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by generativenoise
1142 days ago
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Your understanding of the physics is so bad I don't know where to start. Though for a first step where do you think that energy you extract from the water to turn it into ice goes? If you want to use ice cubes they have to either be made in space, or you have to get extremely good radiative cooling to space. There have been plenty of solutions proposed but the most favourable "solution" that has mostly been chosen is to make it the futures problem to figure out how to adapt. |
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> is so bad I don't know where to start. Though for a first step where do you think that energy you extract from the water to turn it into ice goes
You are not extracting energy from water, the energy comes from nuclear fission in nuclear powerplants.
> If you want to use ice cubes they have to either be made in space
Why? You have a giant power plant getting energy from nuclear radiation and it's entire purpose is to generate 1-2 square km of ice sheets each 1M thick along with 10-20 other plants you have 300-600 sq km of ice per year that is intended to keep polar surface ocean water cool (not the whole world).
The goal is not to cool the air but to essentially use nuclear energy to transfer heat from the ocean into steam into the atmosphere.