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Great idea, how do we get the power?
oops, you are right, to transport long distances, the angle would be 0.001°, basically a flat pipeline, so you need power to suck the water at the end of the pipeline. How much power you need? I don't know, have no idea.
Quote from: myuncle on 08/04/2021 16:00:06oops, you are right, to transport long distances, the angle would be 0.001°, basically a flat pipeline, so you need power to suck the water at the end of the pipeline. How much power you need? I don't know, have no idea.On your question of power, wouldn't it be possible to make use of the Earth's axial spin?For example, suppose we built a pipeline from Antarctica to central Australia. The centre of Australia is sometimes called its "Dead Heart", because it won't support agriculture to grow living crops. Due to a lack of fresh water, to irrigate the crops.Such water could supplied by a pipeline which starts at the centre of Antarctica. Which roughly corresponds to the. South Pole. Where the surface of the Earth rotates at minimum speed. And so its "centrifugal force" is at a minimum. Then, you put Antarctic snow into the Antarctic end of the pipe. This results in the following consequences:1. The snow in the pipe, gets impelled along the pipe by the increasing "centrifugal force" generated by the Earth's increasing axial surface spin, as the snow is "flung outwards" to a greater distance from the South Pole.2. As the distance from the South Pole increases, the snow gets warmer, and melts into fresh liquid water.3. This water eventually emerges at high speed from the Australian end of the pipe. Where it's sprayed abundantly over the arid ground - to irrigate it, and thus create new, fertile fields for crops.Sounds a good idea, doesn't it? Or does it contain a fatal flaw?
Another idea: you tether flying fridges in the desert. Fridges are solar powered, and are obviously open, so the ice can drop down. You fly them using anything: kites, airships, hot air balloons. Everything is tethered to the ground. If the fridges make too much ice, they will become too heavy for the kites/airships. As a result things start going down, allowing the ice to melt. Once the ice is gone, the kites/airships will go up again, and the cycle repeats itself.
The snow in the pipe, gets impelled along the pipe by the increasing "centrifugal force" generated by the Earth's increasing axial surface spin, as the snow is "flung outwards" to a greater distance from the South Pole.
Quote from: myuncle on 08/04/2021 20:51:18Another idea: you tether flying fridges in the desert. Fridges are solar powered, and are obviously open, so the ice can drop down. You fly them using anything: kites, airships, hot air balloons. Everything is tethered to the ground. If the fridges make too much ice, they will become too heavy for the kites/airships. As a result things start going down, allowing the ice to melt. Once the ice is gone, the kites/airships will go up again, and the cycle repeats itself.How do you get the water into the refrigerators so that they can make ice?
they can make ice?Report
On your question of power, wouldn't it be possible to make use of the Earth's axial spin?For example, suppose we built a pipeline from Antarctica to central Australia.
Free desalinated sea water is called rain. The trick is not to live where there isn't any.
Quote from: alancalverd on 09/04/2021 23:49:29Free desalinated sea water is called rain. The trick is not to live where there isn't any. On a per capita basis, that precludes living in the SW of the UK.
Somerset >1500 mm per annum/956,000 . Cambridgeshire < 600/847,200, roughly half the per capita rainfall of the southwest.