Matching Water Heater Elements to Solar PV Panels
Check out David Pogue's video on Matching Water Heater Elements to a Solar Panel for more on how solar doesn't follow ohm's law.
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Check out David Pogue's video on Matching Water Heater Elements to a Solar Panel for more on how solar doesn't follow ohm's law.
A push toward renewable energy is facing resistance in rural areas where conspicuous panels are affecting vistas and squeezing small farmers.
Fluctuating solar and wind power require lots of energy storage, and lithium-ion batteries seem like the obvious choice—but they are far too expensive to play a major role.
It's a problem of magnitude -- not so much an issue of actually storing electricity. Electricity is the difference in atomic potential, it doesn't like to be stored, and while we can store it in small quantities, the amount generated to light whole cities up is a challenge.
The leader of the largest U.S. oil and gas trade group said the industry is not interested in receiving aid from the Trump administration to help overcome a historic drop in oil prices on Monday.
“We are not in discussions with anyone in the administration at this time on any type of program for the industry,” said Mike Sommers, the CEO of the American Petroleum Institute, in response to a question from the Washington Examiner on a press call. “We believe we shouldn’t be reacting to one day of a market downturn.”
Sommers added he has spoken to a number of API members and that the consensus is, "They are not asking for anything from the government.”
Coal-fired power plants are retreating from the market in at least two big ways. One is hard to miss: Many plants are closing. The other is more subtle: Remaining plants are running much less often than before.
Newly released figures from the Energy Information Administration show that coal plants in the United States had a "capacity factor" of 47.5 percent in 2019, the first time it's been below 50 percent in decades of available records. This means that the total electricity production from the country's roughly 310 remaining coal plants was less than half of what it would have been, had every plant operated every hour at full capacity.
Here is a partial list of what one company promises sitting under a small panel of red lights will improve: athletic performance and recovery (owing to faster muscle recovery and joint repair), sleep (thanks to increased melatonin production and a “healthy circadian rhythm”), and skin quality (because of reduced inflammation and increased collagen production).
These red lights, in this case made by Joovv, are one of dozens of at-home versions of what’s known as light therapy, or photomedicine, or photobiomodulation, a technology based on the idea that light can change us on a cellular level. This past summer, the journal Frontiers in Medicine published an issue dedicated to photomedicine, and its 12 articles have an overwhelming effect similar to Joovv’s marketing copy, covering dermatological concerns like aging, skin cancer, and psoriasis as well as autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes. I like the way a 2016 journal article phrases it with a bad joke that gives away the researcher’s quiet exuberance: After a brief overview of peer-reviewed light-therapy treatments (for arthritis, hearing loss, and chemotherapy side effects), the conclusion states that “after decades confined to the ‘scientific wasteland,’ [photobiomodulation] may be finally emerging into the light of day (pun intended).”
It's pretty amazing what you can do with light these days, with narrow spectrum LEDs that can only produce the light you want.
At peak capacity the 83 acre PSEG Bethlehem Energy Center in formerly known as the Albany Steam Station can put out 893 megawatts of power when all four turbines are operated at full speed. The 94 acre solar farm in Greenville can put out a peak of 14 MW of power.