2. Average-14,000 kilowatt-hours per day
3. Not unless you have a super-bright light bulb on top of your house. (the moon's not bright enough)
I hope ur not trolling on #3
1. depends on panel size and type.
2. varies widely from area to area and during various times of the year.
3. NO!
1.
Use a solar panel calculator
solar panel calculator
http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=Arx8...
2.
The EIA reports that in 2007, the average American home used 936 kilowatt-hours of electricity each month
Read more: http://www.ehow.com/about_5166858_much-e...
3.
Yes, but the not much.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_qu...
1 volt out of a solar panel
MOONLIGHT LUNAR FRESNEL LENS SOLAR PANEL PV PHOTOVOLTAIC
1. It varies depending on the type of panel and the amount of sun the panel gets. In my experience, for monocrystaline panels on a house in Los Angeles, you get 5 times the nameplate rating, so a 200 watt panel will give you 1,000 watt hours per day. This assumes clear weather, spring/summer/fall. Winter will be less as the sun is lower in the sky. A tracking system will perform better.
2. 1,700 square foot house here uses about 25 kwh per day. This can increase or decrease depending on personal habit and outdoor temperature (if you use air conditioning).
3. No, no chance at all. In fact, they only really work from about 9am to 6pm here in the summer, much shorter in winter.
Solar Panel r quite expensive but govt. gives subsidies so it is less expensive.
1) it depends on your panel size , type of panel multilayer or crystalline etc etc... it also depends on the place where it is made like made in US r generally guaranteed to work great, made in CHINA well you know the guarantee they give...
2) avg estimates r not good to base your purchase on. if u need Google it
3) no they cant instead they have battery to store electricity for the night..
just think about hail stones, hurricanes, maintenance, cloudy days etc etc before u buy
1. How much energy does one solar panel create per day (24 hours)?
2. How much energy does the average US household use per day?
3. Can solar panels harvest energy at night too? If so, how much?