Very fascinating. However, by that far in the future, we will have the technology to control the weather to a large extent. Satellites positioned between the Earth and Sun could shade the planet, keeping overall sunlight intensity levels the same as they are now.FuturismFan wrote: ↑Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:04 pm 250,000,000 AD – Hypercanes are frequent on Earth
Source is a National Geographic documentary called 'Naked Science: Supercontinent', at around 25:30: https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1qb411a7tu/
- The future supercontinent, Pangaea Ultima, will have storms much more powerful than those of today.
- Much of the surface of the Earth will get above 50°C, and will be 50°C as a monthly average. This will be due to increased solar energy as the Sun ages and increased carbon dioxide content (volcanism increasing due to the continents colliding into a supercontinent).
- This high temperature will fuel enormous storms called hypercanes, much larger than modern hurricanes, and reaching into the stratosphere.
- Creatures which can survive being pummeled by the oceans will become dominant. This would include organisms like crabs: with adaptations such as hard shells, ability to survive out of water, and ability to lock their gills up to become a self-contained environment.
From Wikipedia:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HypercaneHypercanes would have wind speeds of over 800 kilometres per hour (500 mph), potentially gusting to 970 km/h (600 mph), and would also have a central pressure of less than 700 hectopascals (20.67 inHg), giving them an enormous lifespan of at least several weeks. This extreme low pressure could also support massive storm systems roughly the size of North America.
And by using a technique called "star lifting," we could slowly siphon off the Sun's outer layers of hydrogen, which might shrink it enough to prevent it from turning into a red giant that is projected to expand and fry Earth in 5 billion years.
https://www.gregschool.org/gregschoolle ... e-galaxies
