h a l f b a k e r yRomantic, but doomed to fail.
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Desertification. It is bad. Sands blow and drift from deserts onto arable land. It needs to stop.
About once every 6 months someone posts an idea in which giant mirrors are positioned in space to concentrate solar energy. Any of these projects could be used to stop desertification. I propose
that the white hot solar beam be played slowly across the sands, fusing them into glass. Dunes would be stabilized, and reflect even more light than they do now. This would also cut back windborne sand. Everyone wins.
Nuclear glass.
http://unitednuclear.com/trinitite.htm [2 fries shy of a happy meal, Aug 25 2005]
Solar Sinter
http://www.markuska...m/work/solarsinter/ This was a solar-powered, semi-automated low-tech laser cutter, that used the power of the sun to drive it and directly harnessed its rays through a glass ball lens to laser cut 2D components using a cam-guided system. [omegatron, Mar 11 2014]
[link]
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There are too many problems to list (what happens to any living creatures in the path?, what'll keep it from breaking?, etc), but I like the creativity. |
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Would be good to blind all the other planets looking at us. |
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Nice idea... But I'm with the Nuke guy...DrCurry, NUKE IT!
After all, the satellites after doing a stirling job of vetrifying the desert would eventually fall out of orbit... Where will they land? I'll tell you where... On the glass! That's where they'd land... and then it'd break... and someone might cut themselves.
Nuke it. It's the best solution. |
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This sort of scheme would also be especially effective against the giant man-eating desert ants. |
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This is stupid, how stupid can you get? And it's not funny or nice. - |
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For days the mirrors sat there.... no glass. But the intense, concentrated heat created a strong updraft. Unexpectedly, this changed the weather pattern! + |
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[Murdoch]You could make one serious plasma display with it! That's why it's better... It'd be big enough to be be viewed from space... then you could see it on google earth! |
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So, we're dropping nukes for safety, now? |
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Well, if it's for the public good... |
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So, I'm watching the Discover channel running series on planet Earth the other day, and the following statement, "As the Indian subcontinent moved northward into the south of Asia, its tectonic pressures raised the Himalaya mountains. Warm, moist air rose up these steep mountain slopes and was stripped of water vapor which produced rains or ice depending on temperature. A side effect of this air flow was the westerly flowing stream of dry air which settled thousands of miles to the west into northern Africa, beginning the desertification of the region which persists to this day." |
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Now, it occurs to me we have more than enough nukes to change the topology of Nepal, Tibet, and eastern India. Enlist the Chinese and there may be enough energy to reverse the Gobi desertification as well. |
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How about: Use mirrors to focus energy to Stirling Engines? The next big thing in energy: http://www.stirlingenergy.com/ |
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I think glassification could be accomplisheh better via a ground-based system: A large sand rover which heats the sand until it melts, and then cools the sand and tranfers the heat to the front: |
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<-Front --- Back->
HHHHHHCCCCCC |
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The tires would have to be huge, and far away from the hot part. The machine would move purty slow too, but all in all have less waste heat produced than space mirrors. |
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As regards nukes fusing the desert - I wonder if there are a few acres of fused desert at the test sites in Nevada? |
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If so, it would provide a venue to test another idea: Glass Skates. |
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Fishbone. The desert is an ecosystem all its own. In fact the desert is an ocean, with its life underground. Once you've been through the desert (on a horse with no name) you will understand. |
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[bungston] link. Looks like nuclear glass isn't a smooth surface. |
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How so goes the depth of the fusion? I've me doubts on the ? |
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I was going to propose a solar-powered dune buggy that sinters the sand with a big solar reflector, like the Solar Sinter, but rather than moving the beam around to print small objects, it drives around the desert, slowly melting long lines of glass into the sand. |
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//slowly melting long lines of glass into the sand |
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I think slowly is the important word here... |
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The Sahara covers about 1,700,000 square miles. It would
take--well, I have no fucking idea it would take to turn it
all into sand--but the point is it would take a long time,
and in the interem the sand would keep blowing over,
across, and around the big lines and patches of glass. |
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Sand is abrasive. Glass is brittle. Do the math. |
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You would not need to do the whole thing. Just the really sandy places. You could skip the places with rare horn toads, ancient cities and things of that sort. And you could start with the windward side of the clump of sand. |
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As regards worries that the glass would get frosted by abrasive sand I think that would be ok. There is really nothing to see on the other side of that glass except unfused sand. Maybe some rare horn toads you didnt know about making blowfish faces on the underside - just as well not to see them. |
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What could go wrong! Am I right?!!?! Nothing! |
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I imagine the Bedouins would be plenty pissed off. All of
their camels would have to wear Chucks. Have you ever
tried to locate sixty four pairs of Converse sneakers in size
9
camel?! |
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It would change the albedo and that would have weather consequences. |
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I didn't know camels had such sensitive albedos. |
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13 amp would do it? What does it say in the handbook? |
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I thought it was going to be an idea to fuse the desert in attempt to
turn the sand itself into a big bomb. |
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On the other hand, the Gobi desert is three-phase and no earth cabling either. I tell you it's a bugger when in rains, shorts out all over the place. |
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Hey, at least the people there _wear_ shorts. I can't tell
you what it's like up here when there's a sudden summer
downpour and all the hill people come out for a wash, clad
in nought but the sky. |
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Now, your Atacama, that's a completely different kettle of ferrets. |
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Sure it's all 110 volts, but the west Atacama sand is 50khz, and the east sand is 60khz....don't know what they were thinking of... |
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Probably all that running around in the hot sun wearing
nothing but their underpants. Poaches the brain, don'tcha
know. |
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