Pegasus Research Consortium
Endangered Earth => Geoengineering => Topic started by: burntheships on February 20, 2013, 04:46:53 AM
Meet The Scientist With A
"Cheap & Easy Way To Stop Global WarmingStangely enough, the plan to outift business and military jets with equipment sounds like a commonly known conspiracy. Yet each time these scientists come around year after year, they seem to be ramping up the idea of using planes to spray chemicals into the atmosphere. Quote Here is the plan. Customize several Gulfstream business jets with military engines and with equipment to produce and disperse fine droplets of sulfuric acid. Fly the jets up around 20 kilometers—significantly higher than the cruising altitude for a commercial jetliner but still well within their range. At that altitude in the tropics, the aircraft are in the lower stratosphere.
The planes spray the sulfuric acid, carefully controlling the rate of its release. The sulfur combines with water vapor to form sulfate aerosols, fine particles less than a micrometer in diameter. These get swept upward by natural wind patterns and are dispersed over the globe, including the poles
Well, that sounds familiar! Are they testing us, seeing what the public
reaction is year after year?
I think so, and if so let it be known that its a diabolical scheme, and will
never be accepted by the public!
They continue to push this, even though it's well known that the particles can facilitate the chemical reactions that lead to ozone loss, permanent whitening
of the sky, once its started it has to be continued indefinitely.Quote
Once spread across the stratosphere, the aerosols will reflect about 1 percent of the sunlight hitting Earth back into space. Increasing what scientists call the planet's albedo, or reflective power, will partially offset the warming effects caused by rising levels of greenhouse gases.http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/511016/a-cheap-and-easy-plan-to-stop-global-warming/
"The sooner we find out
whether it works or not, the better." says the [mad] scientist
David Keith. Both Keith, and another Scientist, Paul Kruzan have
focused work on the use of sulfate aerosols released in the atmosphere,
and in particular and see this as worthy of
research and experimentation.
The idea of using sulfur particles to counteract warming is not new.
This concept is one of many also known as solar radiation management, or SRM.
And familiar is the idea of planes spraying chemicals, sulfate aerosols.
Here are a few things to remember, and factor in to what you see in the future.
"While sulfates would be likely to offset warming, it's not clear how they would affect precipitation"
"No one thinks that field experiments involving tiny amounts of sulfur would be physically dangerous, says Parson. "What concerns people," he says, "is the political and social consequences of the research going ahead, followed by bigger and bigger experiments—and then you're on the slippery slope all the way to full-scale deployment."
"It would be an extreme action, creating a different planet—even the color of the sky would be whiter."
"It is often assumed that SRM would be "turned on with a big switch," says Keith. "But there's no reason you can't ramp it up."
So all, its time to make your resistance to this crazy idea known, speak out loud and often,
as if they are not doing it already ( many think they are ) then they plan on doing it.
This is as clear as it gets.