Fla. Inventor Believes He Can Suck Power Out of Hurricanes
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Fla. Inventor Believes He Can Suck Power Out of Hurricanes
Despite years of experiments by the federal government and backyard inventors, nothing has worked so far to stop a hurricane from barreling ashore.
But one Florida inventor hasn't stopped trying.
Businessman Peter Cordani has spent four years researching a way to drop absorbent particles into the eye of a storm to disrupt its spin and suck out the moisture.
He admits he won't stop any hurricanes, but he believes he could save cities and residents from suffering billions of dollars worth of damage by gutting the storm's strength.
The U.S. government's Hurricane Research Division studied Cordani's plan and dismissed it as one of the better ideas they've received.
Many of those ideas, including Cordani's, are unrealistic because of their huge expense or because they lack a basic understanding of meteorology or science, said Hugh Willoughby, a research professor with the International Hurricane Center at Florida International University.
Other ideas are just plain crazy, like the one that suggested blasting a hurricane with a nuclear weapon.
"The answer to that is a hurricane is bad enough without making it radioactive," said Willoughby, who reviewed some of the proposed inventions when he was director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's hurricane research division. "The only benefit would be is it would glow in the dark and it would be a lot easier to see at night."
The federal government tried its own inventions to weaken hurricanes but gave up in the 1960s. Meteorologists now turn their attention to better understanding the dynamics of the storms, rather than trying to stop them.
Researchers have spent years studying what makes hurricanes grow and move, such as ocean temperatures, barometric pressure, and convection. The data has helped them assemble a more accurate model that will allow meteorologists to look ahead five days when forecasting the track of hurricanes this year, extending the three-day forecasts used since 1964. The hurricane season began Sunday.
The extra two days will allow more time for evacuations and help safeguard against huge property losses. The U.S. Navy, for example, requires 96 hours to get its fleet out to sea.
Still, Cordani insists beating the hurricane is the only way to truly conquer the storm's devastation.
Researchers at his company, Dyn-O-Mat, tested their absorbent powder on a thunderstorm cloud two years ago. A television station's weather radar confirmed the cloud lost moisture after an airplane dropped $40,000 worth of Dyn-O-Gel granules into the cloud.
The company's now trying to develop a powder that's thousands of times more absorbent so it can be tested on a grander scale -- in the eye of a hurricane.
"We're trying to break the momentum of that spin, of that rotation," said Cordani, whose company develops mats that absorb oil and other products. "We know the product can do that."
But Willoughby said the cloud experiment proves little because clouds regularly disappear on their own. He said huge amounts of the powder would be needed to make even a minor change in a hurricane.
"It would really take all of the military heavy-lift aircraft that the United States has to carry the material, and there would be a major air traffic control problem around the eye," Willoughby said. "The big danger would be a major collision, and it would be hugely expensive for not much benefit."
Willoughby said it's possible, though unlikely, that a compound could be developed to tackle large storms.
Cordani said in the future, his powder will do just that.
"These are things that are definitely needed for the world."
But one Florida inventor hasn't stopped trying.
Businessman Peter Cordani has spent four years researching a way to drop absorbent particles into the eye of a storm to disrupt its spin and suck out the moisture.
He admits he won't stop any hurricanes, but he believes he could save cities and residents from suffering billions of dollars worth of damage by gutting the storm's strength.
The U.S. government's Hurricane Research Division studied Cordani's plan and dismissed it as one of the better ideas they've received.
Many of those ideas, including Cordani's, are unrealistic because of their huge expense or because they lack a basic understanding of meteorology or science, said Hugh Willoughby, a research professor with the International Hurricane Center at Florida International University.
Other ideas are just plain crazy, like the one that suggested blasting a hurricane with a nuclear weapon.
"The answer to that is a hurricane is bad enough without making it radioactive," said Willoughby, who reviewed some of the proposed inventions when he was director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's hurricane research division. "The only benefit would be is it would glow in the dark and it would be a lot easier to see at night."
The federal government tried its own inventions to weaken hurricanes but gave up in the 1960s. Meteorologists now turn their attention to better understanding the dynamics of the storms, rather than trying to stop them.
Researchers have spent years studying what makes hurricanes grow and move, such as ocean temperatures, barometric pressure, and convection. The data has helped them assemble a more accurate model that will allow meteorologists to look ahead five days when forecasting the track of hurricanes this year, extending the three-day forecasts used since 1964. The hurricane season began Sunday.
The extra two days will allow more time for evacuations and help safeguard against huge property losses. The U.S. Navy, for example, requires 96 hours to get its fleet out to sea.
Still, Cordani insists beating the hurricane is the only way to truly conquer the storm's devastation.
Researchers at his company, Dyn-O-Mat, tested their absorbent powder on a thunderstorm cloud two years ago. A television station's weather radar confirmed the cloud lost moisture after an airplane dropped $40,000 worth of Dyn-O-Gel granules into the cloud.
The company's now trying to develop a powder that's thousands of times more absorbent so it can be tested on a grander scale -- in the eye of a hurricane.
"We're trying to break the momentum of that spin, of that rotation," said Cordani, whose company develops mats that absorb oil and other products. "We know the product can do that."
But Willoughby said the cloud experiment proves little because clouds regularly disappear on their own. He said huge amounts of the powder would be needed to make even a minor change in a hurricane.
"It would really take all of the military heavy-lift aircraft that the United States has to carry the material, and there would be a major air traffic control problem around the eye," Willoughby said. "The big danger would be a major collision, and it would be hugely expensive for not much benefit."
Willoughby said it's possible, though unlikely, that a compound could be developed to tackle large storms.
Cordani said in the future, his powder will do just that.
"These are things that are definitely needed for the world."
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Idiot!!! He should realize..while hurricanes are violent storms..they are necessary to keep the earth in balance..they transport energy from one part of the globe and distribute it to another..To mess with this process IMHO would be devestating :oking of weather wrote:Another idiot (imo) trying to mess with mother nature again..................Probably and hopefully wont succede..............
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lol Gulfbreezer
Peter Cordani was interviewed live by Shepherd Smith on Fox News a little while ago. It seemed to me that Shep thought he was nuts but of course he didn't say anything like that. He was just like "You mean you took a thunderstorm off the doppler radar???" and Shep was like "Wow".
Rainband's right about hurricanes being needed to keep the balance. Alligators are dangerous but we don't go and kill them all. They have a function in this world too.

Peter Cordani was interviewed live by Shepherd Smith on Fox News a little while ago. It seemed to me that Shep thought he was nuts but of course he didn't say anything like that. He was just like "You mean you took a thunderstorm off the doppler radar???" and Shep was like "Wow".
Rainband's right about hurricanes being needed to keep the balance. Alligators are dangerous but we don't go and kill them all. They have a function in this world too.
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southerngale wrote:Alligators are dangerous but we don't go and kill them all. They have a function in this world too.
You're right southerngale, good point.
Although I wouldn't mind Dyn-O-Mat focusing on taking down mosquitoes. They suck! (bad isobar

Last edited by isobar on Mon Jun 02, 2003 5:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Dont mess with mother nature as hurricanes are needed to have balance of energy as Rainband said.
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
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When a hurricane is forming, they should get all the personal watercraft in this country out there going in a circle opposite to the rotation of the hurricane. They shoud go faster and faster until the hurricane loses it's strength.
Similarly when a tornado is forming, do the same thing with all the ATV's, but on land.
Similarly when a tornado is forming, do the same thing with all the ATV's, but on land.
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coriolis wrote:When a hurricane is forming, they should get all the personal watercraft in this country out there going in a circle opposite to the rotation of the hurricane. They shoud go faster and faster until the hurricane loses it's strength.
Similarly when a tornado is forming, do the same thing with all the ATV's, but on land.
Hilarious!! ROFLOL!!! :blol: :blol: :blol:
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