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Old September 3rd 05, 08:14 AM posted to sci.physics,sci.geo.meteorology,soc.history
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: May 2005
Posts: 92
Default Many are losing sight that we may have 2 more Katrina-like-Hurricanes before 2005 ends

In my posts when I said that Florida is uninhabitable and the Gulf
Coast is uninhabitable means that those states, every year has a
hurricane evacuation commencing. A state is uninhabitable if you have
to evacuate every year. One thing that can be done, as the speaker of
the House of Representatives, Mr. Hastert remarked that it is rather
silly to rebuild New Orleans when it is 7 to 15 feet below sea level. A
sensible, reasoning person would build a Newest Orleans nearby where it
is above sea level. Rebuild it on higher ground.

Because unless the main problem-- hurricanes and increasing hurricanes
in global warming are addressed then the building of New Orleans is
insane since the next big hurricane will repeat the exercise all over
again.

And unless we do conquer hurricanes by building a Earth Air Conditioner
of Aluminum Sequin placed into orbit to reflect Sun rays, then every
city on the Gulf Coast from Galveston to New Orleans to Tampa, St.
Petersburg, Miami and even Jacksonville to Savannah to Charleston will
be destroyed in an upcoming hurricane and every city between those big
cities.

So it is not a question of whether we build Earth-Air-Conditioner but
when. For we cannot afford to be battered by hurricanes every summer
and have entire regions of the country uninhabitable for half of the
year.

Now there was a nice factual data on Katrina as it approached New
Orleans last week. It was said that Katrina was category 5 with winds
(if memory serves me) of up to 165 mph but as it neared New Orleans a
gust of Midwest dry air diverted Katrina and lowered it to a category 4
with winds of 140 mph. Sparing New Orleans from a direct encounter with
Katrina.

Now I have not worked out the math, but if a dry gust of wind from the
Midwest can downgrade a hurricane from 5 to 4 and divert its path some
100 miles. I would think this data could come in handy when computing
the affects of aluminum sequin in orbit above the Gulf Sea waters. If a
dry gust of wind can affect a hurricane that much, then think of what a
cargo hauled aluminum sequin in orbit can do.

It maybe possible, just possible that a cargo hauled material in orbit,
not necessarily aluminum sequin, but some other material such as cotton
fibers or the fibers of some plant or sawdust, when placed in orbit
that intersects the path of a hurricane such as Katrina, could dissolve
the entire hurricane.

Analogy: Hurricanes are like bathtub drain with its rotation motion.
This is hard to stop once the rotation motion is in place but it can be
weakened by the interference of objects in the path. The gust of dry
Midwest air was such an object.

The Aluminum Sequin placed in orbit is designed to never create a
hurricane by reflecting Sun rays into outer space and thus depriving
the ocean water from heating up and creating a hurricane. But perhaps
another material when placed in orbit where a hurricane is moving can
so weaken the storm. Something like sawdust. So I wonder if we can fly
above a hurricane in a conventional airplane and not need a space
rocket or space shuttle.

But we definitely need to get ready for the 2006 season and schedule a
space flight with cargo full of aluminum sequin so that we prevent the
formation of hurricanes for 2006.

Archimedes Plutonium
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies

 
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