Solar Energy
Solar Energy
BIBLIOGRAPHY
In a broad sense, most energy that individuals use is some form of solar energy. Other renewable energy sources (such as wind, hydropower, and wood) indirectly harness solar energy by using the atmosphere, oceans, and forests as solar collectors. Even exhaustible fossil fuels (oil, coal, and natural gas) are solar energy that was originally captured by plants and concentrated by geological processes into forms with high energy densities per unit of weight and volume.
In more common usage, solar energy refers to the two primary ways in which people harness and directly use solar energy using manufactured collectors: heating, and generating electricity.
Space and water heating systems for buildings can be either passive or active. Both approaches use glass to trap heat, as in a greenhouse. Passive design uses no moving parts or fluids; rather, it involves incorporating features into the siting and design of a building to take advantage of the natural solar radiation available. Such features include large windows facing south, heat-absorbent material such as brick or tile in floors and walls, and orienting a building on its site so as to maximize sun exposure.
Active heating systems use water or another liquid piped through collector units. The most common type of collector is a roof-mounted flat-plate design, consisting of an insulated glass-covered box painted black to maximize heat absorption. Water circulates in a loop between the collectors, where it is heated, and a tank, where it is stored until needed for either domestic uses or space heating.
There are two technologies for converting solar energy to electricity. Solar thermal-electric power plants (also called concentrating-solar-power, or CSP, power plants) use mirrors to gather solar radiation and focus it on a small area to produce high temperatures. The concentrating collectors may be parabolic troughs or dishes, or a system of mirrors that are spread over a wide area and that focus sunlight on a receiver at the top of a tower in what is called a power tower or central receiver system. A fluid circulates through a receiver unit at the parabola’s focal point, where it is boiled. The resulting steam drives a generator as in a conventional power plant. Unlike solar-heating systems, which are installed at the point of energy consumption, CSP plants are typically large, central-station generating facilities.
The other solar-electric technology is photovoltaic cells. Photovoltaic cells are made of a semiconducting material, such as silicon, that releases electrons when struck by light. Cells are typically combined into modules, which in turn are assembled into larger arrays. Arrays can be sized for residential, industrial, or electric-utility use. The most commonly used material is crystalline silicon, but research since the 1970s has produced advances in such newer designs as thin-film cells using noncrystalline (amorphous) silicon, cadmium telluride, and other materials.
Interest in solar energy was stimulated in the 1970s by high oil prices and has been further stimulated by government policies, such as tax credits. Enthusiasm diminished in the 1980s and 1990s as the prices of oil and natural gas fell and many government subsidies lapsed. After the late 1990s interest was renewed by rising energy prices, but the use of solar energy remains limited. In Renewable Energy (2002), the International Energy Agency estimates that in the year 2000, solar heating made up 0.3 percent of world energy consumption and photovoltaic cells contributed less than 0.05 percent.
The major impediment to solar energy is cost. Though solar radiation is abundant and nonpolluting, the equipment required to gather and utilize it is expensive. Solar heating systems have found some commercial adoption in sunny locations for certain applications, especially for heating swimming pools. CSP technologies, though technologically proven, are not yet competitive with other sources of electricity. Perhaps the most promising technology is photovoltaics. By 2002, photovoltaic costs had fallen to about 20 to 30 percent of their 1980 levels. They have become cost-effective in some specialized applications, particularly in remote locations far from existing power lines. From 1992 to 2003, installed photovoltaic capacity worldwide grew by about 30 percent annually.
Economic theory predicts that as exhaustible energy resources are depleted, their prices will tend to rise, making renewable sources more attractive over time. The longrun prospects for solar energy will depend on how its cost compares with other energy sources.
For more information on solar technologies and research, see the Web sites for the International Energy Agency and the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory. On the economics of solar and other energy sources, see Economics of the Energy Industries, by William Spangar Peirce (1996).
SEE ALSO Energy; Energy Sector
International Energy Agency. 2002. Renewable Energy. http://www.iea.org/.
International Energy Agency. 2004. Trends in Photovoltaic Applications: Survey Report of Selected IEA Countries between 1992 and 2003. Report IEA-PVPS T1–13:2004. http://www.iea.org/.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Solar Research. U.S. Department of Energy. http://www.nrel.gov/solar/.
Peirce, William Spangar. 1996. Economics of the Energy Industries. 2nd ed. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.
Renewable Energy Working Party. 2002. Renewable Energy … into the Mainstream. International Energy Agency. http://www.iea.org/.
Steven E. Henson
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The Jehovah's Witnesses and their plan to expand first amendment freedoms.
Magazine article from: Journal of Church and State; 9/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...organizational than accidental. Judge Joseph Franklin Rutherford, president of the Watchtower...head legal counsel to replace Rutherford upon his ascendancy to president. Moyle, under Rutherford's close watch, created the...
|
|
Jehovah's Witnesses and the Third Reich: Sectarian Politics under Persecution.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Church History; 3/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...by their world leader, Judge Joseph Franklin Rutherford, chose the path of direct resistance...his dictatorial successor, Rutherford, spoke and wrote positively...Suddenly, however, in 1932, Rutherford changed his posture by withdrawing...
|
|
Building the Kingdom In transforming a Bucksport pinewood lot into a meeting house, 400 Jehovah's Witnesses share commitment and 'a willing spirit'
Newspaper article from: Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME; 8/30/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Witnesses was adopted in 1931 by Russell's successor, Joseph Franklin Rutherford. A judge, he sought to reaffirm Jehovah as the...name as God's specially accredited followers. Rutherford gave Witnesses portable phonographs to play his...
|
|
Franklin and Lucy: President Roosevelt, Mrs. Rutherford and the Other Remarkable Women in His Life.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2008; 487 words
; 9781400064427 Franklin and Lucy; an intimate portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Mrs. Rutherford, and the other remarkable...s life. Persico, Joseph E. Random House 2008...examines the life of Franklin D. Roosevelt through...
|
|
JOHN C. RUTHERFORD SR. | JAMES E. WOODRUFF | MARY S. RAMOSKA | RICHARD A. SCHEPIS | NAME: SANDRA ANN SINDLER
Newspaper article from: Sun Publications (IL); 4/5/2000; 700+ words
; ...survived by his wife, Lillian Rutherford of Chicago; three sons, John Rutherford Jr. of Madison, Wis., Steven (wife Linda) Rutherford of Stoughton, Wis. and Joseph Rutherford of McHenry; one daughter, Linda Rutherford of Apache Junction...
|
|
GUIDE TO SCHOOL ELECTIONS
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 4/10/2001; 550 words
; ...Lanza Avenue, former vice president of Franklin School Parent-Teacher Association, president...Adriana Street, kindergarten teacher at St. Joseph's School in East Rutherford, president of Franklin School Parent-Teacher Association, Republican...
|
|
DEAN'S LIST
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 7/17/2005; 700+ words
; ...Fort Lee: Joseph Cipolat, Alexander Kalfayan. * Franklin Lakes: Jacqueline...Justin Thames. * Rutherford: Chelsea LaRosa...Lyndhurst: Joseph B. Colantuono...Monahan, Joseph J. Piepul...Wojcik. * Rutherford: Alison M...
|
|
OBITUARIES
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 6/29/2004; 700+ words
; ...Broersma Floor Waxing, Franklin Lakes, for 45 years...Home, Fort Lee. JOSEPH ESPOSITO, 74, of...parishioner of St. Joseph R.C. Church, East Rutherford. Arrangements: Kimak...Ramsey Funeral Home, Franklin. GEORGE M. HIGGINS...
|
|
MOCCO'S TITLE RUN STOPPED IN 2 OTS
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 3/24/2002; ; 486 words
; ...backstroke in 1 minute, 49.52 seconds. Notre Dame's Kelly Hecking (Rutherford) was 12th, finishing in 1:57.90. Fencing MADISON -- Rutgers' Joseph Zampieri (Franklin Lakes) placed 13th after the fourth round of men's sabre at the...
|
|
New members.(Photographic Society of America)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: PSA Journal; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Stolte, PPSA Florida Joseph Malkary, Delray Beach...Hooksett New Jersey Joseph Placer, Woodcliff Lake Barbara Novak, Rutherford George Sands, Jr., Hamilton Jeffrey Sielski, Franklin Park New York Stan Noble...Karnataka, India, Joseph Zaia, FPSA Nariman Chaeichi...
|
|
Joseph Franklin Rutherford
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Joseph Franklin Rutherford 1869-1942, American sectarian leader, b. Missouri. He became...founder, Charles T. Russell , in 1916. Under the direction of Rutherford the Witnesses' attack on the existing social order took on an increasingly...
|
|
Rutherford, Joseph Franklin
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Rutherford, Joseph Franklin (1869–1942), ‘Judge Rutherford’, second head of the organization popularly known as Jehovah's Witnesses (q.v.). Of Baptist family, he practised law in Missouri. In 1906...
|
|
Jehovah's Witnesses
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...leadership passed to the charismatic and volatile Joseph Franklin Rutherford, who expanded the fledgling sect into an organized international movement. Upon Rutherford's death in 1942, the more bureaucratic Nathan...
|
|
The 1940s: Religion: Deaths
Book article from: American Decades
...chaplain of the U.S. Senate, 10 May 1942. Judge Joseph Franklin Rutherford, 72, founder of the Jehovah's Witnesses, 9 January...train foreign missionaries, 29 January 1941. Rev. Joseph Stolz, 79, Jewish philanthropist and dean of Reform...
|
|
Robert Rutherford McCormick
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Robert Rutherford McCormick Robert Rutherford McCormick (1880-1955), American...his mother was the daughter of Joseph Medill, a founder of the Republican...freedom of the press. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was his chief political...
|