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"The sun's abundant energy, if harvested in space,
could provide a cost-effective way to meet global power needs in as little as 30 years with seed money from governments, according to a study by an international scientific group. Orbiting power plants capable of collecting solar energy and beaming it to Earth appear "technically feasible" within a decade or two based on technologies now in the laboratory, a study group of the Paris-headquartered International Academy of Astronautics said. Such a project may be able to achieve economic viability in 30 years or less, it said, without laying out a road map or proposing a specific architecture." See: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/1...A-GoogleNewsUK |
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jacob navia wrote:
I can't see what is that big advantage of installing solar panels in orbit compared to installing them in the sahara desert or in other more accessible places in the surface of the earth. The U.S. has a fair share of solar power in a lot of deserts, installing solar panels in there would be a no brainer... And what typically makes for a good desert also typically makes for a good location for solar power. Dave |
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On Nov 15, 2:49*pm, David Spain wrote:
jacob navia wrote: I can't see what is that big advantage of installing solar panels in orbit compared to installing them in the sahara desert or in other more accessible places in the surface of the earth. The U.S. has a fair share of solar power in a lot of deserts, installing solar panels in there would be a no brainer... And what typically makes for a good desert also typically makes for a good location for solar power. Dave however space solar could likely provide power for many more hours than land based solar |
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Le 15/11/11 22:38, bob haller a écrit :
On Nov 15, 2:49 pm, David wrote: jacob navia wrote: I can't see what is that big advantage of installing solar panels in orbit compared to installing them in the sahara desert or in other more accessible places in the surface of the earth. The U.S. has a fair share of solar power in a lot of deserts, installing solar panels in there would be a no brainer... And what typically makes for a good desert also typically makes for a good location for solar power. Dave however space solar could likely provide power for many more hours than land based solar OK. I can buy solar tiles for around 240 US$ per square meter at http://www.solarenergyexperts.co.uk/...ar-tile-prices Suppose I install just 100 square meters in my roof, what makes for 24 000 dollars. 1000 of those houses would make for 100 000 square meters, i.e. 10 square kilometers of solar power. True, that system would cost 24 million. Solar tiles aren't that efficient and produce only between 50 and 120 Watts per square meter. The output of that system would be 100 000 * 50 = 5MW to 12 MW of electricity. Installation of solar tiles is very easy, just replacing your normal tiles with solar ones and a bit of cabling. All can be done by local workers, 1000 homes re-roofing is maybe expensive but just doable. Le's say installation costs are 2000 dollars per house. Makes 2 million dollars for the 1000 homes. With 26 million you can't even pay one trip to orbit... Not to mention the payload... Installation of the panels in space, unfolding them, astronauts needed to deploy them (and they DID have trouble with the relatively SMALL solar panels of the ISS remember?) You would need a permanent space station to keep those astronauts in orbit and feed them, support them as they work in the panels in the hostile environment of space. Then you need the transport system to earth (the deadly BEAM) a receiving station on earth, etc. Compare to that distributed system where there is NO TRANSPORTATION costs since electricity can be used at the homes, right where it is produced. No beam needed! And after 15 years you just replace the tiles with new ones, no need to pay all transportation to space AGAIN! Bottom line: For 26 million you get 100 houses with 5KW to 12 Kw systems. In the space railroad you get... well nothing, you can't even pay a SINGLE trip to orbit to put a few square meters of solar panels in geo-synchronous orbit! |
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On Tue, 15 Nov 2011 13:38:07 -0800 (PST), bob haller
wrote: however space solar could likely provide power for many more hours than land based solar a) But it will take many years longer to get Space Solar Power up and running compared to putting solar tiles on your roof. Rooftop solar can provide power next week. Space Solar Power is ten years away at best. If the roof solar provides 8 hours of power a day, that's 29,200 hours of electricity from your roof before Space Solar Power provides one hour. And then Space Solar Power only narrows the gap at the rate of 16 hrs/day. b) Solar Power (and wind) won't replace all power on Earth. It can't, not from orbit and not from the ground. But solar can take a large part of the load during the day and let traditional power (oil, natural gas, etc.) handle the night and periods of calm winds. This is enormously more efficient than Space Solar Power, and probably will be no matter how low you get the cost of space launch. This doesn't even get into the idea of ground-based solar farms in the deserts and prairies. Brian |
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On Wed, 16 Nov 2011 00:02:59 +0100, jacob navia
wrote: Then you need the transport system to earth (the deadly BEAM) a receiving station on earth, etc. Here, I think you're going a bit overboard. Most studies show that the beam is not deadly, in fact it isn't much more dangerous than your average radar, which we have all over the world. But I do think the area used by the rectenna would be better used for a solar farm. Brian |
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Brian Thorn wrote:
But I do think the area used by the rectenna would be better used for a solar farm. How much "shading" would the rectenna provide? So much that one couldn't put panels underneath it? I thought there were proposals to grow crops under them (where there was water at least). rick jones -- web2.0 n, the dot.com reunion tour... these opinions are mine, all mine; HP might not want them anyway... ![]() feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hp.com but NOT BOTH... |
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![]() "jacob navia" wrote in message ... Le 15/11/11 04:22, a écrit : "The sun's abundant energy, if harvested in space, could provide a cost-effective way to meet global power needs in as little as 30 years with seed money from governments, according to a study by an international scientific group. I can't see what is that big advantage of installing solar panels in orbit compared to installing them in the sahara desert Terrestrial solar suffers from the same limitations as most green sources of energy. It's intermittent, and they CAN'T be used for baseload power. Which means providing a continuous flow of electricity directly /into/ an existing grid. That ability is the Holy Grail of green energy. SSP is the ONLY green source that can. Terrestrial solar can only reduce demand on a grid, not power a grid. That is the difference between a source that's limited to minor or specialty niches, and a sea-change in our energy future. And SSP can be delivered far from the equator, and more importantly to rural or rugged areas where conventional power, green or not, can't reach. That article mentions India several times, and the reason they're so interested in SSP is that a fourth of all the food they grow spoils for lack of electricity. Many there believe SSP could make India food self-sufficient. or in other more accessible places in the surface of the earth. The U.S. has a fair share of solar power in a lot of deserts, installing solar panels in there would be a no brainer... And you could power ...the desert. What about the rest of the world? Maintenance? Forget costly astronauts expeditions to replace old solar panels (they last only 10-15 years in space)... You just take a truck and replace them. But a conventional power plant of coal, oil or natural gas has to shell out big bucks each and every day to keep the flow of fuel pouring in to make electricity. This is commonly called an operating expense. SSP doesn't have any of these very expensive operating costs, ZERO, and can beam baseload power to the /majority/ of Earth where terrestrial solar is useless. If some meteorite hits them (yes, that *COULD* happen in earth too) you just replace them very cheaply. But do not worry, they are shielded from MOST meteorites by a thick gas blanket dozens of kilometers high. And if the advance most expect happens, which is using mirrors dozens of feet in size, rather than solar arrays miles across, then SSP suddenly doesn't seem nearly as difficult or expensive. The mirrors could be in high orbit transmitting the power with lasers to orbiting satellites which microwave it down wherever needed. Maybe someday getting electricity might be as easy as getting a cable TV signal. SSP is essentially....WIRELESS...power transmission. The other Holy Grail of the energy industry. NASA seems desperate for a new reason for being. By the way. And the planet needs hope for a new clean energy source. Jonathan s At NO COST... Compare this with space where a micro-meteorite collision is quite likely in a few years operation. Health and security problems? None. There is no need to beam the energy back to earth since they are in the surface of the planet already. Forget problems with people getting anxious that a microwave beam could fry them in the event of any malfunction. There is NO BEAM, can you imagine? No health hazards. No problems with birds being killed if they happen to cross the beam. Or humans in small planes that wander into the beam. And forget the energy lost to heating the atmosphere with your beam. You get 100% efficiency on the ground since... YES! THERE IS NO DEADLY BEAM! Installation costs? Almost nothing, your panels can be transported by a plain truck to their destination. No satellites, no huge startup costs, no problems with overcrowded skies where a microwave beam would fry any satellite using a lower orbit... NO PROBLEMS or installation costs at all. Pollution from the installation procedure reduces to the CO2 of the trucks transporting the panels. Compare to the pollution of thousands of rockets (and associated exhaust fumes) the manufacturing needs to build those rockets, and the pollution when they fall down and are burn in the atmosphere. End of life costs? Almost none. Just take your panels and recycle them. No need to send fuel and a transportation engine to make your panels burn in the atmosphere, polluting the skies. Your panels can be dismantled and replaced in no time by low qualified workers. No need to train astronauts, devise a human transport system, etc. Yes, your panels can be less efficient since they could be covered by clouds. In the deserts of the U.S. anyway there are enough days with full power to compensate any oddball cloudy days. But of course, rationally thinking about solar power is not the exercise here, as it seems. jacob |
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