US makes 'weather control powder'

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Apr 25, 2002
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#1
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1469610.stm

By BBC Science's Julian Siddle

A company in the United States claims it has invented a powder that can be used to remove clouds from the sky and even stop the development of hurricanes.

They say the new product could help many areas of the world that are subject to extreme weather conditions.

The Florida based company, Dyn-o-mat, used a military aircraft to drop four tonnes of its powder on to a developing storm cloud.

The cloud disappeared from radar screens, which were monitoring the experiment.

Officials from the company, which produces materials to absorb pollutants such as oil and acids, say they used a specially developed powder that absorbs large quantities of water.

'Completely safe'

The water is then turned into a gel before falling out of the sky.

The company says the gel is completely safe, bio-degradable, and breaks down in seawater - though they refuse to say exactly what is in it.

Among the applications that it envisages for the powder are clearing away clouds before sports fixtures and constraining the development hurricanes.

The company believes that a tightly controlled jet of the powder aimed at the hurricane would cut it into smaller pieces, making it far less threatening.

The US Government has already expressed interest in the new product, and the company says it could be useful worldwide.
 

Talus

Sicc OG
May 14, 2002
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#4
its kinda crazy to think of some shit like that..but i dont think they would understand the long term effects of fuckin with the weather like that....
i mean what could the consequences be...?
 
Sep 28, 2004
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#5
There's a reason certain things happen. And while they can cause unhappy events and destruction, the delaying or stopping of such events would most likely produce something far worse eventually. Shit absorbs water, and it's in powder form. I'm sure that's going to be hella healthy if someone accidently inhales it after they dropn it on some clouds. What happens to the powder that doesn't hit a lot of moisture? What if it gets to the ground and people breathe it in? And it absorbs the moisture in your lungs and becomes a gel in there? Will it "break down" in time for you not to suffocate on it? Or am I just being a bit too radical, and pulling irrational worries out of the air? (Like moisture from a raincloud.)
 
Jul 10, 2002
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#10
BEIJING (AP) -- The weathermen in Beijing are moving ahead with plans to fire rockets to disperse rain clouds, an experiment aimed at securing more sunshine during the 2008 Olympics.

Zheng Guoguang, head of China's Meteorological Administration, said practice drills were ready to begin, the state-run China Daily newspaper reported Tuesday.

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Zheng said the drills will simulate what will take place when the Olympics begin on Aug. 8, 2008. He said summer provided the last chance for meteorologists to practice under similar weather conditions.

Chinese officials have said historical records show there's a 50 percent chance of rain for the opening ceremony -- and the same probability of rain during the closing ceremony.

Last month, a top-ranking weather official acknowledged that seeding clouds to produce rain -- and dispersing rainmaking clouds -- was immature technology.

"Dispersal is more difficult than rainfall enhancement," said Wang Yubin, assistant chief engineer with the Beijing Meteorological Bureau. "In rainfall dispersal, we are still in the experimental stage but we are continuing our efforts."

http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/news?slug=ap-beijing-weather&prov=ap&type=lgns