TIC without wanting to contract Lyme disease by engaging with you, it is a fact that you posted this
"With all the hurricane's i think project cirrus deserves a mention"
So nobody is misrepresenting you.
Your daft naive belief is just that, a belief.
Where is the evidence?, the onus is on you.
Where are the experiments you promised X ?
Everyone can see quite clearly how triggered you are.
larry i know you're a retard so i'll go slow
i do think project cirrus is worth mentioning. from the information i have read a hurricane was apparently seeded with dry ice & caused a lot of damage. some claim the seeding cause the hurricane to turn, others deny that. i don't know what actually happened because i wasn't there & it's not my claim, just information that is out there. could it be a possibility that the seeding cause the hurricane to turn? maybe, that's why it's worth mentioning
there is no daft belief, just providing information you spastic
ex needs to confirm if he was lying or if he is delusional & believes his claim
no one is triggered larry, i just dislike liars like yourself. if you were really interested in truth you would be calling out ex's retarded claims but you don't because you're a cuck
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
I may indeed be a delusional clown, and there is definitely evidence of this. I have also been known to tell a small untruth here and there.
I havenât made a claim though, so donât start on with that
You said that âweather is being manipulatedâ and I simply asked for evidence to prove your belief. You also said that you would provide some interesting experiments that would prove weather manipulation is possible.
Thats two different things of course âŚ.. where is your proof or evidence of either belief?
If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?
Ha Ha, I imagine everyone sees your predictable modus operandi âŚ..
Where is your evidence for either belief?
If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?
Shame that a topic like this has become just another forum tussle. Hurricanes do not typically hit either the UK or Australia. But they are only too real in the Caribbean and the southeastern United States. Here in Puerto Rico, we cross our fingers, and pray every hurricane season that we don't get hit. Gets kind of tiresome, to be honest.
This year it's been the southeastern U.S. that has gotten it bad. While we feel bad for all those affected, we're also relieved to have been somewhat spared thus far this season. Somewhat, because we did get grazed by Tropical Storm Ernesto earlier this year.
The subject of weather manipulation is one that deserves serious discussion and analysis by scientists, meteorologists, and others. We certainly don't need the Marjorie Taylor Greenes of the world, spouting their insane conspirational bullshit to the detriment of society in general... and specifically to the detriment of those affected by these storms. Those who exploit natural disasters for political gain are the worst kind of human slime.
As always, I never go running to any extreme position, but rather seek out objective, methodical, well thought out information, in order to form my opinions. Here is a piece from The Washington Post.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weath...limate-change/
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
Yep the last one specifically and the surrounding idiocy got pretty infuriating. Sitting there watching a Cat 5 take dead aim at Fla and locally I had to listen to "well it's not hitting us" and "this one is definitely man made" . People made it a two-party conspiracy before the bodies were even cold let alone counted. Thankfully my niece and nephew bugged out of Bradenton and there was actually some we dodge a bullet chatter.
As one of a few including yourself who live with these things on an annual basis, I'd sure be interested in some direct real time evidence pertaining to "hurricane manipulation" as thus far all I've seen are reckless agenda driven politicians and propagandists passing as right wing talking heads and lots of "some say" "I've heard" and more rumors than a Jr high school hallway. Rain manipulation, yeh we've seen that for everything from crops, droughts and trying to shut down the Ho Chi Minh trail in Vietnam. But loose baseless talk about current life and death events, active hurricanes, has no meat on the bone. Tried the article btw but apparently you need to be a sub and sign in.
oh, possibly delusional as I thought I had them stored in an onion bag behind the door, but I canât find them now.
So, anyway, where is either of the pieces of evidence or the experiments you said you could post, I have asked many times now for you to substantiate your belief âŚ..
If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
Being bitten by the 10k character max bug.
So I'll cut off as little as I can.
By Scott Dance
September 16, 2024 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
For two decades, a bold and promising experiment sought to answer a wild question: Could scientists artificially weaken hurricanes before they bring devastation to U.S. shores?
The short answer was no â at least, not that scientists could detect. Despite early hints of success, they concluded in the 1980s that the endeavor aptly named Project Stormfury wasnât worth continuing. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forbade its scientists from conducting any similar research from that point forward.
But now, as the threat of rapidly intensifying and catastrophic hurricanes grows, some want to give the idea of disrupting a storm â still far-fetched, but perhaps more necessary than ever â another shot. They are pitching new technologies and approaches that, while intriguing to some experts, also underscore how daunting, costly and dangerous it could be to try to control nature.
A Norwegian company wants to employ devices it says could cool Atlantic surface waters ahead of storms. The Japanese government is funding research to modify typhoons as part of a program tackling some of the biggest threats to humanity. And there are meanwhile broader efforts to engineer a cooler climate and weaker storms, including a White House-sponsored effort to study how blocking out some planet-heating sunlight could slow or reverse human-caused climate change.
The concept of altering the weather â technically called weather modification â has increasingly entered the public imagination, especially as warming temperatures have fueled stronger hurricanes and heavier downpours. The idea of using nuclear weapons to fight hurricanes drew some attention after a 2019 report that then-President Donald Trump suggested it, something he denied. Dangerous research to weaken tornadoes is central to the plot of the movie âTwistersâ released this summer.
âWe really love to control our surroundings,â said Jill Trepanier, an assistant professor at Louisiana State University.
But stopping a storm has never become reality.
âThe record of weather modification is exaggerated claims and failure, universally,â said Hugh Willoughby, a professor at Florida International University who worked on NOAAâs Stormfury project.
That could change with the right innovation, Willoughby added. The question is, have we discovered it yet?
Promising results, and then failure
The idea behind Stormfury was to determine whether scientists could weaken a hurricaneâs eyewall, where its strongest and most damaging winds are concentrated.
Aircraft would inject a storm with silver iodide, a substance that can actually incite precipitation â a practice commonly known as cloud seeding. That would cause a new, wider eye to form around a hurricaneâs center, which would gradually replace the old one. In the process, the stormâs strongest winds would slacken, at least briefly.
The theory was put into action in the 1960s when scientists tested it on four separate hurricanes. And early results appeared to back up scientistsâ theory: Half of the time, winds decreased by between 10 and 30 percent, according to NOAA.
But as meteorologists studied hurricanes in the years and decades that followed, they realized: Maybe there was nothing artificial about that weakening at all.
They saw that many storms not included in the experiment underwent similar eyewall replacement processes. Scientists now know itâs a common phenomenon, making it impossible to know if the interventions had any actual effect.
âYou couldnât tell it from what would happen naturally,â said Willoughby, who went on to lead NOAAâs hurricane research division from 1995 to 2002.
Stormfury disbanded in the early 1980s after a National Academy of Sciences panel concluded that a better understanding of hurricanes was needed before continuing the research. NOAA no longer conducts any research aimed at modifying hurricanes, officials said.
Instead, its research is focused on improving forecasts. The agencyâs messaging promotes better preparation for inevitable storms.
âThe best way to minimize the damage of hurricanes is to learn to co-exist with them,â NOAA says on its website.
Could new technologies succeed?
For some researchers, that isnât enough.
A growing number of hurricanes are rapidly intensifying into major storms before making landfall in the Caribbean and on U.S. shores. Persistent and astonishing warmth in the Atlantic basin, providing ample fuel for hurricanes, raised fears of a historic storm season this year, though an unexpected lull in tropical weather has called that into question.
It was the devastation of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 that sparked Olav Hollingsaeter to consider how to combat storms. Now CEO of Norway-based OceanTherm, Hollingsaeter is among those exploring whether there is a way to weaken hurricanes from beneath â tapping colder, deeper stores of water to sap storms of energy â rather than from the sky.
OceanThermâs idea is to use what it calls âbubble curtainsâ that would use air bubbling from perforated pipes to carry colder waters upward to mix with warmer waters near the surface. They would be installed at depths of several hundred feet ahead of hurricane season in storm-prone areas, and places where ocean currents could carry the cooler waters across wider swaths of the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico or Caribbean Sea.
Itâs a technology that has been used for decades in Norway to mix fresh surface waters with saltier waters beneath them and prevent narrow fjords from freezing, Hollingsaeter said. Salt water has a lower freezing point than fresh water.
That same technology used to preempt the freezing, the company says, could be used to cool waters to prevent storms.
The company estimates it would cost on the order of $1 billion to install the devices across enough of the Atlantic basin to be effective, he said. A 2019 test conducted in Norway suggested it could cool surface waters by several degrees â a change that would reduce the amount of energy available for storms to unleash. But more modeling and testing are needed to determine how impactful the technology could be in waters around Florida, for example.
âIt actually looks like itâs plausible,â said Mark Bourassa, a meteorology professor at Florida State University. Bourassa is working with OceanTherm, though he doesnât have any formal role with the company.
Itâs not a totally new idea â the Gates Foundation drew attention in 2009 when it sought patents for technology to pump cold water to the surface and send warm waters deeper ahead of a hurricane. Another company, New Mexico-based Atmocean, proposed similar technology that could also help store planet-warming carbon dioxide deep in the oceans. Neither initiative has advanced to practical use.
In Japan, scientists are meanwhile exploring the possibilities of controlling and modifying the weather, including typhoons, as soon as 2050 as part of a lofty national initiative known as the Moonshot Research and Development Program.
As part of the program, researchers are exploring all kinds of strategies besides potential water-cooling technologies, from cloud seeding to wind barriers and wind turbines that might redirect and weaken storms. They are also investigating how forecasting could be improved in a way that can help better judge when human intervention could make a difference.
Moonshot organizers suggest some intervention could have a âbutterfly effect,â where a small action triggers atmospheric changes that amount to significant control over the weather.
Here's the last part of the article.
(Too long to fit in one bite).
For some, any idea is âhopelessâ
Even if such solutions can be found, their potential unintended consequences still give scientists pause.
Moshe Alamaro, a retired research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was among those who participated in a 2008 workshop convened by the Department of Homeland Security to spotlight the possibilities and, perhaps, promise of hurricane modification. But he has since changed his mind on the idea.
Even if a plan could work, he wondered, what would happen if an altered storm spared one community but went on to kill people somewhere else? What if a modified typhoon blew past Japan only to hit North Korea? âYou would get World War III,â he said.
âI was foolish enough to think it would work,â Alamaro said. âI came to the conclusion that itâs hopeless. The only remedy is not to build near shore and improve construction standards.â
Until further testing of ideas can happen, the totality of potentially dangerous consequences on ecosystems, wildlife, fisheries and crops remain unclear. If human intervention were to cool Gulf surface waters, for example, it could have effects on weather across the United States and beyond, Willoughby said.
âWhere do you think the rain that causes crops to grow in the American heartland comes from?â he asked.
Scientifically, itâs also impossible to prove any intervention works, Trepanier said. An experiment requires a control, so that scientists can see what would have happened had they not intervened.
And then there are the sheer logistical challenges. Hurricanes are massive systems, releasing amounts of energy on par with what the worldâs electrical grids are capable of carrying. Research has suggested that even an immense amount of energy put toward weakening a hurricane could only marginally reduce its intensity.
And besides, that energy must be transferred somehow, or else it would simply keep building up in the tropics and overheat them, Trepanier said. Hurricanes are natureâs way of redistributing that energy. If we somehow stopped a hurricane from unleashing that energy, the next one might be even bigger.
In explaining why NOAA no longer conducts experiments to alter hurricanes, agency officials say altering a hurricane would require scientific advancements we can still only dream of.
âMaybe the time will come when men and women can travel at nearly the speed of light to the stars,â officials wrote on a NOAA website answering common questions about hurricanes. âWe will then have enough energy for brute-force intervention in hurricane dynamics.â
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