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What sort of legitimately USEFUL information can be obtained from the interior of a tornado? "Stormchasing" seems to be more of a redneck form of entertainment rather than a legitimate scientific effort.
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Regards, Marv
Smart phones are to people what laser pointers are to cats
Homo sapiens is a goal, not a definition
PJs (Aug 17, 2025)
I agree about using sensors rather than people. (A main reason for foregoing a manned mission to Mars. (Unless only politicians and lawyers are sent.)) The problem is that we can't accurately predict the path of the storm so deploying and nailing down the sensors is problematic.
But what is the real use of that data ? Tornadoes are basically random in the sense that knowing in detail the path/pressure distribution/temperature/etc. doesn't tell you much of anything to predict the path of the next one. Our government has already collected mountains of data from space probes that sits, mostly uninspected, in vaults until someone really needs to calculate the average size of pebbles on Mars. I think a lot of the tornado data already collected is in the same category.
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Regards, Marv
Smart phones are to people what laser pointers are to cats
Homo sapiens is a goal, not a definition
There is more to the data than predicting the path. Sensors improve over time and all tornadoes are not the same. I’m sure there is a lot of data waiting to be analyzed but maybe the people to do this work haven’t even been born yet. More data is always good.
I have lived through two tornadoes. One killed 37 people. They are a life changing event that I wish I knew more about, from a distance. They can drive. 2x4 down a tree’s center, pulverize a brick building, and derail a freight train. Yet we know little about what makes them tick.
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