Climate Control Using Nuclear Energy
Moninder Singh Modgil

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of using nuclear reactors to manipulate atmospheric conditions by creating low pressure regions, aiming to disrupt hurricanes and induce rainfall in arid regions through a vortex model.
Contribution
It introduces a novel concept of nuclear heat injection to control weather phenomena, including hurricane disruption and rainfall generation in deserts.
Findings
Artificial low pressure regions can influence hurricane dynamics.
Nuclear heat injection may induce controlled tropical storms.
The vortex model demonstrates potential atmospheric effects.
Abstract
We examine implications of anthropogenic low pressure regions, - created by injecting heat from nuclear reactors, into atmosphere. We suggest the possibility that such artificially generated low pressure regions, near hurricanes could disrupt their growth, path, and intensity. This method can also create controlled tropical stroms, which lead to substantial rainfall in arid areas, such as - (1)Sahara desert, (2) Australian interior desert, and (3) Indian Thar desert. A simple vortex suction model is developed to study, effect on atmospheric dynamics, by such a nuclear heat injection system.
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Taxonomy
TopicsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
