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#51
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Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: Andrew Sarangan wrote: There is 30 horsepower of solar radiation falling on a Cessna 172's wing that we are simply throwing away. Unless I dropped a decimal somewhere, there is about 16 M^2 of wing area on a C-172. At ~1000W/m^2 insolation, that yields an "ideal" max power of ~16,000 W. 30 HP is 22.4 kW; there isn't that much energy in sunlight. Since there are ~746 W/HP, by my reckoning the sunlight power on a C-172 wing is ~21 HP. Still not bad, though not sure where Andrew got 30 HP. He's using 1.4 kW, which is about the max you'll ever get. Both of you are ignoring the fact that you get that only if the angle beteen the sun and your collector is 90 degrees, otherwise you have to multiply by the sine of the angle to get the real energy per unit area. The challenge is extracting the full solar spectrum and storing it. But there are no fundamental scientific reasons why this is not achievable. You mean other than we haven't a clue how to do it in the real world? There are no fundamental scientific reasons why we can't: Convert light into electricity with 90% efficiency. Real world system efficiencies of 40% should be possible today - using solar thermal (e.g. solar troughs). Lab efficiencies are already around 40%. Using collectors or concentrators doesn't change the overall efficiency, it only makes the area of the converter required for a given amount of energy smaller; the total area remains the same. And for photocells, it runs the temperature up which plays hell with the usefull life and reliability. Cure cancer. That is already being done for some forms of cancer. Next time try "Cure the common cold." (And strictly speaking the body does that on its own - it just makes you feel miserable while it goes about it!) Cure cancer as in take these pills twice a day for a week, not irradiate or cut out a chunk of the body and hope there isn't too much collateral damage to the body, though with stuff like proton therapy the irradiation stuff is getting pretty good. Produce sustainable fusion. Always 30 years off.... ;-) Convert junk mail and coffee grounds into 100 LL. An interesting idea. :-) Mr. Fusion; I forgot about the banana peels. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#52
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In article Andrew Sarangan writes:
On a clear day, the average solar power incident on the earth's surface is 1400Wm^2. http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1998/...utbundit.shtml No, that is the solar power at the top of the atmosphere. By the time it gets through the atmosphere, the accepted figure is 1000 watts per square meter. Consumer solar cells are available claiming about 20% efficienty now. If they can do as their ads claim, the 16 sq meters of the top of the 172 will get 3.2 kW under direct solar radiation, and perhaps 70% of that on a typical mid-day for most of us due to the sun angle being lower than directly overhead. That 2.25 kW would give 3 horsepower if the conversion were 100 percent efficient (it isn't). As for 100 percent efficient solar cells, you say: We are already doing it, for specialized applications. Internal quantum efficiencies of certain semiconductor materials have approached nearly 100% within a narrow spectral range.The challenge is how to translate that to match the broad solar spectrum. The know-how exists, but there isn't enough investment to make it happen. If you believe that, you should be out convincing investors that you can make them very rich. Don't tell us. Show us. Convince those that point out that the laws of thermodynamics setting limits apply to solar cells too. Had we spent all the post-911 terrorist-aversion expenditures on something like this, we could be declaring independence from the middle east. Speculation, with no facts in evidence. I know that we spent several millions erecting a metal fence around our small GA airport. All it did was screw up the localizer signal and trap the deer population. I don't think even the administrators believed there was a terrorism threat here. Yes, the whole security paranoia over aircraft has not gone away. On the other hand, NSF (National Science Foundation) budget has barely kept up with inflation in the past 10 years. This is where we count on for fundamental break throughs in discovery. Last I checked, the NSF didn't do research. Universities do some, but putting things into production is done by businesses. Now, if I had the cash, I would be inclined to see if that 3 horsepower could be fed to a reasonably efficient prop to drive an ultralight around. It might be difficult to stay ultralight with all the solar power weight, but it would be fun if it could be made to work. Alan |
#53
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Phil J wrote:
On Apr 15, 11:52 am, Gig 601Xl Builder wrote: While I agree that alternate forms of energy are a very good thing for very many reasons there is no reason to do anything at this point that will trash the world economy because there is still several metric butt-loads of crude out there. I don't know of anyone who is suggesting that we trash the world economy. There are lot's of Greens out there that would do exactly that and if the truth were known they would be happy about it. These are the same people that were pro-USSR prior to the 90s. They are watermelons. Green on the outside and red on the inside. That is a friend of mine's favorite saying. He probably got it from Rush but it is a pretty good description. |
#55
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(Alan) wrote:
Now, if I had the cash, I would be inclined to see if that 3 horsepower could be fed to a reasonably efficient prop to drive an ultralight around. It might be difficult to stay ultralight with all the solar power weight, but it would be fun if it could be made to work. You are about 28 years too late - it was demonstrated in 1980. Here's a brief history of solar powered flight: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/n...-054-DFRC.html |
#56
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Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: Both of you are ignoring the fact that you get that only if the angle beteen the sun and your collector is 90 degrees, otherwise you have to multiply by the sine of the angle to get the real energy per unit area. I didn't ignore that aspect out of ignorance or oversight. I'm not trying to write a treatise on the subject after all. And anyway, we also "ignored" clouds, fog, smoke, bug splatter, and night too. It didn't seem relevant to the underlying point. Which I took to be the amount of power in sunlight. (Solar powered aircraft have been built and set records, after all.) I can make a solar motor out of 4 cigarette lighter flints, a magnifying glass, and a refrigerator magnet; that doesn't mean it is usefull for anything other than a physics demonstration. There is a big difference between the amount of power in sunlight and the incident power in sunlight, and the incident power is what there is to work with. Jim Logajan wrote: Real world system efficiencies of 40% should be possible today - using solar thermal (e.g. solar troughs). Lab efficiencies are already around 40%. Real-world heat engine efficiencies of 36% have been observed in power plants: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_en..._performa nce Yeah, and bejeezus huge solar boilers have been build in sunny climates with some sucess. None of that has anything to do with running a practical airplane. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#57
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On Apr 15, 2:47*pm, Gig 601Xl Builder
wrote: I don't know of anyone who is suggesting that we trash the world economy. There are lot's of Greens out there that would do exactly that and if the truth were known they would be happy about it. These are the same people that were pro-USSR prior to the 90s. They are watermelons. Green on the outside and red on the inside. That is a friend of mine's favorite saying. He probably got it from Rush but it is a pretty good description. Really? How many Communist Greens have you met that wanted to trash the world's economy? Phil |
#58
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 11:58:25 -0500, Gig 601Xl Builder wrote:
Dan Luke wrote: ......a self made dooms day scenario so to speak. Oil is $110/bbl and climbing. Gasoline is on a similar path. Those facts alone are already starting to give serious economic impetus to alternative energy development. Oil is at an all time high because the dollar is at an all time low. That's not the only reason. Demand is at an all-time high and growing fast. Crude is getting more expensive to extract. All the money both foreign and domestic is moving into hard commodities. Gold and oil just happen to be the most popular two. If the dollar wasn't in the hole so badly the resent find off the coast of Brazil would have really depressed the oil futures market. Hmmm... "...could contain as much as 33 billion barrels!" That's a pig-in-a-poke until the reserves are proven. That's why it didn't depress prices--not even a smidgen. |
#59
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 10:43:01 -0700 (PDT), Phil J wrote:
I don't know of anyone who is suggesting that we trash the world economy. Talk radio "environmentalist" strawmen say it all the time. That's why it shows up here. But I think now is the time to devote some serious resources to find alternative, sustainable ways to keep our societies running. If we wait until the end is clearly in sight, we probably won't be able to afford to spend the resources it will take to solve the problem. If you want to get some good perspective on this kind of thing, read the book Collapse by Jared Diamond. It's a very clear-eyed, down-to- earth analysis of why past societies have flourished, but then ultimately collapsed. Over and over again in human history, societies have over-used their natural resources until they suffered a catastrophic collapse. This is the rule, not the exception. It is very rare in human history for a society to live in a way that is sustainable over the long term. Clearly, our current society is not sustainable, and if we ignore history we will be condemned to repeat it. You're just one of those whacko alarmists. Everything will be fine if we just keep doing things the same way we always have. Don't worry; be happy! |
#60
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