Ever wished you could win more games of Trivial Pursuit? Or go on a long winning streak of some trivial game show? Well, you must start your trivial knowledge somewhere, so how about we give you some interesting facts about solar energy for your first category? Let the facts begin.
Which country uses the most solar energy?
If you guessed the USA, you're wrong. Britain? Nope, try again. Brazil? Not yet. Germany? Bingo. Ethiopia? Germany was the right answer.
Regardless of its location way up above the equator and its relatively small population, Germany currently uses more solar energy than any other country. That blows holes in the common assumptions made in the northern states that solar energy isn't a plausible local energy solution.
Was Albert Einstein involved with solar energy?
Of course, he was! Did you think the guy who defined the equation for energy wouldn't know the facts about solar energy? In fact, though his work in solar energy was overshadowed by things like relativity and nuclear weapons, it had a large part related to his Nobel Peace Prize for Science in 1921. Albert Einstein in fact was responsible for numerous solar experiments with early photovoltaic solar panels. The only question is whether it's this that made his hair stand up everywhere.
Can raw solar energy, without any kind of power cells, really boil water?
Yes, it can. In fact, we've even known how to achieve it for a long period. In Africa, scientists have taught people how to sterilize water bottles by placing them along with dark surfaces. But to get water to begin boiling, you just need to some of those handy little solar cookers from the 18th century. Or, you can obtain a full solar oven if you'd rather. The solar oven was invented in 1830 by John Herschel, an astronomer.
Are Einstein's photovoltaic panels still in use today?
No, but kind of yes. Photovoltaic solar panels are still used today, but in the 1950s they were given a silicon base and became much more efficient than they had been when Einstein was doing his research. Silicon is a product of the seemingly unlimited resource we call sand. It takes only 1 ton of silicon to produce enough photovoltaic cells to make as much electrical energy as can be created from 500,000 tons of coal. Further, you don't make many air pollutants by using silicon based photovoltaic solar panels, as you of course do make when you burn fossil fuels for electricity production.
How has inflation affected the price of photovoltaic panels?
Are you kidding? After all that hyperinflation during the 1970s? Actually, photovoltaic panels cost about 200% less than they did in the 1970s and are occasionally twice as efficient at the conversion of solar energy into electricity as they were in the 1970s. So you get about four times as much electricity for the money from photovoltaic panels now. Sounds like hyper deflation to me. Seriously, this is a matter of improved photovoltaic production technology.
So there you go! You have now mastered some facts about solar energy that may be necessary sometimes during your next game of Trivial Pursuit. |