Originally posted by: Chaotic42
A hurricane produces about 6.0*10^14 watts of energy (1) or 5.2*10^19 J/day.
A nuclear bomb produces about 6.3*10^13 Joules of energy (2).
Now, I'm not up much on my SI units, but if you average that out over one day, you get 7.3*10^8 watts for a 15 megaton nuclear bomb.
There's a big difference there.
I wasn't sure how long of a time period that was over.Originally posted by: silverpig
'cept a nuke goes off in about a 100 millionth of a second...
I think you could fvck up a tornado pretty good with a large enough bomb, but there's no way for a hurricane. I suppose you could use a whole sh!tload of nukes all over the place, but that's gonna do way more damage than the hurricane itself.
Originally posted by: ATilaptops
This thread is histarical. If we started using nukes to kill hurricanes then Florida would be gone, lol. Even assuming all the blast energy was used against the hurricane, would the radiationstill kill off the surounding area's? Like cities in Fl where hurricanes hit...or am I wrong here? Would everything just be absorbed in killing the hurricane? Even if that is true, nukes aren't exactly cheap, I don't think the government cares that much about hurricane victims
Originally posted by: Kibbo
Originally posted by: ATilaptops
This thread is histarical. If we started using nukes to kill hurricanes then Florida would be gone, lol. Even assuming all the blast energy was used against the hurricane, would the radiationstill kill off the surounding area's? Like cities in Fl where hurricanes hit...or am I wrong here? Would everything just be absorbed in killing the hurricane? Even if that is true, nukes aren't exactly cheap, I don't think the government cares that much about hurricane victims
First of all, the nuke could be used whent the storm in new, out in the ocean.
Second of all, the gov't cares a great deal about Florida voters in an election year.
Your cost concern is valid, though.
Originally posted by: Kibbo
Originally posted by: ATilaptops
This thread is histarical. If we started using nukes to kill hurricanes then Florida would be gone, lol. Even assuming all the blast energy was used against the hurricane, would the radiationstill kill off the surounding area's? Like cities in Fl where hurricanes hit...or am I wrong here? Would everything just be absorbed in killing the hurricane? Even if that is true, nukes aren't exactly cheap, I don't think the government cares that much about hurricane victims
First of all, the nuke could be used whent the storm in new, out in the ocean.
Second of all, the gov't cares a great deal about Florida voters in an election year.
Your cost concern is valid, though.
Originally posted by: ReiAyanami
a hurricane has the energy of like 100 hydrogen bombs. you would need like a freeze ray
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
Even better than a freeze ray would be a thin layer of oil over the water of the ocean where the storm would me moving too. Hurricanes get all their energy from evaporating water, so if you cover the water with oil it cant evaporate as easily and the storm will weaken and go away. I read somewhere that they were testing it with "safe" oils that would break down and not hurt the environment. But you would still need a whole lot of oil to make it work