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Comment by ericd

11 hours ago

In space, that solar panel is always in the sunlight. No clouds, no night time. Weirdly enough, earth is a more challenging environment in some ways for solar. You need to lay out >3x the number of panels on earth to get the same power production, and you need batteries or a grid interconnection as a buffer.

Also, there's a populist backlash on building datacenters, power transmission infra, and power generation in many areas on earth. Locally, we have a number of people complaining about solar arrays going up on farmland, even though it's the farmers choosing to do it. "It's an eyesore".

> In space, that solar panel is always in the sunlight

Only in a Sun-synchronous orbit, at specific elevations. Most 'normal' orbits have periods of shade.

  • Right, sorry, I meant in the orbits they're considering for these - I think they're mainly considering sun-sync.

How big is it? I have some space I’m not using, no pun intended.

  • How big are panels? If you get 60 cell panels, about 68x45 inches/1.7m x 1.1m. Our home array is 60 of those, 24kw.

    Example of a spec sheet: https://signaturesolar.imagerelay.com/share/ffc69ee2265b4613...

    If you mean the farmers' arrays, those are meant for commercial generation, so a good bit bigger, but one nice thing about solar is it's extremely modular, and you can fit it to the land. I believe bigger panels are more common for commercial, but I think it's a lot nicer to handle 40-50 pound panels than 70 pound panels.