IMHO building a new something, it always require someone thinking out of the box.It always takes dreamers to push an engineers imagination.
IMHO building a new something, it always require someone thinking out of the box.It always takes dreamers to push an engineers imagination.
Good you clarified that! Our legal department was planning to call you today.It's not actually my idea, I read it in this book.
The example I always give is John Kennedy declaring we will put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. If he was an engineer, he would have known how much effort and luck that would take - along with money and smart engineers and pilots who are willing to take risks. A well-informed engineer never would have made that promise without a lot of hedges and contingencies.IMHO building a new something, it always require someone thinking out of the box.
And said ring will reduce sunlight over the rain forests, reducing the oxygen producing ability of the planet. With population growth increasing the need for oxygen, we have "electrical suffocation" as a new cause to rally behind.I think the future still lies with solar. But in outer space, with panels orbiting the earth, perhaps forming a ring around the equator.
And yet a good leader knows what his team is capable of when it's pushed to its limitsA well-informed engineer never would have made that promise without a lot of hedges and contingencies.
Not really, it would be seen as a very thin line on the sky. A ring only one km wide at geostationary orbit would be capable of delivering twice the energy being consumed today in the world, considering current technology efficiency, if I remember correctly.And said ring will reduce sunlight over the rain forests, reducing the oxygen producing ability of the planet. With population growth increasing the need for oxygen, we have "electrical suffocation" as a new cause to rally behind.
And, a good leader knows that you should leave a back-door on any claim you make. In my experience, the executives who justify a project are not around by the time the project is implemented - when the market is already saturated by faster movers his cost-cutting redesigns needed to justify the project are not allowing the new plant to meet capacity promises. Note that Kennedy said, "end of the decade", not end of his 8-years in office. It would have been easy for him to blame his successor if the targets were not met - "every thing was on schedule when I left office".And yet a good leader knows what his team is capable of when it's pushed to its limits
Good point...Note that Kennedy said, "end of the decade", not end of his 8-years in office. It would have been easy for him to blame his successor if the targets were not met - "every thing was on schedule when I left office".
That is inefficient because the incident light would be about 25% of available light. You would be much better off making a circumpolar ring and having the ring face the sun. That way, there would be no visible 1km band in the sky.Not really, it would be seen as a very thin line on the sky. A ring only one km wide at geostationary orbit would be capable of delivering twice the energy being consumed today in the world, considering current technology efficiency, if I remember correctly.
I must be on joeyd's ignore list now. I have said a couple of years ago on this forum, solar and wind power will only become "mainstream and practical" when big oil and coal decides to enter it.And why don't people giving this argument ever include the fossil fuel subsidies?
Fossil fuel subsidies reached $90 billion in the OECD and over $500 billion globally in 2011.[3] Global renewable energy subsidies reached $88 billion in 2011.[4] Taking into account the price difference offered to developing countries of the fossil fuels (in many developing countries, fossil fuels are sold below the regular price), then as of 2015 fossil fuels are subsidised with an estimated additional $550 billion per year
From - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_subsidies
This is getting interesting... Ok, let's consider circumpolar. I'm no astrophysics expert, but wouldn't there be serious gravitational tidal forces to consider, mainly effected by the moon? Perhaps an equatorial ring (not necessarily geostationary, as you say) would be better suited to withstand such forces.That is inefficient because the incident light would be about 25% of available light. You would be much better off making a circumpolar ring and having the ring face the sun. That way, there would be no visible 1km band in the sky.
Also, why would it have to be geostationary? A moving coil (relative to a ground-based receiving station) is much easier to transmit the energy and the 22k mile geostationary orbit distance will be a huge hit to efficiency vs 100 or 200 miles.
Not yet. But you are persona non grata until you backup or retract your libelous claims about Mr. Sowell's alleged bigotry. That you refuse to says much more about you than me.I must be on joeyd's ignore list now. I have said a couple of years ago on this forum, solar and wind power will only become "mainstream and practical" when big oil and coal decides to enter it.
And for you to not see it says more to me about you. But it has been that way for quite a while.That you refuse to says much more about you than me.
Of all the political problems, I think that would be the least of them. The main issue would be the "fair distribution" of the generated power, and the enforcement of payment by the subscribed nations.Re space power: the druids make all kinds of noise about the microwatts of power emanating from a modern cellphone. You think they'll stand by peacefully and allow terawatts to be transmitted to the surface of the earth? Not likely.
The problem with a non-geosynchronous orbit is that you don't have a fixed point on the ground to deliver the energy to. You would thus need a string of receivers on the ground close enough together to pass the energy from one satellite to the next.That is inefficient because the incident light would be about 25% of available light. You would be much better off making a circumpolar ring and having the ring face the sun. That way, there would be no visible 1km band in the sky.
Also, why would it have to be geostationary? A moving coil (relative to a ground-based receiving station) is much easier to transmit the energy and the 22k mile geostationary orbit distance will be a huge hit to efficiency vs 100 or 200 miles.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_SchumpeterCame across this little bit of food for thought out there.
Max.