Aquarium Uses Eel Powered Christmas Lights 96
A Japanese aquarium is using the greenest energy possible to power the lights on its Christmas tree, an electric eel. From the article: "Each time the eel moves, two aluminum panels gather enough electricity to light up the 2-meter (6 ft 6 in) tall tree, decked out in white, in glowing intermittent flashes."
Next Step... (Score:2)
Ask and ye shall receive. (Score:5, Informative)
Piezoelectric Eels for Energy Harvesting in the Ocean [sjtu.edu.cn].
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Obligatory monty python reference (Score:2)
I want my eel powered hovercraft. [youtube.com]
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Eel is much better put to use as the principle ingredient in unagi maki :)
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This isn't about a power source. It's about finally enabling the eels to celebrate the birth of Jesus the way they're supposed to.
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So, eels get his birth date wrong too?
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I hate to say it but (Score:1)
Solar is the greenest energy available, hands down. Although I doubt using the sun to provide light would interest many people.
"Wow, an eel-powered christmas tree!"
"You think that's cool, imagine this: A giant ball of hydrogen millions of degrees in temperature constantly undergoing fusion sustains all life on Earth from 93 million miles away! And it will last for billions of years, at almost no cost! Although unfortunately output is subject to seasonal fluctuations."
Re:I hate to say it but (Score:4, Insightful)
Solar is the greenest energy available, hands down.
Not if the solar cells require a lot of toxic chemicals and energy for the manufacture process...
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So, you would hold and release light without conversion how, exactly?
Who said anything about hold and release?
So...you're advocating lights that only work while the sun is shining, is that it?
I think they call that a 'mirror'.
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Mirrors and fibre-optic are exactly what I was thinking of. And of course, the sun is always shining somewhere (although I grant that making use of that fact would involve a significant initial expenditure of energy).
Okay, so which would you prefer,
a) a network of unbroken 3,500 mile long fibre optic cables along the surface (1/8 of the circumference of the earth, assuming you'll only need light for half of your nighttime hours and can get it from the east or the west...and you'd need one cable from each direction for morning and evening light, of course), or
b) the (slightly shorter, but much more difficult to manage and maintain) 3,030 mi 'direct' route, by boring directly through the crust, along the 45 degree chord t
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photovoltaic cells are just a bad idea for energy production anyway. Solar thermal generation as a lot fewer issues. We can build daylight solar thermal without any exotic materials, using the same turbines and generators used in other power infrastructure. 24/7 solar thermal requires an added complication of thermal mass, but again that is vastly better than photovoltaics.
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Basic thermodynamics begs to differ. Thermal energy has very high entropy, therefore converting it to electricity (which has low entropy) is never going to be an efficient process.
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But if you are using abundant solar energy to produce that thermal energy, the efficiency doesn't matter so much.
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A concentrating collect + steam turbine + generator is still generally more efficient than all but the more exotic photovoltaic cells in terms of area used. And storing a heat mass in a well insulated underground reservoir is a lot more efficient than battery storage or electrolysis for supplying power during night and bad weather.
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Look at your TV, now back to me; Satellites run on solar power. Look out the window; now back to me; Plants run on solar power. Look at yourself, now back to me; We all depend on solar power in some form, solar is the original and greenest power. I ride to work on a horse.
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Clearly posted by someone who knows nothing of how solar power actually works. It's the greenest energy available, discounting the creating of the cells, their disposal, the incredibly low efficiency, inability to be used in all but select locals, terribly high expense to return ratio... other than that they are the bees knees.
OP also missed the point of the article, which was clearly a cheap advertisement for this particular shop. The article poster turning into a slashvertisment complete with misleading
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No, I'm going to have to disagree with you there. I'm going to have to go with Broccoli on this one. I don't know how often it is you look at the sun, but I took a gander just this morning, and it wasn't green. It hasn't been green for as long as I've been aware of it.
Now Broccoli on the other hand, is quite green. Its also a source of energy. However, it doesn't really taste the best, I imagine thats why Republicans are so against green power.
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IIRC, George H. W. Bush liked broccoli. Anecdotal to be sure, but hey, he was the POTUS.
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IIRC, George H. W. Bush did not like broccoli. Green to be sure, but draw your own conclusions.
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/g/georgehw110377.html [brainyquote.com]
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Ah, you're right. I knew he had an opinion about broccoli. I just got it bass ackwards.
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Solar is the greenest energy available, hands down. Although I doubt using the sun to provide light would interest many people.
You mean like a skylight? I hear they're quite popular.
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Not among people who live in basements.
They questioned the practicality?! (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, it is not practical. Sometimes practicality needs to be shoved out of the way because impractical is half the fun. In this case it's the idea and the wonder of whether or not it could be done. They've shown it can be done regardless of how practical it may be. I, for one, rejoice in this sort of tinkering and proof.
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the article is pretty terse. if it's part of a broader d
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What math needs to be done is if the current being used for the tree is normally "waste" current.
the eel is going to discharge the current anyway so if this is not being "used" then using it for a tree does no harm to said eel.
anybody have the math on how much current on average that type of eel produces??
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I suspect the claims of green may be a bit tongue in cheek.
My hovercraft is full of eels... (Score:1)
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Not only does your user name really fit this thread, but an electric eel powered hovercraft has to be one of the top 3 coolest things I've heard of this week.
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Can these electric eels power it too?
Only if they are shrieking eels* - then you can be really eco friendly by getting two memes for the price of one.
(*as referenced in that nice respectable fantasy movie we all love. Not the top hit on Google at the moment which is distinctly NSFW. Ick!)
What about the eel? (Score:2)
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my question exactly. eating more and creating more "greenhouse gas".
the other one is "Each time the eel moves, two aluminum panels gather enough electricity to light up..." each time it moves? at all? blinks? (dunno if eels blink)
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Terrible (Score:1)
Regards,
PETA
Feedback (Score:4, Interesting)
... so if the eel is in sight of the tree, and is photophobic (or -philic), can one set up an oscillation in which eel movement causes light which causes more movement, making the tree lights flash at a substantially constant rate?
No-eel (Score:5, Funny)
Born is the light powered by my eel.
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The journalist claims the energy production is entirely energy free.
Don't eels poop?
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er, pollution free. Duh.
PETA (Score:2)
I'm sure PETA is going to have a cow. You know they're not just about EATING animals. Ethical Treatment and all!!! Is it ETHICAL to STEAL energy from an eel without asking it first?!
Hell, they're not happy you even HAVE an eel. Much less are forcing it to move around so you can harvest it's energy.
I can see a bunch of naked protesters between aluminum panels trying to power lightbulbs now.
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I'm sure PETA is going to have a cow.
I doubt it - maybe they'll have some tofu or a nice stuffed pepper.
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Doesn't matter, PETA can't change a damned thing.
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I can see a bunch of naked protesters between aluminum panels trying to power lightbulbs now.
That. Would. Be. AWESOME!
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That's nothing: come New Year's Day, the Japanese will probably eat the eel.
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I can see a bunch of naked protesters between aluminum panels trying to power lightbulbs now.
When we tried that, the bulbs did not light, but was that the protest?
Cool but not novel (Score:2)
I've wondered how well LED lamps could be adapte
But what powers the eel? (Score:3)
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The point you guys are missing is that its an aquarium - its powering the eel regardless if the eel is powering the lights or not.
So...
Why not?
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This Crazy Glue says you are wrong.
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green. NOT. (Score:1)
Put the eel back in the river or ocean. Shut down the aquarium. Turn off the lights. That would be green. This isn't.
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Turn off the internet while they're at it.
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Go sit in the dark and stop eating. Die. Wait for the maggots to consume your body. That would be greener still.
Other Uses (Score:2)
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Ah yes (Score:1)
My aquarium is full of eels!
2007 is calling (Score:1)
Of course there was no video available in TFA, so I went and searched for it.
Here's a 2007 version: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9wktSQdyaE [youtube.com]
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Greenest Energy Possible? (Score:2)
How much power does it take to keep an eel alive in a tank 24/7 so that visitors can see some lights flicker a few hours a day?
And if the notoriety attracts more visitors, don't they just end up causing more resources to be used in the building?
I bet this thing has a carbon footprint like a Hummer.
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Putting a piezoelectric footpad under the visitors would generate a lot more energy output with a lot less carbon output.
(If you ever think I'm missing the point, you're missing the big picture. I'm talking fucking Guernica, here.)
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That's fine, but it's not the "greenest energy possible", in fact, it's nasty energy camouflaged as green just because it comes from a living thing.
Now, if they ran the wires to the stream where the eel normally lives, that would be green.
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I have doubts that damming streams is good for the environment.. it dries up wetlands, and wets drylands..
I get your line of thinking, I think we just seen a different purpose in this exhibit.
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I see the purpose in the exhibit. I just don't see a purpose in characterizing it as the greenest energy possible when it's nearly the opposite.
Hello eel... follow the white rabbit... (Score:1)