Swiss researchers have reported laser-powered  cloud seeding success, both inside and outside the laboratory. Inside  the lab, the powerful infrared laser caused visible clouds of vapor to  follow in its wake when fired into a water-saturated chamber and  sensitive weather apparatus recorded spikes in water droplet density  when it was fired into the skies of Berlin, although nothing was visible  to the naked eye.
Experiments in cloud seeding have been going on  for some time and varying degrees of success have been reported by  showering silver iodide crystals or frozen carbon dioxide or even salt  above clouds. A research team from the University  of Geneva has achieved encouraging results from taking a more  hi-tech approach.
The team fired short 220-millijoule pulses of  infrared light from a laser into an illuminated chamber of  water-saturated air at minus 24°C and noted the formation of clouds in  the laser's wake. Team member Jérôme Kasparian explained the phenomenon  by saying that the pulses stripped electrons from atoms in the air,  encouraging the formation of hydroxyl radicals and converting sulphur  and nitrogen dioxides into particles that act as the seeds on which  water droplets grow.
Post-burst chamber examination showed that the  concentration of water droplets along the plasma channel immediately  after the laser was fired measured about 50 micrometers wide. After a  few seconds the droplets grew to 80 micrometers as the smaller droplets  fused together, doubling the volume of condensed water.
Real world application of the lab research has  its detractors, Daniel Rosenfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem  is quoted in the New Scientist as saying: "Whatever has been  documented in this experiment is of little relevance to natural clouds"  and Thomas Leisner of Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology said  in Nature that he is "sceptical that this could be used to trigger rain  on demand."
But Kasparian claims that the team has enjoyed  similar success when pulses were sent 60 meters up into the skies over  Berlin. Although there was no change visible to the naked eye, weather  sensors confirmed an increase in size and density of droplets in the  atmosphere.
It's early days for the research and the team  is currently looking to boost the effect so that actual rain might  result, no doubt hoping that success will not see them being taken away  by the authorities as Donald Sutherland was in the Kate Bush video for  1985's Cloudbusting.
Via: New Scientist.




 
 

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