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Make my solar oven really hot?
How hot your oven gets is a function of how much solar radiation it can absorb. That being said, maybe you can think about what color to paint the container portion of the oven itself. (do you get hotter in the sun wearing a white shirt or a black one?) Then how do you increase the amount of radiation reaching your container? You need to collect more radiation from the sun, so maybe you can consider adding some reflective panels directing more radiation to it. Sorry for the vague-ish answers, I would still like you to do your own research and designing
How is Solar Energy used?
Almost sure that you might find everything that have to do with solar power at www.redsolarwho.com
how much energy does a solar plant produce a day?
Insolation has been measured between the equator and the 45th parallel at 136 watts (power) per square meter in full sunlight under cloudless sky. Common silicon solar cells operate at a maximum of 17 percent efficiency and the new multi layer full spectrum flexible cells are slightly more efficient. A mile is roughly 1'600 meters (1'600 x 1'600 m for a square mile), I will let you work out the math. (136 x .17) x 1'600 sq These are the numbers, but hybrid systems are always more efficient for practical use.
Products needed for going solar?
Visit this site www.solarcity.com You will get lot of solar related information :)
Is Bernie Sanders' new plan to nationalize the power sector in order to fight climate change anywhere near politically feasible?
Unfortunately, it is. I like his goals and timelines a lot, but not his tactics.So let's start with what his plan is. I'm qualified to say because I've read the entire thing and published on it (link at bottom).He's going to build lots and lots of wind and solar power on federal lands and waters very rapidly. He's going to build HVDC lines along the interstate right-of-ways to distribute the electricity everywhere. He's going to stop permitting fossil fuels on federal lands.So far, so good. But it's the path to this that starts getting problematic. He's going to declare a federal emergency and grant himself extraordinary executive powers. This was something that people rightly worried about Trump doing over the border because Presidential powers in national emergencies are pretty overwhelming.He's going to start with the four Power Marketing Authorities (PMAs) that are divisions of the Department of Energy. They built and still own the major hydroelectric dams in the USA. That's right, most hydroelectric power in the USA is already nationalized.They cover most of the US states, but not all of them, so he's going to create a fifth to round up the rest of the states. They are what he will build all that wind and solar with.And he's going to sell it preferentially to co-ops and small utilities that pass some virtue test, bypassing most of the monopolistic price gougers that are clinging to coal and nuclear.The cost of wind and solar are incredibly low already, but under this plan, the federal government will be providing electricity for every need for effectively the price of distribution in a few years. He's also going to work to tear up the fossil fuels leases on federal lands and persecute the oil and gas industry.So yeah, emergency powers, destroying long standing utilities and persecuting the oil and gas industry. I like the perspective on where the electricity comes from and how it is distributed, but the rest of it I'm not a fan of. And it's possible. Declaring a national emergency is something that's politically viable. Over 1000 jurisdictions globally have declared a climate emergency. I'm sitting in one now, Vancouver BC. But a municipal or state emergency are a lot different than a US national emergency in terms of powers. A lot of rights can be trampled.It's bad governance.Bernie Sanders' climate plan: excellent on electrification, but authoritarian and populistNote: my personal policy is to block and mute climate change deniers. Yours should be too.Is Bernie Sanders' new plan to nationalize the power sector in order to fight climate change anywhere near politically feasible?.
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