Solar Energy Basics: Difference between revisions

From WikiIndex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Text replacement - "Wikidot" to "Wikidot.com")
m (Text replacement - "Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike" to "Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike")
Line 10: Line 10:
|editmode        = LoginToEdit
|editmode        = LoginToEdit
|engine          = Wikidot.com
|engine          = Wikidot.com
|license          = Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
|license          = Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike
|maintopic        = Solar Energy
|maintopic        = Solar Energy
}}
}}

Revision as of 13:22, 5 December 2022

Small rectangular monochrome image, landscape orientation, thin black border with a white background, containing the words 'no logo' in black text. Solar Energy Basics
Recent changes
[No WikiNode]
[No About]
[No Mobile URL]
Founded by:
Status: Dormant
Language: English
Edit mode: LoginToEdit
Wiki engine: Wikidot.com
Wiki license: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike
Main topic: Solar Energy

Solar Energy Basicssolar energy is the energy, heat or electricity, produced directly using the energy radiated from the Sun to the Earth.

Each time the Sun forward onto land in 1367 watts per m². Taking into account the fact that the Earth is a sphere (and therefore the rays often angled) which also rotates, the solar radiation on the Earth's surface on average 24 hours and four Seasons at European latitudes of about 200 watts per square metre.

The amount of solar energy arriving on Earth's soil is so huge, about a thousand times greater than all the energy used by humanity as a whole, but scattered in the sense that it is necessary to collect energy from vast areas in order to have significant quantities, and rather difficult to convert into easily exploitable energy (mainly electricity) with acceptable efficiencies.

To exploit it are needed products generally high cost that make solar energy much expensive compared to other methods of generating energy.

Wiki size: 19 article pages see stats

(As of: 09 April 2013)