) Gross (2001) Jackson (1997) Pais and Hulot (2000) 1950 2000 source of the large decadal LOD variations that are observed (e.g., Lambeck, 1980;Munk and MacDonald, 1960), it was not until 1988 that Jault et al (1988) were able to model the core angular momentum (CAM) and show that it causes decadal LOD variations that agree reasonably well with those observed. Other assumptions about the core surface flow fields that have been made (Finlay et al, 2010;Holme, 2007) are that the flow is purely toroidal so that it has no radial component (Bloxham, 1990;Whaler, 1980Whaler, , 1986, that the flow is steady in time (Gubbins, 1982;Voorhies, 1986;Voorhies and Backus, 1985), that the flow is steady within a drifting reference frame (Davis and Whaler, 1996;Holme and Whaler, 2001), that the flow includes a helical component Olson, 2004, 2006), that the flow is tangentially magnetostrophic (Asari and Lesur, 2011), or that the flow is quasi-geostrophic (Canet et al, 2009;Gillet et al, 2009;Pais and Jault, 2008). The last two assumptions are required in order to reduce the inherent nonuniqueness of core surface flow determinations.…”