Posted on 10/30/2012 11:11:40 AM PDT by DogByte6RER
On the flip side ... could you stop a nuclear detonation by hurricaning it?
Godspeed to all of the East Coasties dealing with Sandy.
Then you end up with “Radioactive Superstorm Sandy.”
The HUGE!!! downside to successfully pulling this off... I’d have had to go to work yesterday and today!
I'm not sure, but the next time one is over Washington, DC, let's give it a try.
Excellent idea. Nuke it, and then we can all get showered with nice jet-streamed plutonium particles far and wide.
What a stupid idea.Detonate a nuclear device in the atmosphere and contaminate all of the water vapor with strontium 90 and othe radioactive waste.
They may stop a hurricane but they will surely kill or sicken a large part of the people they were trying to protect.
You can render a hurricane bankrupt and ineffectual by placing it under the management of the US Federal government - especially if the committee is run by Democrats.
To affect a hurricane one would have to drop something as dense as a black hole into it, like Megan McCain.
If Urine were as flammable as gasoline, would you argue that pissing on a fire would put it out?
Consider the consequences of a nuke failing to stop a hurricane on a landfall course... and then lets talk about “acid rain”.
Cloud seeding would probably work better.
Duct-tape Algore to a rocket and shot him into the eye. It’ll probably work just as well and will actually help the environment instead.
To believe man can have any effect on God sized events is just stupid on the face of it. It shows how arrogant we have become.
I know,.....lets sentence some scientists to jail for not predicting earthquakes correctly. Oh yeah, we just did that.
Take a look at the satellite photos of Hurricane Sandy or Katrina. Even a 50MT nuclear warhead detonation (only the Soviets ever had one run away to that size) would look like a tiny clump of pixels in the middle of a hurricane whorl that stretches from Florida to New York.
Moreover, nuke size hardly makes a difference. The largest US-made nukes ran away to about 15MT, and it's been proven by physicists like J. Carson Mark in the Operation Ivy (Mark) tests that anything above 3MT only temporarily lifts the Earth's atmosphere higher into space by a slight bump without adding any significant destructive power or area of effect. I don't think that the US arsenal has anything over ~1.2MT warheads since SALT eliminated the ridiculous megatonnage nukes of the '60s.
In short, America's biggest current nuclear warhead used against a hurricane would be like trying to stop your outdoor lawn sprinklers by standing in the middle of the lawn while lighting a book of matches. The biggest US nukes of the '60s would be like doing the same futile exercise only using a highway road flare.
Hurricanes help regulate the climate. Leave them alone and learn how to deal with them better. I don’t think we should be trying to stop natural occurrences.
![]() Tsar Bomba. The fireball was five miles in diameter |
Please don’t make this personal.
Just because I posted this thread doesn’t mean that I would ever support nuking a hurricane. The article also reminded me of the planned “Atoms for Peace” program of the 1950s ... the idea was to use nukes to carve out canals in land bridges.
I merely found the article and the idea interesting and I looked forward to reading some FReeper feedback.
The article further mentions the futility of of such an idea ... a nuke carries a very very small percentage of the energy existing within a hurricane. To quote the article:
“So bombing a hurricane might be about as effective as trying to stop a speeding Buick with a feather.”
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