Researchers from Japan successfully managed to transmit energy wirelessly with
high accuracy. It’s a game-changing achievement for electricity
generation that could one day allow us to place huge solar sheets in
space and beam the energy back to Earth.
The researchers from the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced yesterday that they
had used microwaves to deliver 1.8 kilowatts of power - just enough to
power a kettle - through the air to a receiver 55 metres away, with
pinpoint accuracy.
"This was the first time anyone has managed to send a high output of
nearly two kilowatts of electric power via microwaves to a small target,
using a delicate directivity control device," a spokesperson for JAXA told AFP.
Although
there’s still a long way to go, the team’s ultimate goal is to set up
solar satellites around 36,000 km off Earth’s surface, where they’re
able to soak up the intense solar energy from the Sun and then beam it
back to Earth via antennae, providing the planet with unlimited
renewable power.
"But it could take decades before we see practical application of the technology - maybe in the 2040s or later," the spokesperson told AFP.
"There
are a number of challenges to overcome, such as how to send huge
structures into space, how to construct them and how to maintain them."
Still,
we can't help but get excited at the prospect of fossil fuel-free
electricity being beamed down on us from outside our atmosphere. It
doesn't get more futuristic than that.
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