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Date: | Wed, 10 Jul 2024 09:23:53 -0400 |
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There is a transmitter that drives all the weather on planet Earth. But no government can control it.
Millions of hydrogen fusion reactions happen every nanosecond thousands of miles inside the Sun. For every 4 hydrogen atoms that are fused, one helium atom is created. The 4 hydrogens weigh slightly more than the one helium (4 * 1.00784 u = 4.03136 u vs 4.002602 u for the helium) and that tiny bit of mass difference is released as energy.
There are so many fusions happening, this tiny amount of energy creates enough heat to keep the sun at a toasty 15 million degrees centigrade. About 2 billionths of this energy reaches the Earth.
But 2 billionths is more than enough. What penetrates the ionosphere and so on to hit the surface of the Earth is about 174 trillion kW of solar energy every hour. Most of it goes to keep us warm, some of it (maybe 2% of the total) warms the atmosphere itself, evaporates water, and makes the warmer air rise, which is the basis for wind, and hence, weather. Earth spins, which is also a major factor, as the spinning creates the prevailing "trade winds" the ocean currents, and the addition of spinning moves the heat around to make the entire planet inhabitable rather than having a 500 F equator and -200 F polar regions.
So both the hot day and the cool breeze are powered by a fusion reactor. The good news is that the fusion reactor is at a very safe distance from everyone. But both "solar" and "wind" power are really fusion power.
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