Compressional wave velocity-density (V P − ρ) relations of candidate Fe alloys at relevant pressure-temperature conditions of the Earth's core are critically needed to evaluate the composition, seismic signatures, and geodynamics of the planet's remotest region. Specifically, comparison between seismic V P − ρ profiles of the core and candidate Fe alloys provides first-order information on the amount and type of potential light elements-including H, C, O, Si, and/or S-needed to compensate the density deficit of the core. To address this issue, here we have surveyed and analyzed the literature results in conjunction with newly measured V P − ρ results of hexagonal closest-packed (hcp) Fe and hcp-Fe 0.85 Si 0.15 alloy using in situ highenergy resolution inelastic X-ray scattering and X-ray diffraction. The nature of the Fe-Si alloy where Si is readily soluble in Fe represents an ideal solid-solution case to better understand the lightelement alloying effects. Our results show that high temperature significantly decreases the V P of hcp-Fe at high pressures, and the Fe-Si alloy exhibits similar high-pressure V P − ρ behavior to hcp-Fe via a constant density offset. These V P − ρ data at a given temperature can be better described by an empirical power-law function with a concave behavior at higher densities than with a linear approximation. Our new datasets, together with literature results, allow us to build new V P − ρ models of Fe alloys in order to determine the chemical composition of the core. Our models show that the V P − ρ profile of Fe with 8 wt % Si at 6,000 K matches well with the Preliminary Reference Earth Model of the inner core.compressional-wave velocity | high pressure-temperature E nigmatic properties of the Earth's inner core have recently been discovered including differential super-rotation (1), seismic anisotropies (2-4), and fine-scale seismic heterogeneities (5, 6). Deciphering these observations requires solid knowledge about the composition of the Earth's inner core and, therefore, the elasticity of candidate Fe alloys (7-16). Since F. Birch pointed out in the 1950s that Earth's core is too dense if composed of Fe or Fe-Ni alloy alone (13), a number of candidate major light elements, including oxygen (O), silicon (Si), sulfur (S), carbon (C), and hydrogen (H), have been suggested via cosmochemical, geochemical, and geophysical evidence (17). To ascertain the identity and exact amount of light elements needed in the Earth's inner core, one key piece of information lies in the comparison of the seismic V P − ρ profiles with reliable laboratory measurements of these properties for candidate Fe alloys. Potential Fe-light element alloy must have V P − ρ profiles that match seismic models such as the Preliminary Reference Earth Model and AK135 (7,8). Thus, this requires precise experimental results describing the V P − ρ relationships of Fe alloys at pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions relevant to the Earth's core. To address this issue, here, we present new experimental measurements on the V...