JustAFriend said:
You're about 40 years too late with your idea....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_power_satellite
..and the power transmission was with microwaves (idea was tested out and worked with power being transmitted over several miles.) Environmentalists screamed the concept down in the late '70s....
A year or two back, there was a thread here discussing Dyson spheres and someone (may have been TGT, but I'm not sure) posted a couple of very interesting links wherein something quite similar to what you describe was covered in some detail. As I recall, the main obstacles would have beenBrent said:
So, collecting solar energy is cool here on Earth, problem is night, and cloudy days. Why not build a network of solar collectors in orbit to capture sunlight and convert it into energy for us down here on Earth?
JustAFriend said:
Environmentalists screamed the concept down in the late '70s....
Well, they can blow up (Chernobyl did)... but it's a regular old explosion, not a nuclear explosion.Lindley said:
Nuclear plants can't really blow up. There just isn't the critical mass for that to happen.
Luckily, power usage tends to peak in hot, sunny weather - exactly when solar power is most useful.RobertVA said:
Solar:
Weather dependent
Nobody's suggesting displacing a forest, city, or corn field. Most solar advocates want to put solar cells somewhere that isn't being used - on the roof of a building, for instance.Need LARGE area of collectors to generate large quantity of power, displacing human and natural uses
Probably vulnerable to damage in hail storms, possibly high winds too.
Where are you getting that from? Languages don't change that fast...Nuclear:
While volume is relatively low waste products must be stored away from people and other life forms for an EXTREMELY LONG TIME. Storage period would be long enough to expect major changes in spoken and written (like warning signs and labels) communication languages.
Modern reactors shut themselves off before that happens.Cooling system failures can lead to steam explosions and consequential release of radioactive steam.
Stormrage said:
I still say nuclear power. You can stick it in an empty mountain like the fins and everyone nearby would be safe. The only way to die would be to break the containers on purpose. The whole nuclear debate has is full of useless fear created by environmentalists. Part of the reason why I turned away from them.
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