http://fireflyeco.com/
rss
email
twitter
  • About

Solar Sheep

no comments
Posted on Oct 29 2009 by Daniel
Tweet

In June, my colleagues and I took a tour of SAS‘s new 1 Megawatt solar farm in Cary, NC.  Standing in stark contrast to the high-tech metal/glass/silicon is a decidedly low-tech landscaping crew that keeps the grass around the panels trimmed to a manageable height.

Landscaping Crew

A flock of Dorper sheep occupy the pen with the solar array to eat the grass.  Sheep – because goats would jump on the panels – and dorpers because they’re short enough to walk under the panels and all of the associated electrical equipment.

As this is not an agriculture or animal husbandry blog, I should probably get back to my point.

SAS makes statistical software for a variety of applications, so it stands to reason that they would apply some of their number know-how to their own data coming from the solar array.  Back in May, Xan Gregg from the JMP software division, shared a visualization showing solar power output over the course of a day.  He asked “Why is there a small drop in power output around mid-day?”

See it in the January – April data?  Well, the real answer has something to do with the angle of the sun at various times of year and how the panels tilt on their single axis, but several people pointed out that heat can affect solar panel efficiency.  A hot panel cannot make as much energy as a cooler one.

To measure the effect of heat on power generation, Xan has come up with some new visualizations to answer the question.  Rather than steal his thunder, I’ll just provide the link and let him explain it in his own words.

Can't get enough? Try these related posts:

  1. Get your free solar panels…
  2. Lean for the Solar Industry
  3. Solar Cycle 24
  4. Pyramid of Conservation
  5. Easy Energy Visualization at Home

  Tags: data, lawn, sheep, solar, visualization Category: Energy, InfoVis

Twitter

What you’re saying:

  • lu9 on Homestar. Sewiously.
  • Leslie Davis on BizBuzz: Plastic Bags into Oil
  • Anonymous on Free Money for Duke Energy Customers

Blogroll

  • information aesthetics
    Revealing the Impact of Super Bowl Advertising on Social Media
    February 3, 2012

  • Chart Porn
    Cocktails
    February 3, 2012

  • FlowingData
    An action plan for data science, a decade ago
    February 3, 2012

  • Green Building Advisor Blogs
    New Green Building Products
    February 3, 2012

  • JMP Blog
    Using images to add context to your data
    February 2, 2012

  • Visual Business Intelligence
    Should Data Visualizations Be Beautiful?
    February 1, 2012

  • Lean Insider
    The Denver Health & Hospital Authority -- The Results Are In
    January 25, 2012

  • Gemba Panta Rei
    Consumption Rate, Replenishment Time, SWIP and Why Glaciers Need Love
    January 23, 2012

  • mapawatt
    Embrace the EV future
    January 22, 2012

  • Energy Circle
    ReCircle: The Rebound Effect, Smart Homes, Energy Monitoring, Spray Foam Insulation and more!
    January 13, 2012

Categories

  • Carbon
  • Commercial
  • Design
  • EcoMetrics
  • Energy
  • Financial
  • Food and Agriculture
  • InfoVis
  • Lean
  • Nature
  • PlotWatt
  • Policy
  • Pollution
  • Presentation
  • Residential
  • Solid Waste
  • Transportation
  • Water

Tags

agriculture appliances bacteria biomimicry buildings cap and trade carbon footprint cash for clunkers CFL climate change computers corn data efficiency electricity grid home comfort humidity humor HVAC LCA Lean LED legislation lighting maps marketing offsets oil organic recycling renewables SciLights smart grid social justice software solar statistics subsidies TEDTalks transportation UNC visualization waste Water

  • About
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License