This doesn't seem very likely, unless you include our Sun in the definition of "stars". The energy density is simply too low for any practical use.
It is not that this is not POSSIBLE, it simply ain't PRACTICAL. It would require enormous collectors to get but a small amount of energy; there are much better ways to get energy.
humans did that along time ago, converting sun light into energy, for example calculators that works on sun light, in France they are trying to harvest energy by creating small stars on earth! as far as i know they still have problems controlling the plasma contained within a poweful magnetic field, but i am not an expert in the field.
Only one star has any effect on Earth. The sun is the source of the heat and light
without which there would be no life on Earth. None of the other stars has any effect.
Electricity is the naturally occurring source of energy that we are yet not able to harness and use.
Solar energy is one of the environmental friendly ways to harness energy. It does not cause environmental pollution. It will be the energy of the future.
The only fusion energy in the universe is in the stars like the sun, and there are millions of such stars!
It is possible to see hundreds of shooting stars in a single night, during a meteor shower.
The energy comes from "nuclear fusion". Stars like the Sun create helium from hydrogen by this method, and that gives out energy. That's how the Sun creates energy.
They harnessed the horse to the post.Imagine what might happen if it were possible to harness solar energy fully.
If we had the technology
Nuclear energy is a type of potential energy. On the other hand, this may also refer to "potential" in the sense of "possible". It is possible that we harness this nuclear energy one day.
The idea is to harness the potential energy of the water, when it is at a certain height. The water has to be made to go down, to harness this energy.
No
buttholes
Because the world is depleting resources, engineers and scientists must find a way to recycle energy, that is, renewable. In the engineering field, we try our best to recycle our materials to maximize efficiency and to minimize cost. There are lots of potential sources of energy that we, humans can harness. One is gravitational force. Is it possible to harness useful energy from gravity alone? How about the motion of the Earth wtr to the Sun? These are the type questions that will shape how we harness energy, and answers to these questions will indeed benefit the human race.
The energy of chocolate is harnessed by the simple expedient of eating it.
Energy in moving air.
yes
You can't really harness energy from it, since there isn't any stored energy (except for nuclear fusion, for which we don't have the technology yet). However, you can store energy as hydrogen, to retrieve it later.
Solar panels harness energy from the sun--Solar energy!