Jump to content

Underwater Suspension Tunnels


Cyclonebuster

Recommended Posts

oh there will still be a general movement and you'll be changing the temperature of the water by quite a bit.

 

especially as you are reducing radiative emission from the surface leading to greater heat retention.

 

do you not remember the last thread you opened on this where we discussed the infeasibility of this project.

 

You can change the temperature quite a bit if you want to. But you can also regulate the temperature to anywhere between 70 and 90 degrees if needed from flow control valve TV-026. For instance computer modeling can tell us how much cooling is needed to weaken a hurricane prior to landfall or how much cooling is needed to restore the Northern Arctic ice during the summer.

Edited by Cyclonebuster
Link to comment
Share on other sites

again we come to the point, you need to redirect most of the gulfstream to have a decent impact. and then there is the climate disruption to the UK and europe

 

and the fact that its not economically feasible

 

Excuse me but I think what we are doing now climate wise to UK and Europe is not economically feasible. However, restoring the climate back to what it was prior to the industrial revolution is!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

agriculture in the uk and northern europe depends on the gulf stream being there and being warm.

 

if you kill the gulf stream by the method you are proposing then the UK and northern europe will get much much colder.

 

not only that but equatorial regions will get much much hotter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

agriculture in the uk and northern europe depends on the gulf stream being there and being warm.

 

if you kill the gulf stream by the method you are proposing then the UK and northern europe will get much much colder.

 

not only that but equatorial regions will get much much hotter.

 

You are incorrect it is to warm now! It is the warming of the gulfstream that will shut it down as it will melt more polar ice thus slowing it down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

no, its not the warming of the gulf stream that will cause it to shut down, its the warming of some iceshelves in canada that are relatively unaffected by gulf stream conditions that would shut it down.

 

That's even more reason to cool it to pre-industrial revolution temperatures. It is to hot now as are the oceans world wide.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

how is cooling the gulf stream going to cool down some unrelated ice?

 

look, if you introduce a large block of cooling at any point along the gulf stream you are going to both weaken it and cause it to sink prematurely which will be bad for the UK and Europe.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

how is cooling the gulf stream going to cool down some unrelated ice?

 

look, if you introduce a large block of cooling at any point along the gulf stream you are going to both weaken it and cause it to sink prematurely which will be bad for the UK and Europe.

 

It's not that it will cool down some unrelated ice it will cause more ice to form which is what we need to restore those levels of ice to pre-industrial revolution extents and volumes right now in the Northern Arctic..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

meanwhile the ice in canada will continue to melt, then flood the north atlantic with fresh water causing a shutdown of the thermo-haline circulation.

 

seriously, you are again focusing so narrowly on one tiny part of to climate system that you aren't considering impacts on the rest of the world or the fact that you aren't actually helping solve global warming

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They are not forcing warm water down they are mixing cold and warm water near the surface thus lowering the net average temperature of the surface water.

 

Energy is conserved. Water has to take the place of what you have moved to the surface, and that water is warmer than what left. The surface cools, the lower water warms. This can't last forever — you're tapping in to a reservoir of cold water. You haven't shown you are removing energy from the water.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

meanwhile the ice in canada will continue to melt, then flood the north atlantic with fresh water causing a shutdown of the thermo-haline circulation.

 

seriously, you are again focusing so narrowly on one tiny part of to climate system that you aren't considering impacts on the rest of the world or the fact that you aren't actually helping solve global warming

 

Negative. The ice caps are the worlds refrigerators the more ice they have on top of them the cooler the world will be including Canada and the rest of the world.

Edited by Cyclonebuster
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Negative. I just want to show the world how to cool our planet back off to what it was prior to the industrial revolution if we feel the need to do so.

 

Being honest about your intentions when you post the video will be a good start. People will be less annoyed with your message that way.

 

~mooey

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Being honest about your intentions when you post the video will be a good start. People will be less annoyed with your message that way.

 

~mooey

 

I thought it was pretty honest in saying that they work good for climate control at the very beginning.

 

"Underwater Suspension Tunnels"

"Video proves they work for climate control"

 

"Can the videos be explained mathematically?"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought it was pretty honest in saying that they work good for climate control at the very beginning.

 

"Underwater Suspension Tunnels"

"Video proves they work for climate control"

 

"Can the videos be explained mathematically?"

 

You asked us to analyze the mathematics of your contraption. We did, and your replies were increasingly condescending. We'd love to discuss the viability or "coolness factor" of any new ideas, but we'd just rather be aware in advance that we're talking with someone who already knows the math or operations of it, and not try to explain and get "graded" for our answers.

 

Just an idea, here.

 

~mooey

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You asked us to analyze the mathematics of your contraption. We did, and your replies were increasingly condescending. We'd love to discuss the viability or "coolness factor" of any new ideas, but we'd just rather be aware in advance that we're talking with someone who already knows the math or operations of it, and not try to explain and get "graded" for our answers.

 

Just an idea, here.

 

~mooey

 

I hardly know any math. I'd like to see the math.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

I hardly know any math. I'd like to see the math.

 

 

Looks like the very very smart professor did the math for me.

 

 

quote:

Yes, I have spoken with Patrick, and, yes, a scheme somewhat like the one he describes could weaken hurricanes threatening places like Miami that have strong western-margin currents just offshore. There are, however, numerous qualifications.

 

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. Since the mixture would be negatively buoyant, it would sink. But mixing due to several (3-10) lines of these devices could cool the surface waters of the Gulfstream by 1-2C, enough to weaken an Andrew-like hurricane from category 5 to category 3. A rough calculation indicates that a device every 100 m on each line of moorings (~1000 devices per ~100 km line) and 3-10 lines of moorings would be required. My guess is that it would cost $250K to fabricate and deploy a single device, but there might be economies of scale. One might also be able to optimize the size and spacing of the devices.

 

Let's say that careful calculation told us that 4 lines of 1000 devices each would do the trick. At $0.25M per device, the cost works out to 4*1000*($0.25M) = $1000M. The actual cost might range from a few hundred million to a small multiple of a (US = 1000M) billion. One would want to do a detailed simulation before defining the scope of the project, but the basic notion is conversion of some of the kinetic energy of the Gulfstream into gravitational potential energy of the mixed water column. Again, I've not done that detailed simulation, only back-of-the-envelope calculations.

 

Activation of the array would require accurate forecasting since it would take several days for the effect to make its way from south of the Dry Tortugas (optimum location for protecting the maximum amount of shoreline) to the landfall point.

 

South Florida gets hit by a category 4 or 5 hurricane at every few years, but the really damaging ones like Andrew tend to be once-a-generation events, or less frequent. The array would need to be deployed and maintained for a long time between activations that actually safeguard property, although false alarms would not be particularly costly. Annual maintenance could easily exceed 10% of initial deployment cost. Bear in mind that Key West to Jacksonville is the only stretch of US coastline where this strategy would work. The other vulnerable sites, Houston-Galveston and New Orleans, lack the necessary strong offshore currents. While Georgia and the Carolinas also experience many hurricane landfalls and have the Gulfstream offshore, most of these cyclones are already weakening because of vertical shear of the horizontal wind so that a second installation north of Jacksonville would be much less useful.

 

There has been a lot of talk about using wave and current energy to cool the ocean ahead of hurricanes. My general conclusion is that while these ideas might be made to work, the proponents underestimate the scope of the required effort, as well as the political will and recurring cost necessary to keep the project going in the long intervals between really damaging hurricanes. Skeptic that I am, I think that wiser land-use policy and more rigorous building standards are much more cost-effective and more politically feasible. A proof-of-concept that might entail deploying a half dozen devices has some appeal, but I think that there are more promising ways to spend disaster-prevention money.

 

Best regards,

 

Hugh Willoughby

http://www2.fiu.edu/~geology/Content/People/Faculty/willoughby.htm

 

 

 

 

...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.