Difference between revisions of "2812: Solar Panel Placement"

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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
 
{{incomplete|Created by an underpaid solar panel installer - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
{{incomplete|Created by an underpaid solar panel installer - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
This comic proposes a solution to the issue of solar panels not generating enough power due. Solar panels on Earth have multiple things reducing their efficacy such as their distance from the sun reducing the intensity of light hitting them and the fact that for half of the time they can't generate any power because the Earth is blocking the sun. Putting your solar panels in a close orbit above the sun would eliminate most if not all these issues and science fiction authors have suggested this in the form of Dyson Sphere. However putting solar panels in this position introduces many new problems that can negativity impact their energy generating capacity such as transmission losses and the sun.
 
  
{{w|Solar panels|Solar panels}} are a relatively common method of powering large objects on Earth, such as homes, businesses, and generators. They work by gathering solar energy reaching the Earth from the sun and converting it to electricity. More specifically, they absorb vast amounts of photons from the solar rays and use them to knock electrons free. Those electrons produce the electric current which is used for powering Earth devices.  
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{{w|Solar panels|Solar panels}} are a relatively common method of powering devices ranging from calculators to factories. They work by gathering solar energy reaching the Earth from the sun and converting it to electricity. More specifically, they absorb vast amounts of photons from the solar rays and use them to knock electrons free. Those electrons produce the electric current which is used for powering Earth devices.  
  
Solar panels are notoriously inefficient[https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar/solar-performance-and-efficiency] and often cost more than they are worth to install and maintain, not to mention the extreme challenges of disposing of them when they break. [https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/Solar-panels-face-recycling-challenge-photovoltaic-waste/100/i18] This is demonstrated in the comic, where a solar panel of 1m^2 is estimated to return around $58/year, and estimates only a 20% efficiency of converting sunlight to electricity. Considering the potential cost of $10,000 - $30,000 to install, it becomes clear why this might not be the best option.
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The cost-effectiveness of solar panels is a complex topic, involving efficiency[https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar/solar-performance-and-efficiency], installation, and even costs of recycling at end-of-life [https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/Solar-panels-face-recycling-challenge-photovoltaic-waste/100/i18]. The comic demonstrates a simplified calculation, where a solar panel of 1m^2 is estimated to return around $58/year, using 20% as the efficiency of converting sunlight to electricity.
  
 
To solve this, Randall here proposes a rather more straightforward solution: place the solar panels ''downwards'', towards the sun, rather than ''upwards'', from the gravity of the Earth. This would allow for substantially more light to get through and would thus produce massive amounts of energy for the owner.
 
To solve this, Randall here proposes a rather more straightforward solution: place the solar panels ''downwards'', towards the sun, rather than ''upwards'', from the gravity of the Earth. This would allow for substantially more light to get through and would thus produce massive amounts of energy for the owner.

Revision as of 02:16, 8 August 2023

Solar Panel Placement
Getting the utility people to run transmission lines to Earth is expensive, but it will pay for itself in no time.
Title text: Getting the utility people to run transmission lines to Earth is expensive, but it will pay for itself in no time.

Explanation

Ambox notice.png This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Created by an underpaid solar panel installer - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.
If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks.
Solar panels are a relatively common method of powering devices ranging from calculators to factories. They work by gathering solar energy reaching the Earth from the sun and converting it to electricity. More specifically, they absorb vast amounts of photons from the solar rays and use them to knock electrons free. Those electrons produce the electric current which is used for powering Earth devices.

The cost-effectiveness of solar panels is a complex topic, involving efficiency[1], installation, and even costs of recycling at end-of-life [2]. The comic demonstrates a simplified calculation, where a solar panel of 1m^2 is estimated to return around $58/year, using 20% as the efficiency of converting sunlight to electricity.

To solve this, Randall here proposes a rather more straightforward solution: place the solar panels downwards, towards the sun, rather than upwards, from the gravity of the Earth. This would allow for substantially more light to get through and would thus produce massive amounts of energy for the owner.

Transcript

Ambox notice.png This transcript is incomplete. Please help editing it! Thanks.


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Discussion

Can someone smarter than me do the math on running power lines to a panel on the sun? How long until it would pay for itself?172.70.214.125 05:08, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

$22 million / $0.20 per kWH = 110 million kWH, divide by hours in a year and you get about 12549 kW. Google says the sun is 150 million KM away. IDK the exact details, but a calculator I found online suggests a copper cable with a cross-sectional area of 10m^2 can handle that amount of power transported 150 million KM. The density of copper's about 9 cm/g^3. 150 million km * 10 m^2 * 9 g/cm^3 = 1.35 * 10^16 kg. The cost to get one kilogram to Low-Earth Orbit according to google is >$10,000, let's just use that. Total cost to get to LEO: $1.35 * 10^20. Divide by profit per year => 6.1 trillion years. Tiln (talk) 07:10, 8 August 2023 (UTC)
"The cost to get one kilogram to Low-Earth Orbit [...], let's just use that." Ummm... It's actually easier to leave the solar system than to rendezvous with Mercury (never mind attain even closer stability to the Sun's surface).
I supose you could always go to an orbit a very long way away (near solar-escape) and add a little extra reverse delta-V to zero your orbital movement and then fall down. But you must not miss the pinprick Sun, or you're in a highly elliptic comet-like trajectory (with even higher demands needed to circularise at perihelion), so you need to be very precise about stopping and dodging through the gravity wells of any planets you plunge past. Not that not missing is going to do you much good, either.
...hmmm, hang on, maybe that's what the cables back to Earth are for. Spooled in/out just at the right rate (perhaps some bungee-chord included), it's how you stop just above the Sun's surface (at the limit of the conductive cable, then cut the retarding bungee just as you're stable enough at the bottom of the bounce!) and stay there. Ok, not a problem. It'll work after all[actual citation needed] and I withdraw all my petty objections! 172.71.242.82 10:43, 8 August 2023 (UTC)
And then you'll have to deal with the end of the bungee cord retracting under it's own tension... and since it's no longer tethered to the craft it would probably whip back towards Earth. As an afterthought, have you ever been whipped by a released rubber band? Imagine that... but at a cosmic scale. I'd probably take my chances with the cables. Xkcdjerry (talk) 14:39, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

> "...IDK the exact details, but a calculator I found online suggests..."

I don't disagree with >6 trillion year payback, but the cable-calculation is insufficient data. Say 1,000 Watts. This could be carried as 1 Volt 1,000 Amperes (roughly what comes out of a parallel panel) or as 1,000 Volts 1 Ampere. One is fat copper and hardly any insulation, the other is hair-fine copper and thick insulation. A proper design goes to the relative costs of conductor and insulation.
Many on-Earth power lines rely on air for insulation and air can be really cheap. These favor extra high voltages. My neighbor has 20,000V; the long line in California is far over 200,000V, near 1MegaVolt. Space-vacuum is even cheaper, perhaps limited by tolerable size of the bushings at the earth station.
12,549 kW is like 13 MegaWatts. This could be carried as 13MV 1 Amp. Iron (for strength) #30AWG, 0.010" diameter, will carry 3 Amps. #30 is too fine for easy handling. #14 iron, "electric fence wire", is more manageable. About $100 per mile, I remember 93 million miles, so 9 Billion Bucks for wire. Plus deposit on the spools....... and shipping, and stringing.....
BTW: 10m^2 may be a bogus extrapolation. Wires much over 0.25" 6mm 0.000,03m^2 suffer from internal heating. The cold of space helps, but there is no air convection cooling (no air, and no convection in zero-G).. a 3meter diameter cable won't carry 1% of what you would hope from small-wire experience.
Yes, superconductors, hi-temp near the sun.... but this won't come until after the convenient Fusion Power which has been right around the corner literally since I was born.

--PRR (talk) 23:46, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

Congrats, you've just made the universe's smallest Dyson sphere component! 162.158.2.38 07:33, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

I'd just like to point out an error in Randall's math: The light incident on the panel would only be from the portion of the surface with line-of-sight to the panel. This fraction is called the "view factor", and has its own Wikipedia page, which I'm too lazy to link since I'm editing this on my phone. Carry on! 172.70.126.217 13:26, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

I thought Sun luminosity (total outgoing light, in all directions from all points of itsvsurface) divided by Sun area (total luminescing surface area) multiplied by the 1m² (the actual 'capturable' parts) normalised to the effectively-in-contact portion of the Sun exactly in the way you're defining the view factor. (You could link to View factor by just trying {{w|View factor}}, if you want, and edit it later if you're wrong.)
Further out, distance from the Sun factors in as an inverse square relationship, but it'll be negligable when you're practically at the Surface and close to the full 2pi steradian of incident light from a significantly greater area of emitting surface than the unit-area of receiving surface. Once you're at Earth-orbit distance, it's a tad below 70 nanosteradian of "panel view" and almost none of the light even from the directly facing square metre of Sun even comes close to the even smaller solid angle subtending the outwards spread of light.
Set your panel at the height of various solar-surface features, you might not intercept much of the light (hence division by Sun's area) yet what you'll capture will be significant. Probably well beyond any long-(/medium-, perhaps even short-)term survivability of a lump of plastic, silicon and metals normally stuck on a house roof. 172.70.91.161 15:36, 8 August 2023 (UTC)
I think view factor calculations are not needed here: Imagine the sun's surface covered with 1m² panels. Then all the outgoing light is captured by those panels. The incident light can be calculated by a simple area division. If the panels are further away, more panels are needed, and the incident light per panel is smaller (reverse square dependence on the distance from the center of the sun). (G.Rote) --172.69.150.109 05:31, 14 August 2023 (UTC)

Actually, the inverse square dependency yields results in the right ballbark: The Earth is 150 million km from the Sun's center, the Sun's surface is 700,000 km away from the center (radius of the Sun). The ratio is ~214. The squared ratio is ~46,000. The ratio between the monetary yields is $22 million/$58, which is around 380,000, bigger than 46,000. The additional loss factor of around 8.25 must come from the Earth's atmosphere and clouds, and the non-perpendicular angles during much of the day (and night). (My initial thought was that the ratio in earnings ought to be much bigger). (Günter Rote) --172.70.246.238 06:08, 14 August 2023 (UTC)

I was briefly confused because HVAC usually stands for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning, but is here used to mean high-voltage alternating current. 172.69.247.50 13:31, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

I often have the opposite confusion... ;) 172.70.91.161 15:36, 8 August 2023 (UTC)
Ah! Thank you!172.70.85.30 23:21, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

I ran some calculations on using rechargeable batteries to get power from the Sun to Earth, full markdown file is here is anyone to check it out.

TL;DR: it's way better than running powerlines to Earth but falls slightly shy of putting a panel on Earth, though that may be remedied by more precise data. Xkcdjerry (talk) 15:09, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

New idea: maybe we can make some sort of belt in which one side has fully discharged batteries and the other has fully charged ones, so that gravity balanced out and we only need to do work against friction, that should raise the efficiency greatly, with some engineering we might get it above 0.1% or even 1%, however I don't have exact data on this so this remains the work of someone with more knowledge than me XD Xkcdjerry (talk) 15:38, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

The power line loss calculation is not at all valid. Lines on the surface of a planet lose far more power to heating and induction etc. In the cold vacuum of space, efficiency should be excellent. (This should also reference some of the https://what-if.xkcd.com/157/ problems though.) 172.69.65.206 18:21, 8 August 2023 (UTC)

Given that standard transmission losses (for long distance HVAC power lines) are around 3% per 1000 km and the Sun is 150 million km away, the energy reaching the Earth would be 0.97^(150000), a truly negligible amount (10^-1985 of the input energy). In this case, you'd be better off literally sending huge packs of rechargeable batteries to Earth.
~~ Above comment not signed. ~~
Aside from intentional absurdity, why run wires? Wireless power attenuation is very low in a near-vacuum; just beam the power back via microwave. That's how all the serious proposals work, & it seems both obvious & potentially quite practical... It's really just the survivability of anything parked so close to the sun's ejecta, that seems problematic, to me?
ProphetZarquon (talk) 17:27, 9 August 2023 (UTC)
Clearly the above is riffing directly off the "transmission lines" (i.e. strung physical cables) directly mentioned in the title text. Yes, melting/ablation/etc is going to be a major problem (as is sitting the panel directly above the so-called surface of the Sun, which seems to be different from putting it into Very Low Solar Orbit), but the fanciful issue of merely the cabling being a high initial capital cost is very much a Munrovian flight of fancy that's not particularly unusual in such punchlines.
Yes, we'd do it differently 'IRL', but this is very much part of the whole treatment. For one thing, who puts just one 1m² PV panel on a rooftop, like that? (Never mind send it 1AU away from the owner's home.) Round here, the standard seems to be 14 panels (and non-square... 1m x 1.65m if my recent jotted measurements of those used upon a particular roof is not unrepresentative).
It's a "spherical cow in a vacuum" sort of scenario, and we can choose to accept (or argue against) whatever bits of handwavium we feel like highlighting. So why not educate, inform and entertain? 172.70.86.7 21:16, 9 August 2023 (UTC)

I added an explanation of the two equations Randall used. Not sure how clear they are but I'm fairly certain the math checks out. DownGoer (talk) 05:53, 10 August 2023 (UTC)

I love you guys! I would be more concerned about keeping ym shiny new solar panel cooled enough to be efficient. That close to Earth, I would fear that my Solar Panel just melts, and that the solar wind woll blow the molten droplets all around. And I have yet to find an insurance company willing to cover any damaged property by this side effect of the fusion powered heat generator in our Solar System. Not worth the risk, IMHO. 172.71.182.45 16:45, 10 August 2023 (UTC)

I would think they would reject your claim as resulting from an act of Sol.172.70.90.173 11:02, 14 August 2023 (UTC)