enthalpy

Wednesday, August 18, 2004


Dust off your tin-foil hats, as it seems the great Northeast Blackout of 2003 was done as part of a secret experiment to study air pollution along the Ohio River valley. Here's an abstract and here's some more even crazier commentary.
The massive Northeast blackout of a year ago not only shut off electricity for 50 million people in the US and Canada, but also shut off the pollution coming from fossil-fired turbogenerators in the Ohio Valley. In effect, the power outage was an inadvertent experiment for gauging atmospheric repose with the grid gone for the better part of the day. And the results were impressive.

On 15 August 2003, only 24 hours after the blackout, air was cleaner by this amount: SO2 was down 90%, O3 down 50%, and light-scattering particles down 70% over "normal" conditions in the same area. The haze reductions were made by University of Maryland scientists scooping air samples with a light aircraft.

The observed pollutant reductions exceeded expectations, causing the authors to suggest that the spectacular overnight improvements in air quality "may result from underestimation of emission from power plants, inaccurate representation of power plant effluent in emission models or unaccounted-for atomospheric chemical reactions."
Considering I work in the space program with people that think we faked the moon landing, I must say, as far as conspiracy theories go, this one's got legs. But honestly, the University of Maryland? That's the best they could do? Don't we need the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations, a gigantic oil company, or at the very least, the Freemasons for a conspiracy theory to really get off the ground?



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