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terry wrote:
.... Looking now at the numbers, you know that the effective power density of the Sun at the surface is 700 watts per square meter. Your skin represents say 1.5 sq meters, so you are getting a total power of say 1 kilowatt. ..... That 700 watts per sq. metre is an interesting number? Bright sun at midday at the equator perhaps? But I doubt that here at around 48 degrees north and with our climate we get anything close to that? Also now wondering how efficient a solar panel is at converting that 700 watts into electric power (for say home use). Which may be why some 'solar' collectors are both photo-voltaic and heat collecting. The scientific name for this measure is Solar Irradiance. If you hold up a square frame 1 meter on a side, perpendicular to the Sun's direction, in space near Earth's orbital distance, about 1400 watts passes the frame - and twice as far from the Sun, that frame only frames a quarter of that amount (of course!) That number 700 W/m^2 takes into account the absorption of power by stuff in the atmosphere, more at slant angles of course. This URL can show the kind of Solar power you can expect at various geographical coordinates. http://re.jrc.ec.europa.eu/pvgis/apps/radday.php You'll see a peak value around noon - and this can be more than 700 W/m^2 at that 48N latitude. Brian W |
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