Comments by "Stephen Villano" (@spvillano) on "Inside Edition"
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@LeeMooEez were that so, actual howitzers would massively alter the weather.
Instead, only one weapon or technology we have can alter the weather, very locally, within a few miles at most. Nuclear weapons, where local precipitation has been observed due to the effects of the bombs.
Observed at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in detail.
"First, a cloud of soil and dust was stirred up by the blast and carried upward by rising air currents heated by the fireball. This cloud rose 4000 meters into the sky and formed the column or pillar of the "mushroom cloud."
Next, the cloud spread out high in the sky, forming the cap of the mushroom cloud. As the cloud spread, the temperature and pressure decreased, and water vapor in the air condensed to form droplets.
The third cloud was caused by huge fires that were started by heat from the bomb. The air currents rising above these fires lifted more hot air and water vapor 800 meters into the air. Rain produced by big fires isn't associated only with atomic bombs. Emeritus Professor Hitoshi Koyama of Kansai University, writing about the Osaka air raids, noted that "after a big air raid, black rain almost always fell.""
Not some toy cannon in someone's back yard. Or by the rainmaker's cannon.
Or even my almighty flatulence.
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