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Solar luminosity

The solar luminosity is a unit of luminosity (power emitted in the form of photons) conventionally used by astronomers to give the luminosities of stars.

It is equal to the luminosity of the Sun, which is 3.9 × 1026 W.

Calculating with this constant

You can calculate how much solar power hits the Earth by comparing a cross sectional area of the Earth and the total surface area of a sphere with a radius equal to the distance of the earth from the sun.

  • The Earth's radius is 3963 miles (6,378 km).
  • The Earth's cross sectional area = π×radius2 = 49.3 million square miles (128,000,000 km²).
  • The Sun's average distance is about 93 million miles (150,000,000 km).
  • The surface area of a sphere = 4×π×radius2 = 1.09×1017 square miles (2.82×1017 km²).
  • Power reaching the Earth = P(total) × Area(earth)/Area(sphere) = 1.77×1017 W.
  • The power hitting a square meter of area on Earth: (square meter = 1/16092 square miles)
    • Power over square meter = P(total)(1/16092)/area(sphere) = 1387 W (the solar constant)
  • Estimates have been made that humans use about 12×1012 W.
  • How much land area would be needed to power that?
    • The best solar cells can produce about 33% efficiency.
    • Area needed = 12×1012/1387/0.33 = 26×19 m2 = 10122 square miles ~100×100 mile square. (More needed since Sun not always straight over head nor always sunny skies, and also some fraction radiation does not reach the surface.)


07-14-2008 23:18:10
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