It all depends on the size
You can get them in different sizes. A small one would be 140W and a large would be 280W.
depends 10 or more
The amount of power you get depends on a number of factors, including the efficiency of the solar panels. Ideally, the energy of sunlight would be about 1366 watts per square meter, but losses do to such things as the atmosphere reduce this to a practical limit of about 1000 watts. If a solar panel of one meter is 10% efficient, then this means you would get about 100 watts. New technologies are achieving efficiencies approaching 50%, which would produce 500 watts; but some older panels were only 6% efficient. Since you ask about watts, I am assuming you mean photovoltaic panels. Solar thermal collectors are more efficient, but do not produce electricity.
Technically it can have any number of cells.
Five 200watt solar panels for a period of one hour will create one kWh. So, one 200 watt panel will create 0.2 kWh of electricity
One hp is approximately 756 watts.
You can get them in different sizes. A small one would be 140W and a large would be 280W.
300. (I think this is watts not kilowatts)
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
One solar panel wil generate about 5kw per day. So by simple math we can see that 25 solar panles will generate 100 kw per day. But a solar powered generator, if designed right can generate 100kw/hr's per day..
A typical Nuclear Plant with 4 units active generated 13,000 Megawatts of Electricity. A single Solar Panel Generates Just 200 Watts while its sunny. 1 mega watt is 1 million watts. 13,000 Mega watts is 13,000,000,000 Watts. So we divide 13,000,000,000 Watts by 200. we need 65,000,000 Solar Panels. 1 Solar panel covers approximately 4 by 4 Meters. So the area is 16 metre^2. 65,000,000 Multiplied by 16. 1,040,000 Kilometres of land.
The amount of power you get depends on a number of factors, including the efficiency of the solar panels. Ideally, the energy of sunlight would be about 1366 watts per square meter, but losses do to such things as the atmosphere reduce this to a practical limit of about 1000 watts. If a solar panel of one meter is 10% efficient, then this means you would get about 100 watts. New technologies are achieving efficiencies approaching 50%, which would produce 500 watts; but some older panels were only 6% efficient. Since you ask about watts, I am assuming you mean photovoltaic panels. Solar thermal collectors are more efficient, but do not produce electricity.
Technically it can have any number of cells.
Five 200watt solar panels for a period of one hour will create one kWh. So, one 200 watt panel will create 0.2 kWh of electricity
because a solar panel it has power