The most obvious solar cycle the sunspot cycle, of roughly 11 years (on average - the length of an actual cycle may vary). Once in every sunspot cycle, the Sun's magnetic field reverses (north become south, and south becomes north), so a full cycle (for north to be back where it started) is twice the sunspot cycle.
The solar cycle is often described as being 22 years long because it consists of two 11-year cycles of solar activity, which includes the fluctuation of sunspots and solar flares. During the first 11 years, solar activity increases to a peak, followed by a decline to a minimum. The next 11 years then sees the cycle repeat in the opposite phase, returning to the initial conditions. Thus, the complete cycle of solar magnetic activity, including polarity reversal, takes 22 years.
Most solar panels would last about 25 years Most solar panels would last about 25 years ---------------------------------------------------------------- from www.solarcells101.com Most solar panels are rated 25 years But its hard to say because most of the first solar panels in the 1980s are still putting out power they will have a power loss over time but free power for this long is very cool David www.solarcells101.com
because de internal sun dinamo es double, for do a complete cicle it need 2 "half" 11 year cicle, 11 year with one polatity, other 11 with other.
If you were a light ray it would take a day to cover just the inner solar system, and about a year to cross "all" of it. The only space ships (voyager) that we've sent (more than 30 years ago) haven't made it to the edge yet. =============================== 1). How long it takes to go around it depends on where you say the edge is. If you consider the edge of the solar system to be, say, Pluto's orbit, then the 'natural' time to travel around that edge ... using gravity to do most of the work so that you don't need to keep burning fuel all the way ... is about 250 years. 2). As a species, we've been dreaming and scheming about it for maybe a thousand years, and we've completed almost none of it so far. So it takes a really long time, at least in terms of human lifetimes.
by plane it takes around 45 hours by foot it takes around 32 years (a long time) i say plane :)
Most solar panels would last about 25 years Most solar panels would last about 25 years ---------------------------------------------------------------- from www.solarcells101.com Most solar panels are rated 25 years But its hard to say because most of the first solar panels in the 1980s are still putting out power they will have a power loss over time but free power for this long is very cool David www.solarcells101.com
The exact length of a cycle varies, but it is around 22 years. Twice every cycle there is a maximum of sunspots. Some would say the full cycle is 11 years; but since the magnetic fields switches around every 11 years or so, the full cycle is really 22 years.The exact length of a cycle varies, but it is around 22 years. Twice every cycle there is a maximum of sunspots. Some would say the full cycle is 11 years; but since the magnetic fields switches around every 11 years or so, the full cycle is really 22 years.The exact length of a cycle varies, but it is around 22 years. Twice every cycle there is a maximum of sunspots. Some would say the full cycle is 11 years; but since the magnetic fields switches around every 11 years or so, the full cycle is really 22 years.The exact length of a cycle varies, but it is around 22 years. Twice every cycle there is a maximum of sunspots. Some would say the full cycle is 11 years; but since the magnetic fields switches around every 11 years or so, the full cycle is really 22 years.
I would say around 8 billion years. Earth has been around for 5 billion years, and the universe has existed for only 13 billion. In other words, A LONG< LONG< time The universe has existed for 14 billion years. God!!
It will take years for everybody to have solar power, because of the cost of the solar panels and such, but I would say that it would take at the most probably 50 years.
isn't it SOLAR? I'm thinking it could be left on until... well, say when the sun goes out.
I'll tell you when we get there. But if NASA's estimates are true, they want to be colonizing the entirity of the solar systems sustainable environments if possible by 2200, so in 3 billion years there is a possibility, I would say a very high chance of yes...if we live that long
Females are actually called Jenny's and they usually have there first heat cycle at 3 years old.
The Solar System is about 4.5-4.6 billion years old (i.e. 4500-4600 million years old.) Because the Solar System developed gradually it's hard to be more precise than that and say exactly when it started, but solid grains first condensed out of the Solar Nebula about 4567 million years ago.
she has been famous for a LONG time i would say about 4 years some people say 5 years but i say 4.
No. It is not true to say that nine years is not a long time be married
We really have no idea how active the Sun will be during 2012. Because this is the period of increasing activity (we're currently about 1.5 years into the 11-year sunspot cycle) we can expect that there will be more flares in 2012 than we'll have in 2011, and probably quite a few more than we had in 2010. But whether 2012 will be anywhere close to a record would be impossible to say at this point.However, depending on the direction and severity of a solar flare, an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) can be generated, powerful enough to damage electrical equipment (cell phones, computers, cameras, etc.). I myself looked into forms of protection against these threats. Beyond just knowing the facts there are products out there to help.There is a website listed in the related source links below
Well there is nothing that "fuels" the water cycle since we have been recycling the same water for billions of years. You could say that the sun keeps the water cycle moving however.