The problem with my calculation is that the water has to go some place. I am pretty much presupposing a clear street/sidewalk.Thanks for doing the math! Though I feel kind of bad you bothering to take the time to do that. I was more expecting one of our resident scientists to just say "duh yes" or "duh no" in reply.
I think that that amount of plutonium is going to be prohibitively expensive. Never mind the obvious hazards.
Here's a viable alternative.
I was just thinking, "Leave it to a Southerner to come up with that sort of solution to a 1/16th" dusting of snow twice every year."![]()
Exactly! I'm not some tree hugging hippie solar lover. NUCULAR baby!But then he'd have to install solar. Much less politically palatable to his persuasion than plutonium.![]()
People melt the snow on their driveway?
Here we just dig it or drive over it.
And by that I mean we drive over it.
If a driveway were to be made out of plutonium 238, would that be sufficient to keep it ice and snow free during the winter for moderate accumulations?
So that would be a snowblower and chains on the tyres?
Depends on how slippery it gets. Illinois isn't really a land of winter snow. It's a land of winter ice. If it's reasonably snowy I leave it. When it gets really slick I start envisioning my wife slipping while wrangling with holding the son, then I go ice pick(well, it's a grain shovel really) it until it's thin enough the sun will hopefully melt it. I really need to go buy a bag of that blue poison magic salt.