cyclonebuster, on 15 August 2011 - 11:36 AM, said:
Seems the good professor worked it out for me.
...
The scheme that we discussed involved an array of several rows devices across the Gulfstream. Each device would be a rectangular duct 140 m long and 10 by 14 m in cross section. Normally the devices would be moored horizontally at a depth of 100m with their long axes aligned with the current flow. They would be nearly neutrally buoyant. When a hurricane approached, ballast at the downstream end of the channel would be released, allowing the device to float up to a 45 deg angle. Cold water entering the upstream end would flow up to the surface and mix with the warmer water there. ...
Best regards,
Hugh Willoughby
Another interesting scheme I read about some years ago involves spreading a thin layer of insulation (in the form of an oil slick, or more exotic, of the super-absorbent material used in disposable diapers) over a large area of ocean in a hurricane’s path. Like Willoughby’s water mixing scheme, this cuts the hurricane off from its supply of power from the warm ocean surface. Such a scheme has an advantage over Willoughby’s roughly 4000 140x14x10 m submerged ducts, in that it could cost much less than the ducts’ roughly US$ 1 billion, though the ducts might prove less expensive in the long run, as once installed they should need only modest maintenance. Their only moving parts are those of the ballast systems that tilt them to 45° when a hurricane is approaching.
If attention by successful business people is an indication, Willoughby’s scheme (or I should say, the scheme he describes, as I don’t think he’s its inventor) should be taken seriously: according to
this article, Bill Gates of Microsoft fame, along with a group of other investor applied for patents on the technology in 2008-2009.
Moontanman, on 16 August 2011 - 02:52 PM, said:
Well he worked it out all except the environmental consequences, such a diversion would affect far more than just cyclones, weather in Europe, world wide sea water circulation, oxygen levels in the deep sea, sea life, and by affecting weather land life as well. Such a project would have far reaching consequences that would make hurricanes look trivial.
The hurricane weakening scheme Willoughby describes would only be activated when a hurricane was approaching a coast protected by the array of submerged devices, and remain active only until the weather system’s cyclonic energy had dissipated to a safe level – days, or at most, weeks.
Such a brief ocean water mixing would, I think, have only a slight environmental impact, less than that of a hurricane close approach or landfall. Hurricane landfalls on populated and/or industrial coasts can do severe environmental damage from debris, spilled oil and sewage, etc. So I’d say that, along with saving lives and (maybe – this is the real deal-maker/breaker question) money, Willoughby’s scheme would protect the environment.
cyclonebuster, on 16 August 2011 - 04:07 PM, said:
Weather in Europe would return to what it was prior to the industrial revolution. World wide sea water circulation will stay the same. Oxygen levels would stay the same but Co2 levels will lower and that is good for the calcium shelled organisms because carbonic acid won't dissolve their shells anymore.
I think you misunderstand Dr. Willoughby, CB.
Hurricane protection systems like Willoughby and others describe aren’t intended to change global or local environments, just change the short-term weather, that is, reduce the effects of hurricanes.
I think there’s a basic heat mechanical flaw with using this scheme to affect global air temperature. Mixing warm and cold water doesn’t remove heat from it. Warm surface water forced to a lower depth will rise downstream of the array of ducts, so the effect of air temperature is not to reduce it globally, but to move heat slightly. This is just what’s needed to weaken a hurricane, but not to reduce global warming.
We had a lot more discussion of this subject in your 2007 thread
Underwater Suspension Tunnels Prevent Global Warming.
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