The power listed on the solar panel presumably is the peak power. This power is the maximal power outup of the solar panel, which is only reached under ideal solar irradiation conditions.
For comparison: a energy efficient computer uses about 150 W .
Volts * Amps = Watts 12V * A = 150W A = 150W/12V A = 12.5
To charge any battery the voltage of the input must be more than the battery's output.
The total kW load is only a guide to the solar panel capacity. Any energy generated by the solar panel will reduce the energy you draw from the grid, which leads directly to less CO2 output at the power plants. But the power plant is still needed for when there is a cloudy day. When it's cloudy the solar panel output is drastically reduced, although they still produce power, as the salesmen are keen to emphasize, but what they don't tell you is that the power output is reduced by about 95%. Also, in many countries, if your panels generate excess electricity you sell it back to the grid, so the capacity of the panels is not critical.
Probably because a solar panel can produce electricity for many years.
There are many ways one can build a solar panel. One can build a solar panel by making a template for solar cells, putting a frame together, and sanding the whole thing down.
One solar panel is 250w
depends 10 or more
I did not locate a solar panel laptop itself, but there are solar panel laptop charger for the laptop battery. these will last many years and substitute for buying a laptop battery every year.
10 kw on a sunny day Firstly you need to understand that kw refers to the power being generated at any one time. If you want to know how much is generated in a day the answer will be in kwh. Next it depends on a number of factors including what direction the panel is facing and where you live. You might find that on a sunny day a panel is generating around 150w at any one time and over the day you might generate up to 1kwh depending on the factors listed above
Total power output of the sun: 3.86 x 1023 kilowatts (386,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Total solar power received on Earth: 1.74 x 1014 kilowatts (174,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Solar power falling on 1 square meter of ground: 750 watts (0.75 kilowatt) Output of a 1 square meter solar panel: 120 watts (0.12 kilowatt)
Well... Could it be a Solar panel?
4