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Change in the weather? Wind farms might affect local climates.


Large groups of power-generating windmills The List of windmills is a link page for any windmill or windpump. Collections
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  • Folmar Windmill, Bayfield, Ontario
 could have a small but detectable influence on a region's climate, new analyses suggest.

Windmills once were quaint several-story-high mechanisms that pumped water or ground grain. They've since evolved into sky-scraping behemoths that can each generate electrical power for more than 100 homes.

Some modern turbines are 72 meters tall and have rotor blades that are about 25 m long, says S. Baidya Roy of Duke University in Durham, N.C. Future wind mills may reach higher than 100 m, and their rotor blades may measure 50 m long. he notes.

All such turbines disrupt natural airflow to extract energy from wind. To investigate potential effects of a wind farm that includes thousands of windmills, Roy and his colleagues used a detailed climate model based on wind speeds, temperatures, and ground-level evaporation evaporation, change of a liquid into vapor at any temperature below its boiling point. For example, water, when placed in a shallow open container exposed to air, gradually disappears, evaporating at a rate that depends on the amount of surface exposed, the humidity  in north-central Oklahoma during a 2-week period in July 1995. In their scenario, the researchers considered a 100-by-100 array of windmills spaced 1 kilometer apart.

The simulation suggests that during the day, while sun-induced convection handily hand·i·ly  
adv.
1. In an easy manner.

2. In a convenient manner.

Adv. 1. handily - in a convenient manner; "the switch was conveniently located"
conveniently

2.
 mixes the lower layers of the atmosphere, such a wind farm wouldn't have important climatic effects.

In predawn pre·dawn  
n.
The time just before dawn.



predawn adj.
 hours, however, when the atmosphere typically is less turbulent, a large windmill windmill, apparatus that harnesses wind power for a variety of uses, e.g., pumping water, grinding corn, driving small sawmills, and driving electrical generators. Windmills were probably not known in Europe before the 12th cent.  array could influence the local climate. For example, at 3 a.m., the average wind speed at ground level was 3.5 meters per second (m/s) in the absence of windmills. Adding the wind farm would increase the average wind speed to 5 m/s. Also, the 10,000 windmills would increase the temperature across the area by about 2[degrees]C for several hours.

Averaged over an entire day, the wind speed at ground level would go up about 0.6 m/s and the temperature would jump 0.7[degrees]C.

Turbulence caused by the rotating blades would shunt To divert, switch or bypass.  some of the high-speed winds typically found 100 m off the ground down to Earths surface, says Roy. Those surface winds would boost evaporation of soft moisture by as much as 0.3 millimeter per day.

The researchers describe their simulation in the Oct. 16 Journal of Geophysical Research Journal of Geophysical Research is a publication of the American Geophysical Union. JGR was formerly titled Terrestrial Magnetism from its founding by the AGU's president Louis A.  (Atmospheres).

The findings may stimulate scientists to validate the analysis with real-world tests, says Nell Kelley, a meteorologist at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), located in Golden, Colorado, as part of the U.S. Department of Energy, is the United States' primary laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development.  in Golden, Colo. In general, says Kelley, the simulation agrees with atmospheric data he gathered at a wind farm in California.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 16, 2004
Words:399
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