What total solar cell area would you need to provide energy needs? Mastering Physics problem?

Solar cells convert the energy of incoming light to electric energy; a good quality cell operates at an efficiency of 15%. Each person in the United States uses energy (for lighting, heating, transportation, etc.) at an average rate of 11 kilowatts . Although sunlight varies with season and time of day, solar energy falls on the United States at an average intensity of 200 W/m^2.

Assuming you live in an average location, what total solar-cell area would you need to provide all of your energy needs with energy from the sun?

1 thought on “What total solar cell area would you need to provide energy needs? Mastering Physics problem?”

  1. The correct rate is 11kWhr per day. 11kw would be a horrendous amount of power.(maybe Al Gore uses it at this rate)

    I will calc it at your rate for problem sake. (this is not real life by the way, there are lots more variables, length of day, etc)

    200W/m^2 * 15% = 30w/meter

    11kw / 30w/meter = 366m^2

    On a side note I think mastering physics is a crappy program, made for lazy physics teacher that dont ever care about application of knowledge.

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