Say we drill a hole in the ice way above the arctic circle, where the air temperature is well below freezing all year round.
We drop a tube down into this whole to pump up water from the ocean below. We then vaporize this water (create steam) and let it out into the atmosphere. My thinking is that this steam would quickly become water, drop onto the ice, and freeze, thus adding to the amount of ice on the surface.
Say we put a couple hundred of these pumps/humidifiers scattered around in the artic cirlce.
1) Would this work?
2) and if so how much water would have to be pumped up per year to equalize the current rate of the ice caps shrinking?
3) Would the energy needed (or more precisely, the heat generated) to vaporize the water be greater then the net benifit of having more ice on the caps?
We drop a tube down into this whole to pump up water from the ocean below. We then vaporize this water (create steam) and let it out into the atmosphere. My thinking is that this steam would quickly become water, drop onto the ice, and freeze, thus adding to the amount of ice on the surface.
Say we put a couple hundred of these pumps/humidifiers scattered around in the artic cirlce.
1) Would this work?
2) and if so how much water would have to be pumped up per year to equalize the current rate of the ice caps shrinking?
3) Would the energy needed (or more precisely, the heat generated) to vaporize the water be greater then the net benifit of having more ice on the caps?