Florida Scientists Create Artificial Category 5 Hurricane In A Lab

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Florida scientists create artificial Category 5 hurricane in a lab

Scientists in Florida have spent $45 million on an indoor laboratory capable of producing a category 5 level hurricane.

The University of Miami say that the lab, nicknamed “SUSTAIN” (short for “SUrge STructure Atmosphere INteraction“), has constructed a 75-foot long, 30,000 gallon capacity acrylic water tank, equipped with a 1,700-horsepower fan and 12-paddle wave generator.

The device is able to artificially create a wide rang of adverse weather conditions, such as giant waves and hurricanes.

Anongroup.org reports: However, the academic institutions in America, most of them work for the Military Industrial Complex. The science of weather warfare, or geoengineering was perfected at institutions like MIT, with defense contractors such as Raytheon and the MITRE corporationworking in conjunction with academic institutions and the US government.

Understanding the relationship between academic institutions and the military, geoengineering researchers have had good reason to wonder if the recent hurricanes were engineered or altered with geoengineering technology.

According to the SUSTAIN lab director and oceanographer Brian Haus:

We can create the equivalent of a hurricane with winds over 200 miles-per-hour. That’s an off-the-charts Category 5.

That means the SUSTAIN lab can be configured to try and recreate past historical storms. Scientists allege this gives them the opportunity to measure wind and wave patterns for hurricanes that have long passed.

If the tools are really that accurate, it’s a huge testament to the precision of geoengineering technology.

According to Science Alert:

They can also monitor the differences between different categories of storm and ultimately advise governments and authorities on the best ways to tackle them, thanks to the data pulled from the lab.

There are various different uses for the specialized hardware inside the SUSTAIN lab: testing the resilience of model houses and buildings, for example, studying how sea spray affects the growing intensity of a storm (due to the transfer of heat from the water to the atmosphere as spray is generated) and also tracking the way carbon dioxide moves from the ocean to the air during a hurricane.

The University of Miami of course, is currently being struck with a gigantic hurricane.

While this particular effort to recreate hurricanes seems a lot more innocent than the activity of geoengineers such as David Keith, it is concerning, and indicative of how fully developed the science of geoengineering is.

https://youtu.be/HPAwz7oH0aA

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