When Qatar was announced as the host of the 2022 World Cup, a prime concern for fans was the Middle Eastern nation's crippling summer heat. The average August high in Qatar is 105 degrees, not exactly ideal weather for playing (or spectating). But Saud Abdul Ghani, an engineer at Qatar University, may have found a solution fans will be happy with. Here, a brief guide to his breakthrough:
What is this thing?
Quite literally, it's an artificial cloud that would hover over a soccer stadium, protecting fans from the heat.
How would it work?
The cloud would be built of light carbon, and would carry a giant envelope filled with helium gas. The fake cloud would be manipulated by a remote control, and would use four solar-powered (of course!) engines for maneuvering between the stadium and the sun, to block direct light and provide shade.
That sounds expensive. How much would it cost?
Right now, it's an estimated $500,000 per cloud. That's actually "pretty inexpensive... when you take into account how much money is swishing around Qatar these days," says Nicholas Deleon at CrunchGear. Plus, it's "impressively low" for "technology of this magnitude," says Glenn Davis atSportsGrid. And Ghani says the cost will decrease when the artifical clouds become commercially available. Then, he says, they could be used at beaches, parking lots, or other shadeless areas, and may even be controlled by cellphones in the future.
The cloud would be built of light carbon, and would carry a giant envelope filled with helium gas. The fake cloud would be manipulated by a remote control, and would use four solar-powered (of course!) engines for maneuvering between the stadium and the sun, to block direct light and provide shade.
That sounds expensive. How much would it cost?
Right now, it's an estimated $500,000 per cloud. That's actually "pretty inexpensive... when you take into account how much money is swishing around Qatar these days," says Nicholas Deleon at CrunchGear. Plus, it's "impressively low" for "technology of this magnitude," says Glenn Davis atSportsGrid. And Ghani says the cost will decrease when the artifical clouds become commercially available. Then, he says, they could be used at beaches, parking lots, or other shadeless areas, and may even be controlled by cellphones in the future.
1 comments:
Nice Article! Thanks for sharing with us.
Scott Robarge
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