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Comments on Solar Power Satellite via Arbitrarily Large Phased Array
'This was really free power, easy power, plentiful power.' (Read
the complete story)
"So I guess air traffic will have to routed around these beam zones?"
(duG 4/18/2012 2:43:09 PM) |
"It's the leaves that gather solar energy; not the petals."
(Peter Jacobs 4/18/2012 3:38:28 PM) |
"Ha! Peter, that snuck in from the physorg article, which said 'the common flower, which uses its petals to collect solar energy.' And after I noted it in my article, I thought to myself 'hey, that's not right' and then I found the link to the NASA site and never came back. Thanks for reminding me, I'll fix it. Oh, and duG, if an airliner flies through the beam, think of a moth flying through an industrial laser beam..."
(Bill Christensen 4/18/2012 7:48:57 PM) |
"Well, even on a cloudless day the atmosphere absorbs at least 10% of the Sun's radiant energy, and more when it's cloudy. And the Sun is below the horizon nearly half the time, but if you're in a high orbit it's visible all the time. In space near the Earth, the power available from sunlight is about 1000 watts per square metre. If somebody could invent a cheap, efficient and safe way to transmit solar power from orbit to the Earth's surface, it would provide much more power than panels on the Earth's surface."
( 4/18/2012 10:11:06 PM) |
Get more information on Solar Power Satellite via Arbitrarily Large Phased Array
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