…Daniel Rosenfeld and colleagues at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem say injecting smoke into the lower parts of a hurricane causes water vapour to condense at a lower altitude than usual, and form droplets that are too small to fall as rain. Instead these are swept into higher and more peripheral regions of the storm, eventually reaching a point where they freeze. This provides an injection of energy on the edges of the storm that destabilises its destructive centre and causes a lowering of windspeeds.
At least, it works that way in Rosenfeld's computer-simulated hurricanes. The team has not tried the idea in the wild yet….
That's the eyewall of Hurricane Katrina. Just get in there and blow smoke into the base, make wind go poof! NOAA/NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment