FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY BY KEVIN DEUTSCH Students hunched over textbooks hear the hiss of the wind and look at the sky in alarm. ''On any given day you can hear it on campus,'' said Carolyn Robertson, assistant director of the International Hurricane Research Center, which houses the goose-bump-giving Wall of Wind hurricane simulator at FIU's campus west of Miami. The current system is extremely loud. But the powerful invention is about to get quieter, more durable and stronger thanks to a $10 million state grant the center will use to improve the device's design. The improved Wall of Wind, expected to be ready by next spring, will use 12 high-powered fans to whip up what feels like a monster hurricane. Already able to generate sustained wind of 130 miles per hour, the machine will get a boost of at least 10 miles per hour, making its force equal to that of a Category 4 storm. Work on the project began in 2004, and the testing has yielded valuable information. The program's main goal: Help South Florida companies and builders design products and structures that will survive storms. The grant money, for research that can help Florida's economy, also will go toward the construction of a new lab. Click here for the actual Miami Herald article. |
