rexresearch.com
Helmut
FLUHRER, et al.
Weather Control
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/unitedarabemirates/8236350/Abu-Dhabi-weather-project-creates-man-made-rainstorms.html
2 Jan 2011
Abu
Dhabi weather project 'creates man-made rainstorms'
A secret £7 million weather project in Abu Dhabi has resulted in
dozens of man-made rainstorms, according to reports.
Scientists employed by Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, president of
the UAE and leader of Abu Dhabi, successfully created more than 50
rainstorms in the state's Al Ain region last year, mostly in July and
August when there is virtually no rain at all. It is believed to be the
first time the system has produced rain from clear skies.
They have been using giant ionisers, shaped like giant lampshades, to
generate fields of negatively charged particles, which create cloud
formation.
In a company video, seen by The Sunday Times, Helmut Fluhrer, the
founder of Metro Systems International, the Swiss company in charge of
the project, said: "We are currently operating our innovative rainfall
enhancement technology, Weathertec, in the region of Al Ain in Abu
Dhabid. We started in June 2010 and have achieved a number of
rainfalls."
Excerpt:
Methods
for Recovery of
Atmospheric
Humidity
by
Robert A. Nelson
... Since 1992, the Russian company Elate Intelligence
Technologies, Inc. has demonstrated its ability to radio-control
rainfall
on demand over an area of 200 square miles. The corporate slogan is
"Weather
made to order". An Elate weather-control system is in operation at
Moscow's
Bykovo Airport. The
New York Times (Sept. 24, 1992) reported
that
some Russian farmers were using the technology to improve their crops.
Elate executive Igor Pirogoff was quoted in the
Wall Street Journal
(Oct. 2, 1992) as saying that his company could have transformed
Hurricane
Andrew "into a wimpy little squall".
On November 13, 1997, the Wall Street Journal
also reported "Malaysia to Battle Smog with Cyclones" using "new
Russian
technology to create cyclones... to cause torrential rains washing the
smoke out of the air". The Malaysian government approved the plan in
conjunction
with the Malaysian company BioCure Snd. Bhd. and "a government-owned
Russian
party".
The method of atmospheric ionization to modify weather
was first patented by William Haight in 1925 (British Patent #
251,689).
He actually constructed two electrical rain-making towers in
California.
Haight claimed that the earth contains a positive charge of static
electricity
and the atmosphere has a negatively-charged region. Between the two is
an insulating region of dry air that prevents the positive and the
negative
charges from combining to produce a lower temperature that would cause
clouds to condense and rain to fall. By discharging high frequency
alternating
current into the insulating layer, electrical contact is established
between
the positive and negative layers. The temperature drops in the clouds,
causing them to condnese and rain.
The technique can be adapted to produce clouds where
none exist, or to disperse fog by forming clouds. The insulated
apparatus
was not grounded, so as to discharge only into the atmosphere. He used
a 5 kilowatt generator to produce a 150-200 KHz signal (1200-2000
meters)
that could control the weather within a radius of 5 miles. (Figures 10
& 11)
Figure 10 ~ Haight's Rain-Making Tower:

Figure 11 ~ Haight's British Patent # 251,689:

In September 2002, Russia's Emergency Situations
Ministry announced that it had drawn rainclouds to Moscow and produced
rain with a large ionizer. The device was described by Mikhail
Shakhramanian,
the director of the ministry's research institute, as "a metal cage
crisscrossed
by tungsten wire [that] emits a vertical flow of oxygen ions that stirs
the air and raises humidity".
USPatApp
# 2010142112
APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING ATMOSPHERIC
HUMIDITY
Inventor: FLUHRER HELMUT [US] ; DAVYDOVA ELENA
IPC: H01T23/00; H01T23/00
2010-06-10
Priority Date: 2008-12-10
FIELD OF INVENTION
[0001] The present invention is generally directed to an apparatus for
creating an upward flux of moistened air for use in the field of
weather modification.
BACKGROUND OF THE ART
[0002] At present, weather modification methods, known as seeding
methods, are generally based on introducing small particles of a
specific medium into clouds. The particles of seeding media are
typically delivered to clouds by airborne carriers such as aircrafts or
rockets, or with the aid of natural updrafts such as orographic
lifting. Seeding methods are also deployed for the dissipation of fog,
which is actually a cloud with no bottom boundary when located on the
surface of the Earth. Clouds consist of water droplets, ice particles,
or a mixture of both, suspended in the air, which are formed when the
air temperature falls below dew point, causing relative humidity (RH)
of the air to exceed 100%, i.e. vapor supersaturation.
[0003] There are two primary ways to seed clouds. The first method is
based on enhancing the coalescence (a process of merging droplets into
bigger ones) of the rain formation process. Seeding particles
introduced into a cloud grow in size by coalescing with droplets in
their path, eventually becoming large and heavy enough to fall as
precipitation. The second method of seeding clouds employs the
ice-crystal (Bergeron) process. Small particles of silver iodide are
introduced into a cloud that generally contains both ice crystals and
supercooled water droplets. Silver iodide particles are ice nuclei
since they act like ice crystals by depositing vapor onto themselves.
As the equilibrium vapor pressure over ice is lower than that over
water, ice nuclei may further grow at the expense of surrounding liquid
droplets, absorbing more vapor compared to the case of condensation.
The growing crystals eventually become heavy enough to fall as
precipitation.
[0004] Alternative methods for cloud and fog modification are based on
enhancing coalescence by introducing electric forces via droplet
charging or deploying other charged aerosols.
[0005] Numerical modeling and experimental observations suggest that,
to be effective in enhancing coalescence, charged aerosol particles
(typically droplets) should each carry hundreds of elementary charges.
Such droplets are referred to hereinafter as supercharged droplets.
Approaches to the problem have focused on creating devices to
supercharge droplets which are then to be used as seeding media for
cloud modification. In practice, however, producing supercharged
droplets at the rate required to seed a reasonable volume of cloudy or
foggy air would meet with severe engineering difficulties. Seeding
charged particles into clouds, as with any traditional seeding
technique, usually requires deploying airborne carriers which leads to
high associated costs. Furthermore, seeding large volumes of cloudy air
may need to be repeated due to the limited lifetime of the supercharged
state of particles. Some other problems associated with dispensing
highly charged particles into the atmosphere have been discussed in
detail by Vonnegut at al. (1967).
[0006] Accordingly, there is still a need in the art for improved
methods and devices for weather modification.
SUMMARY
[0007] The inventive apparatus for weather modification may be used to
create upward moisture flux, which may cause modification of the
vertical humidity profile by increasing relative humidity at higher
altitudes at the expense of drying the air near the surface of the
Earth. The process may occur even in a stable atmosphere when the
convective updrafts normally responsible for the vertical transport of
humid air do not form. An upward moisture flux achieved by deploying
the inventive apparatus may lead to the formation of new clouds and/or
to supersaturation in existing clouds, thus enhancing the development
of precipitation and/or facilitating the inflow of the evaporated
moisture from a water reservoir inland.
[0008] The instant apparatus comprises a Van der Graaf generator (VDGG)
having a capacitor and grounded charging engine and one or more air
ionizers, such as a source of alpha particles, located in the vicinity
of the capacitor. Preferably, the elevation distance of the capacitor
is equal to about the ion propagation distance. The one or more air
ionizers are disposed along the bottom half of the capacitor.
[0009] To improve efficiency of the inventive apparatus, a ventilation
hole may be positioned substantially near the top of the capacitor and
at least one fresh air conduit may be provided to facilitate fresh air
supply from inside the capacitor. Preferably, at least one fresh air
conduit is provided near each of the one or more air ionizers. The
fresh air conduits may be positioned on each air ionizers or between
about an alpha particle range to two times the alpha particle range
from the air ionizers.
[0010] The apparatus may be powered by a source of renewable energy.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0011] FIG. 1 shows the effect
of the increased collision cross-section for water molecules due to
attractive electric forces.
[0012] FIG. 2 presents one
embodiment of the inventive apparatus.
[0013] FIG. 3 presents a plot
for air ionization by a source of radiation as a function of distance
from this source.
[0014] FIG. 4 presents a plot
for atmospheric current produced by a source of radiation in the
electric field between two plates of a capacitor as a function of the
voltage on this capacitor.
[0015] FIG. 5 presents one
embodiment of mounting air conduit and air ionizers on the surface of
the spherical capacitor.
[0016] FIG. 6 illustrates
another embodiment of the apparatus aimed at reduction of the mixing of
the ascending moistened and the incoming fresh air flows.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] Under certain conditions atmospheric vapor may be out of
aerostatic equilibrium, which results in an upward force being exerted
on a volume of air (Makarieva et al., 2007). Conditions for this
process include (1) evaporation that is sufficiently intensive, in
particular to saturate vapor through the atmospheric column up to a
sufficiently high altitude; and (2) the atmospheric temperature lapse
rate [alpha]=[partial differential]T/[partial differential]z (reduction
of temperature T with altitude z) being greater than a critical value
[alpha]o=TsMwg/Qw, where Ts is the absolute dew point temperature at
the surface of the Earth, Mw=1.8*10<-2 >kg mol<-1 >is the
molar mass of water, g=9.8 ms<-1 >is the acceleration of gravity,
and Qw=44 kJ mol<-1 >is the molar latent heat of evaporation for
water. At sea level, standard temperature Ts=288[deg.] K. (+15[deg.]
C.), the value for [alpha]o is 1.15 K km<-1 >and [alpha]o does
not typically exceed 1.3 K km<-1>. The condition
[alpha]>[alpha]o is satisfied in most cases of ambient values of
[alpha] and T, even for absolutely stable layers
([alpha]o<[alpha]<6 K km<-1>) when convection typically
does not occur.
[0018] At any altitude, actual vapor pressure eventually cannot exceed
the pressure of saturated vapor as any moisture excess in the air is
removed by vapor-to-liquid and possibly vapor-to-ice phase transition
processes. This limitation on vapor pressure, governed by the vertical
temperature profile where [alpha]>[alpha]o, assures that at any
altitude the partial pressure of vapor is greater than the pressure of
vapor mass in the atmospheric column above this altitude, bringing the
vapor out of aerostatic equilibrium. In terms of differential equations
this means that the vertical gradient of the partial pressure of vapor
is greater than the weight of a unit volume of vapor at any altitude.
This difference appears as a force acting on a volume of moist air,
causing an updraft.
[0019] The abovementioned removal of excess moisture in a volume of air
by phase transitions occurs when the partial pressure of vapor at an
altitude initially exceeds the vapor saturation pressure at a
temperature determined by a given temperature profile. The air becomes
supersaturated with vapor and thus subject to a phase transition.
Condensation of vapor into liquid water starts on atmospheric aerosol
particles acting as condensation nuclei, which grow into liquid
droplets at the expense of vapor until the air is no longer
supersaturated. Areas of droplet-laden air appear as clouds. Droplets
may further be merged, via the collection of smaller droplets by a
larger droplet (collector) that is moving, usually due to the force of
gravity. This process, known as coalescence, causes droplets to grow
until they are large enough to fall as rain.
[0020] At temperatures below the freezing point for water (0[deg.] C.),
droplets are super-cooled, i.e. they may remain in a liquid state down
to extremely low temperatures (as low as -39[deg.] C.). Some
super-cooled droplets may freeze and further grow by freezing the vapor
onto ice, via a process known as deposition. Deposition of vapor is a
phase transition process, in this sense analogous to condensation. Ice
particles may also merge with super-cooled droplets and drops, causing
the latter to freeze. This process of collecting ice and liquid water
particles into larger ice particles, called riming, in this sense is
analogous to coalescence, but is also a phase transition (liquid water
to ice) process. These processes of supersaturated moisture removal and
release of latent heat at temperatures below the freezing point of
water will be additional to the condensational moisture removal and
latent heat release. Furthermore, such ice-related processes may be
dominant over condensation in forming the updraft under consideration
as vapor deposition pressure in the presence of ice particles is lower
than the vapour condensation pressure in the presence of liquid
droplets, and particle collection via riming, in contrast to
coalescence of droplets, is accompanied by the release of additional
latent heat. The produced ice-based particles may fall as solid
precipitation or as rain if they melt before reaching the surface of
the Earth.
[0021] Latent heat released in the removal of excess moisture by phase
transitions increases the buoyancy of air and thus augments the initial
updraft caused by the discussed aerostatic non-equilibrium of vapor.
Maintaining this process requires a continuous and sufficient supply of
vapor from the surface of the Earth. In contrast, if the atmosphere is
stable and, at the same time, the intensity of evaporation on the
surface is insufficient to maintain the above process, which is often
the case, an updraft is not produced.
[0022] Accordingly, an apparatus is disclosed for providing a
continuous upward vapor flux to produce or augment an updraft of vapor.
To achieve this, the instant apparatus causes extraction of the vapor
from the air at lower altitudes to moisten the air at higher altitudes.
[0023] Without being bound by theory, it is believed that a mechanism
of selectively transporting the water vapor component of atmospheric
air, which is responsible for such modification of the vertical
humidity profile, is as follows. Air molecules acquire a momentum
transferred from a moving ion by scattering. In the absence of an
electric field, this process is random (Brownian) and the average
macroscopic momentum transfer is zero. However, if the motion of ions
is organized to be in the same direction, e.g. by having unipolar,
i.e., predominantly of the same sign, ions driven by a sufficiently
strong electric field, this ion-to-molecule momentum transfer appears
on a macroscopic scale as a force exerted on the air by the applied
atmospheric electric current, causing the air to flow. This phenomenon
is known as "ion wind" generation.
[0024] Applicants have unexpectedly discovered that, under certain
conditions, the generated "ion wind" accelerates water vapor to a
degree significantly higher compared to other air components. In
contrast to molecules of other air components, a molecule of water
(H2O) possesses its own electrical dipole moment. Therefore, when
colliding with a charged particle, it experiences a charge-to-dipole
interaction additionally to the short-range Van-der-Vaalse interaction
which is common to all air molecules in collision processes. In this
regard, water molecules behave differently during collision
(scattering) events on atmospheric ions, and this difference is
described in terms of the collision cross section.
[0025] Trajectories of water and non-water molecules are shown in FIG.
1, illustrating the effect of the increased collision cross-section for
a water molecule, moving parallel to axis X at a distance r from it
(scattering distance) towards an air ion of radius R. Non-water
molecules moving parallel to the axis X at a distance r from it can be
scattered only if r<R, so R is their maximum scattering distance. In
contrast, due to the additional attractive charge-to-dipole electric
force, water molecules with the maximum scattering distance [rho] can
also be scattered at R<r<[rho]. The effective cross-section for
water molecules determined by [rho] is larger than that for other
molecules determined by R as [rho]>R.
[0026] The collision cross-sections ratio of water to non-water
molecules, called enhancement factor EF, for a range of air ion sizes
has been estimated by Nadykto et al., (2003). For ions with diameters
0.6 nm and 1.2 nm, the values for EF were found to be 7 and 2.2
respectively. For the average diameter of air ions of about 0.9 nm, EF
4. For water molecular clusters with dipole moments larger than those
of the water molecule H2O, such as water dimer (H2O)2 and others
((H2O)n, n>2) which appear in higher concentrations when vapor is
closer to saturation, the values for EF are found to be even higher.
[0027] The larger the ion-to-molecule collision cross-section, the
larger the number of air molecules that collide with a moving ion and
the larger the total momentum transferred to the molecules from the ion
per unit of time. The total momentum transferred to molecules of a
volume of air per unit of time is the macroscopic force exerted on this
volume of air. As the collision cross-section for water molecules is
greater (EF>2), and therefore the ion-to-molecule momentum transfer
is also greater, the electric force exerted on water vapor will be
significantly greater compared to other air components. As a result,
the vapor moves ahead of other components in the air flow produced
along the electric field lines. This microphysical process of
separation of water vapor from other air components by an atmospheric
electric current of unipolar ions (unipolar atmospheric electric
current or UAEC) is referred to hereinafter as selective moisture
transport (SMT). The latter leads to the re-distribution of the
available atmospheric vapor and the formation of buoyant parcels of
moistened air.
[0028] In general, SMT causes an increase in relative humidity in some
areas at the expense of it decreasing in others from which the moisture
was taken, i.e. closer to the origin of UAEC. Although at first it may
be not obvious, an increase in humidity reduces the density of the air
and vice versa. This is because the number of molecules of all
components in a volume of air is constant at a given temperature and
pressure. Adding or removing water vapor with a molar mass of
1.8*10<-2 >Kg mol<-1>, which is lower than the molar mass
of air of about 2.9*10<-2 >Kg mol<-1>, will respectively
reduce or increase the mass per unit volume of the air, i.e. its
density. According to Archimedes' principle, dehydrated air parcels
descend while moisturized ones ascend. In this way, the moisture
separation achieved with the aid of a locally generated UAEC appears as
upward moisture transport on a larger scale, ultimately due to the
forces of gravity and reasonably long lifetimes of air parcels with
artificially modified humidity. The ascending moistened air will reach
saturation at and above a certain altitude, and the initial updraft may
further be augmented by latent heat release and aerostatic
non-equilibrium of vapor as discussed previously.
[0029] Generating an atmospheric electric current requires producing
atmospheric ions acting as current carriers and a source of electric
field which drives the ions.
[0030] All air ionization methods are based on moving electrons between
gas molecules. If a gas molecule loses an electron, it becomes a
positively charged molecular ion. If a gas molecule gains an electron,
it becomes a negatively charged molecular ion. Within nanoseconds,
molecular ions bind up to 10 molecules of water and possibly some trace
gases, forming small air ions.
[0031] Accordingly, the instant apparatus includes one or more air
ionizers. Preferably, the air ionizer component utilizes high energy
particles produced in the process of radioactive decay. In general, the
radioactive decay produces alpha, beta, and gamma emissions ionizing
the air by moving electrons. Radioactive decay produces bipolar
ionization, i.e., ions of opposite sighs.
[0032] Accordingly, the one or more air ionizers comprise a source of
high energy particles in form of a radioactive solid substance.
Suitable substances include, but are not limited to, isotopes of
americium, polonium, plutonium, uranium, thorium, actinium, radium, or
combinations thereof, with Americium-241 (<241>Am), Plutonium-239
(<239>Pu), or Plutonium-238 (<238>Pu) being the preferred
substances. In practice, alloys of the said isotopes with a corrosion
resistant metal compound, for example nickel-chrome based, are
preferred.
[0033] Alpha radiation is the main source of air ionization by
radioactive decay. The alpha particle, a helium nucleus consisting of
two neutrons and two protons, collides with air molecules knocking out
electrons, until it loses its energy over a definite distance in the
air. Such a distance, referred to hereinafter as the alpha particle
range, is defined as the distance traveled by the alpha particle before
it loses its energy. The alpha particle range is determined by the
energy of alpha particles which is specific for a particular substance
of the source. For example, alpha particles produced by <241>Am
have the energy of about 5.48 MeV and a range of about 3 cm, limiting
the air ionization zone by this distance. Plutonium isotope
<239>Pu produces practically only alpha particles with the energy
of about 5.15 MeV.
[0034] Air molecules that lose electrons become positive molecular
ions. The free electrons do not exist in air for very long before they
are captured by neutral gas molecules, forming negative molecular ions.
Molecular ions are further clustered into small air ions. Alpha
ionizers produce bipolar ionization, which means that positive and
negative ions are always created in equal numbers.
[0035] Producing ions alone, however, is not sufficient for the SMT to
occur, even if they are produced in large amounts. In order to produce
UAEC, an electric field may need to be generated to dissociate ions of
opposite signs and to form an atmospheric electric current of the ions
with preferred sign. Accordingly, the instant apparatus also comprises
a static electric field generator.
[0036] Generating a static electric field can be achieved by
accumulating electric charges of the same sign in some area of space,
typically in an electrically conductive object confining the charges,
acting as a charge capacitor or electrically coupled to a charge
capacitor and acting as a charged electrode.
[0037] The generated electric field causes ions with the opposite
charge as the capacitor to drift towards and recombine on the capacitor
or electrode. For ions with the same charge, this field drives them
away from the capacitor thus forming a UAEC at distances from the
capacitor greater than the thickness of the air ionization zone limited
by the alpha particle range. Such a continuous charge separation and
removal of ions signed oppositely to ions of the produced UAEC, which
prevents the direct recombination of ion pairs, is maintained by
charging the capacitor.
[0038] In principle, the sign of the accumulated charge may be either
positive or negative, but generating a current of negative ions is
preferred because the latter achieve higher velocities in an electric
field.
[0039] To produce a UAEC in the above method, the air ionizers are
preferably located in the vicinity of or, preferably, on the surface of
the charged capacitor or charged electrode. The air ionization zone is
the zone within the alpha particle range from the air ionizer. The term
"vicinity" means the distance from the capacitor so the electric field
generated by the capacitor in the air ionization zone is sufficiently
strong to dissociate the opposite sign ions.
[0040] Compared to the short range of alpha particles, ranges of
generally less energetic beta and gamma emissions are much longer,
which makes it technically difficult to achieve the separation of the
bipolar ionization produced by beta and gamma emissions with a static
electric field. Furthermore, producing intensive long-range beta and
gamma radiations is not desirable as it may require radiation safety
procedures at distances over the alpha particle range. Therefore,
radioactive materials providing the highest alpha and lowest beta and
gamma radiation outputs are preferable.
[0041] To determine the strength of electric field sufficient to
dissociate the bipolar ionization, the atmospheric electric current may
be measured at different values of electric field strength. For
example, a plot for the atmospheric current produced by a 0.9 [mu]Ci
<241>Am source from a typical smoke alarm in the applied electric
field produced between the plates of a capacitor is given in FIG. 4.
The distance d between the plates is 3 cm (the maximum ionization
distance is within the produced electric field) and the measurements
are taken at different values of the voltage on the capacitor. The
complete dissociation of bipolar ionization corresponds to the
saturation of atmospheric current which occurs, as shown on the plot,
at capacitor voltage U=300 V. The corresponding electric field strength
is E=U/d=300/0.03=10 kV/m. This is the minimum value for the required
strength of the electric field to be achieved for this particular
source. In general, sources with a higher radiation output require a
stronger electric field.
[0042] FIG. 2 illustrates an embodiment of the instant apparatus for
weather modification 20, suitable for practicing the invention. In this
embodiment, the electric field generator comprises a Van der Graaf
generator (VDGG) 21 having a preferably spherical capacitor 22 and a
charging engine 23 placed on a base 26. The capacitor 22 is elevated
above the surface of the Earth by a non-conductive support structure
24. The charging engine 23 is coupled to the capacitor 22 with an
electrical conductor 25. The base 26 of the charging engine 24 is
grounded.
[0043] One or more air ionizers with sources of alpha ionization 27,
preferably in the form of flat sheets of radioactive substance, may be
disposed on or near the surface of the bottom hemisphere of a capacitor
22. The capacitor 22 is preferably made from a corrosion resistant
metal. It is preferable that air ionizers are made from an alloyed
metal comprising the same metal that the capacitor is made from and an
alpha radioactive element. In this configuration, negative ions will
flow away from the capacitor tending aside of it and towards the
surface of the Earth which acts as a collector electrode for these
ions, if the capacitor is negatively charged.
[0044] Since the energy loss of the alpha particle per ion pair formed
is nearly constant, the specific ionization, i.e. number of ion pairs
produced per unit length of the particle path, is proportional to the
rate of the loss of alpha particle energy E with the distance of
penetration x, -dE/dx, and so a plot for ionization as a function of
the distance of penetration is of the Bragg curve shape as shown in
FIG. 3.
[0045] As shown in FIG. 3, most bipolar ionization is produced at some
distance from an ionization source, referred to hereinafter as the
maximum ionization distance. Referring to FIG. 3, the maximum
ionization distance extends from point 30 up to the source-specific
alpha particle range, indicated as 31.
[0046] Depending on the capacitor's size and charging engine design, a
voltage up to several megavolts can be achieved on a VDGG capacitor.
The strength of electric field is sufficient to dissociate the opposite
sign ions. The voltage U on spherical capacitor of radius R is related
to the accumulated charge q as U=q/4[pi][epsilon]R, where
[epsilon]=8.85*10<-12 >F/m is the dielectric permittivity of the
air. At the same time, the electric field strength E at the distance
r>R from the capacitor's center is related to q as
E=q/4[pi][epsilon]r<2>, therefore E=UR/r<2>. For example,
if the capacitor with a radius of 0.8 m is operating at a voltage of 2
MV, the electric field strength at a distance of 3 cm from its surface
(about maximum ionization distance) is 2.32 MV/m. The electric field of
this strength is sufficient to dissociate bipolar ionization from
radioactive sources with an output much higher that of the source
discussed previously as an example.
[0047] As mentioned above, the most intensive ion generation by a
radioactive source attached to the capacitor occurs in a zone at the
maximum ionization distance from the source surface referred to
hereinafter as the maximum ionization zone. As a result, two UAECs of
opposite polarity ions and associated air flows originate from the
maximum ionization zone due to ion dissociation in the electric field.
For a negatively charged capacitor, negative ions flow away from the
capacitor and positive ions flow toward the capacitor, leading to the
formation of a low air pressure layer at distances from the source of
about the maximum ionization distance. Bursts of fresh air parcels into
the low pressure layer may occur, in particular, between streams
flowing out from the alpha ionization sources, which are responsible
for the SMT, causing a partial mixing of the moistened and fresh air
parcels.
[0048] To minimize the latter effect, the following optional
modifications to the design may be utilized. Referring back to FIG. 2,
conduits 28 to facilitate the fresh air supply from inside the
capacitor made of a non-conductive material may be provided near one or
more air ionizers 21. Each conduit 28 has an outlet 29, which is
preferably positioned in the lower pressure zone (i.e., maximum
ionization zone), more preferably between the middle and the outer
limit of this zone. The capacitor 22 may also be provided with a
ventilation hole 30 on its top. For example, conduits may have a
threaded base which is screwed into threaded holes in the capacitor.
The rim of the ventilation hole is preferably smooth and preferably
shielded with an insulating material to avoid unfavorable corona
discharge. By way of a non-limiting example, a rubber or flexible
plastic ring with a notch for the rim of the ventilation hole can be
used.
[0049] A recommended option to mount alpha radiation sources and
conduits is presented in FIG. 5. The shape of the air ionizers 51
corresponds to a section of the top part of the sphere with a radius
r<<R, where R is the radius of the spherical capacitor 52. Air
conduit 53 made of a non-conductive material is screwed into a threaded
hole in the capacitor, passing through a hole in the center of the air
ionizer. To avoid corona discharge on the edges of the air ionizer, all
edges of the air ionizer are made smooth and covered by non-conductive
material. The edge of the air ionizer's hole is covered by the
conduit's flanges 54a and 54b and the side edge of the air ionizer is
also covered by covers 55a and 55b in a similar way to the edge of the
capacitor's ventilation hole. Avoiding or minimizing corona discharge
is desirable because the production of hazardous gases such as ozone
and nitrogen oxides and high corrosive stress are likely to occur on
sharp points, especially in a highly ionized environment.
[0050] Such configuration may also generate a higher electric field,
compared to that of the capacitor, achievable in the ionization zone as
the conductive surfaces of the apparatus are equipotential and
r<<R. In this case where the ionization source acts as a charged
electrode electrically coupled to the capacitor, free electrons
produced by ionization and accelerated in the electric field may
achieve a velocity sufficient to ionize air molecules in their path,
the ionization energy of which is about 35 eV. This secondary
ionization, also known as amplification, can additionally produce many
free electrons and further negative ions for each primary electron that
was formed by radiation.
[0051] FIG. 6 illustrates another optional modification to the
apparatus aimed at the further reduction of the mixing of the ascending
moistened and the incoming fresh air flows. In this configuration, one
or more conduits 61 are connected to the ventilation hole 62 of the
capacitor 63 with air ionizers 64 and air conduits 65 as described
above. The conduits 61 extend beyond the zone of the ascending
moistened air represented by arrows 66a and 66b.
[0052] The height of the capacitor, referred to hereinafter as the
elevation distance, is preferably as high as possible to treat a large
volume of air and, for increased safety, to minimize beta and gamma ray
intensities on the ground. At the same time, the elevation distance
preferably does not exceed the distance that small air ions propagate
in the applied electric field during their lifetime, i.e. most of them
should terminate on the surface of the Earth (the collector).
[0053] The ion propagation distance is determined mostly by the
attachment of ions to atmospheric aerosol particles, also known as
large or heavy ions, which are not moved by the electric field and do
not contribute to the SMT. If the elevation is too high, too many
immobile large ions may accumulate above the surface as a layer of
space charge, which reduces the intensity of the electric field along
ion trajectories. The ion propagation distance can be evaluated by
measuring the vertical profile of the electric field for a particular
system and numerically integrating the ion motion equation over time up
to the ion lifetime which can be determined experimentally using
well-known methods. Elevating the ion source to a distance between one
half and two thirds of the ion propagation distance determined in the
abovementioned way is a guide. In some embodiments, depending on the
system design and the concentration of pollutants in the air, the
elevation distance may vary between several and 10-15 meters, which is
also acceptable in terms of radiation safety for a number of typical
alpha sources including <241 >Am.
[0054] The operation of a typical VDGG is sensitive to leakage
currents. Any liquid moisture on the operating equipment can negatively
affect the system's performance. As a VDGG produces a nearly constant
electric current at a variable voltage on the emitter electrode,
leakage currents may cause the voltage to drop below a threshold for
effective ion separation. As a result of SMT, drizzle may be produced
around the operating apparatus even under clear sky conditions.
Condensational moisturizing may also occur on the equipment. To prevent
the accumulation of continuous water film on moisture-sensitive parts
of the system, including the charging engine of the VDGG and the
support for the capacitor and ventilation hole conduits such as rigid
structures or a tethering rope which anchors a supporting
lighter-than-air craft to the surface of the Earth, these parts may be
coated with a water repulsive wax-like substance. Also, techniques to
prevent condensational moisturizing, such as, for example, sufficient
heating of moisture-sensitive parts is also recommended. Preferably,
the charging engine of the VDGG is hermetically sealed.
[0055] A source of renewable energy for the generator of atmospheric
electric current, such as rechargeable batteries powered by solar
panels and/or windmills, is recommended, especially in the absence of a
power supply infrastructure.
[0056] In another aspect, a method of weather modification is provided,
which is based on the modification of vertical humidity profile by
increasing the relative humidity at higher altitudes at the expense of
drying the air near the surface of the Earth. This method may work even
in a stable atmosphere when the convective updrafts normally
responsible for the vertical transport of humid air do not form. The
method comprises deploying and operating the apparatuses described
above. Operating the instant apparatuses augments or creates a moisture
updraft, which may lead to the formation of new clouds and/or an
increase in supersaturation in existing clouds, thus enhancing the
development of precipitation. Operating the apparatus is most efficient
in areas of high humidity when the atmosphere is stable and convective
updrafts of moist air are weak or absent. Creating strong updrafts of
moist air near a shoreline, preferably in the presence of low-level
winds from the ocean, would facilitate the inflow of the evaporated
moisture from a water reservoir into inland, benefiting the terrestrial
hydrologic cycle. For example, such conditions can be found in many
locations along the shorelines of Middle Eastern countries.
[0057] Although the invention herein has been described with reference
to particular embodiments, it is to be understood that these
embodiments are merely illustrative of the principles and applications
of the present invention. It is therefore to be understood that
numerous modifications may be made to the illustrative embodiments and
that other arrangements may be devised without departing from the
spirit and scope of the present invention which is defined by the
following claims.