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Ch. 17 Environmental Science. Alternative Energy Sources. Solar Energy. Sun is the source of all energy on earth Absorbed by plants and used by all organisms Also provides energy for Water cycle – flow of rivers Wind energy – warms earth surface and causes winds to blow. The Sun as fuel.
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Ch. 17 Environmental Science Alternative Energy Sources
Solar Energy • Sun is the source of all energy on earth • Absorbed by plants and used by all organisms • Also provides energy for • Water cycle – flow of rivers • Wind energy – warms earth surface and causes winds to blow
The Sun as fuel • Sun obtains its energy from thermonuclear fusion • Hydrogen fuse and form helium • Converted to heat and light energy • Only one billionth of the energy reaches earth. • Fusion Energy Advances (6 min)
Solar Energy • Advantages • Free • Clean • Nonpolluting • disadvantages - not constant • Size and cost of equipment • Energy from the sun (4 min)
Passive Solar Energy • Suns energy is collected, stored, and distributed naturally in an enclosed dwelling. • Greenhouse, car on a warm sunny day • Not used to produce electricity • Reduces use of fossil and nuclear fuels
Passive solar heating in homes • Large windows that face south • Materials that absorb solar energy • Stone, brick, and concrete • May have glass enclosed areas • Insulation helps
Active Solar Energy • Devices are used to collect, store, and circulate heat produced from solar energy • Tubes, tanks, fluids, pumps, fans • Solar Collectors • On roofs • Flat-plate collectors – heat absorbed by fluid in tubes, fluid circulated into home • Solar panels In this video segment adapted from NOVA, learn about photovoltaics and see how two families are using solar technologies in their homes. • http://www.teachersdomain.org/asset/oer09_vid_solarhome/ • Solar power - This video segment from Vegas PBS shows the largest solar power system to date in the U.S. and explains how solar power can serve the needs of large-scale facilities and benefit the environment. (3 min)
Photovoltaic Cells • PV Cell – uses thin wafer of semiconductor material to produce electricity directly from solar energy • Made of silicon or selenium • Sunlight causes electrons to move and make an electric current • Used in calculators, watches, satellites • Lightweight, no pollutants • Photovoltaic Video (1 min)
17.2 Hydroelectric Energy • Hydroelectric power – electricity produced from the energy of moving water • Energy from flowing streams • Use dams to generate electricity – flowing water pushes turbines which make electricity • Important in flood control • Provide recreation/lakes • Store water
Disadvantages of dams • Negatively impact ecosystems • Affect plant life • Flooding/erosion • Create a barrier/fish cannot spawn • Stored water develops cold bottom layer
Energy from tides • Tides in the ocean have a large amount of energy • Use of tidal electrical generators is limited • Concerned about the environment • Difference in high and low tides not enough to produce large amounts of energy
17.3 Wind Energy Aerogeneratorsor wind turbine generators • Windmills used to generate electricity • Adv. and disadv. similar to solar power • Adv. - Free, unlimited and nonpolluting • Disadv – not constant, need storage devices
Two types of wind turbines • Traditional – 2 or 3 very long vanes • Darriues rotor – looks like upsidedown eggbeater
Wind farms • Need steady winds of at least 15 mph • Take up land • Interfere with radio and TV • Dangerous for birds • Wind energy (6 min) • Investing in carbon-free power
17.4 geothermal energy and nuclear fusion • Geothermal energy – heat energy generated within Earth • Generated by the decay of radioactive elements deep beneath the ground. - as elements decay they give off energy in the form of heat.
Geothermal energy used where the source of energy is near he surface • 250 plants around the world • 65% of the homes in Iceland use it • In the US – Hawaii and California use it
Geothermal disadvantages; • Not enough in some areas to be worth the cost of extraction • Not easy to locate • Sulfide gas given off along with the heat • Pipes become corroded • Lack of water to produce the steam
Nuclear Fusion – two nuclei fuse to become one larger nucleus. • Produce large amounts of energy • Scientists have not yet learned to control and use it efficiently. • Geothermal Power