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Magnifying Solar Panels' Energy As Cheap as Coal, Start-up Claims

29 Sep

Xtreme_photovoltaics

If you've ever set a leaf aflame with a magnifying glass, you'll understand the basics of the photovoltaic cells that may finally make renewable energy affordable enough for everyone.

"The world runs on cheap energy," said Paul Sidio of Sunrgi. "We want to be the Wal-Mart of solar power."

Sunrgi says it developed a way to make solar energy as cheap as coal using panels that focus the sun onto photovoltaic cells equipped with innovative cooling systems.

The company claims its magnifying glasses intensify the sun's rays 2000 times onto photovoltaic cells, which increases the heat to 3300 degrees Fahrenheit. While such heat will fry silicon in no time, the company says its electronics actually stay just about six degrees above ambient temperature thanks to special heat convection and generous spacing of the electronics.

Topping off the design, the units track the sun's trajectory to maximize energy collection throughout the day.

"We generate six or seven times greater power than flat panel, non-tracking solar panels," Sidio said.

Sunrgi is showing off a prototype of the cell at the Wired NextFest pavilion in Chicago's Millennium Park, where the free future tech expo is open to the public through October 12.

In keeping with their desire to make solar energy as cheap as possible, the company designed its electronics so that they can be built like a computer's motherboard – meaning its innards can be built on any PC assembly line in the world.

That leads to a projected cost of 5 to 6 cents per kilowatt-hour over a twenty-year period in the American southwest.

That's cheaper than power created by almost all traditional energy sources.

Solar energy has always been long on hope but short on economic competitiveness. But if Sunrgi can make good on those promises and prices once its production design is finished and UL approval is won, pulling electricity out of the sun's rays could become more than a well-meaning indulgence.

For those of you excited about covering your roof with Sunrgi's technology, you may have to wait a while.

The company says it plans to first sell to utilities and large companies.

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Images: Sunrgi

 
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the door on the nature

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Pullman on Censorship and Religion

29 Sep

Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy constitutes one of the finest reading experiences for children I’ve ever seen. I read them as an adult, on the advice of a literary colleague, and fell under their spell immediately. They are fantasy books, for sure, but with a strong rational and anti-authority philosophy. And although I don’t think of them as purely anti-religious, if your religion is one with an authoritarian streak then …

In a brief article in The Guardian, Pullman takes on those who would seek to ban his books from library shelves. He points to the futility of such bans, the inevitable increased readership of banned works, and the utterly moronic reasons that some give for requesting bans. But he saves his real vitriol for religion. Pullman’s basic take on religion

My basic objection to religion is not that it isn’t true; I like plenty of things that aren’t true. It’s that religion grants its adherents malign, intoxicating and morally corrosive sensations. Destroying intellectual freedom is always evil, but only religion makes doing evil feel quite so good.

isn’t precisely the same as my own, since I do disagree with religion because it is false. I also like plenty of things that aren’t true - the works of David Foster Wallace are a timely example - but the things I like that aren’t true don’t claim to be true. But I certainly also agree with the things that drive Pullman nuts

In fact, when it comes to banning books, religion is the worst reason of the lot. Religion, uncontaminated by power, can be the source of a great deal of private solace, artistic inspiration, and moral wisdom. But when it gets its hands on the levers of political or social authority, it goes rotten very quickly indeed. The rank stench of oppression wafts from every authoritarian church, chapel, temple, mosque, or synagogue – from every place of worship where the priests have the power to meddle in the social and intellectual lives of their flocks, from every presidential palace or prime ministerial office where civil leaders have to pander to religious ones.

Well put!

 
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