How bright is this planet anyway?
How bright is this planet anyway?
I was doing homework for one of my classes, and I thought I'd do the same calculations for factorio! MY homework assignment was about figuring out how much land it would take to power the US entirely off of solar. Given data included a peak incoming solar radiation of about 1350w/m^2. (outside the atmosphere)
So, what is Factorio's incoming solar radiation? I'm assuming that each grid square is 1 m^2, and they have better tech than we do. So at 50% efficiency, to produce a max of 60 kW with an area of 9 m^2... the incoming solar radiation would have to be 13.3 kW/m2. That is about 10x Earth's solar radiation. Just thought to share some quick calculations.
edit: I dropped a 0 in there, i fixed the math.
So, what is Factorio's incoming solar radiation? I'm assuming that each grid square is 1 m^2, and they have better tech than we do. So at 50% efficiency, to produce a max of 60 kW with an area of 9 m^2... the incoming solar radiation would have to be 13.3 kW/m2. That is about 10x Earth's solar radiation. Just thought to share some quick calculations.
edit: I dropped a 0 in there, i fixed the math.
Last edited by MadZuri on Tue Mar 17, 2015 6:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
that also explain why he never take the space suit out.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Yeah, on earth nominal/affordable solar cells provide 150w/m2 electrical, but on factorio they produce 6667w/m^2. If you assume we use the same technology, factorio is ~45x brighter than earth. That or the scale of gameplay is deceptive. I really doubt a refinery is 5m x 5m big...
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Nor that the human is taller than the assemblers, but this Factorio. Everything can happen win Factorio.MadZuri wrote:Yeah, on earth nominal/affordable solar cells provide 150w/m2 electrical, but on factorio they produce 6667w/m^2. If you assume we use the same technology, factorio is ~45x brighter than earth. That or the scale of gameplay is deceptive. I really doubt a refinery is 5m x 5m big...
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
What if it's a huge mecha instead of a human? It would at least explain being able to carry several wagons worth of stuff with it all the time.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
We can assume, that 1 tile = 1m² , cause too much things are matching together with that measure. Any other leaves more question-marks.
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Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
I agree with the size/scaling and efficiency discussed above, but there is some wiggle room in the other factors:
On a clear day in Melbourne, Australia (ie: pretty far South) we can get over 2kW/m2 between 11am and 3pm. Without checking I'd expect it gets near to 3kW/m2 for a longer part of the day at the equator.
Possibly a more important factor for a different planet would be the spectral distribution of the primary. Higher wavelengths yield more power. So maybe it looks similarly lit to Earth due in the visible spectrum, but there's more ultra violet and above. I'm not sure what range PV cells can work in though...
At least, that's the explanation I'd go with
On a clear day in Melbourne, Australia (ie: pretty far South) we can get over 2kW/m2 between 11am and 3pm. Without checking I'd expect it gets near to 3kW/m2 for a longer part of the day at the equator.
Possibly a more important factor for a different planet would be the spectral distribution of the primary. Higher wavelengths yield more power. So maybe it looks similarly lit to Earth due in the visible spectrum, but there's more ultra violet and above. I'm not sure what range PV cells can work in though...
At least, that's the explanation I'd go with
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
^^ what Ssilk said that is most definitely true. Everything from shown velocities to bot power consumption to the head loss in pipes confirms that. Even the code lists it as meter/tiles interchangeably. Conclusion: the factorio world is somewhere between 10 and 45 time brighter than earth. Either that or solar produces so much power for gameplay balance. This just makes me think about all those mods that makes solar even MORE powerful... they are absolutely absurd! I blame my engineering education for this.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
That would certainly explain how the creepers evolve so fast. I wonder if it is a binary system? That would explain how the daylight cycle is so skewed to favor day over night.Khyron wrote:(snip) Possibly a more important factor for a different planet would be the spectral distribution of the primary. Higher wavelengths yield more power. So maybe it looks similarly lit to Earth due in the visible spectrum, but there's more ultra violet and above. I'm not sure what range PV cells can work in though...
At least, that's the explanation I'd go with
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Hm... well...MadZuri wrote:That would certainly explain how the creepers evolve so fast. I wonder if it is a binary system? That would explain how the daylight cycle is so skewed to favor day over night.
UV mutating the DNA of terrestrial life is one thing but who knows how some other life evolves, adapts, mutates, etc. Do they have DNA or anything even like it?
And as for day/night cycles... it could be due to axial tilt. Or binary stars as you suggest, but if that were the case we should expect to see different brightness levels and colours reflected off the surface.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Sorry, but a world that bright would just cook. Even two times brighter will kill all life. Indeed the amount of solar power is limited to a relative small zone around a sun (relative in astronomical measures):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumstel ... table_zone
So the logical conclusion is: The solar panels must be somehow much, much, much more efficient. Which is really possible, cause it is a game.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumstel ... table_zone
So the logical conclusion is: The solar panels must be somehow much, much, much more efficient. Which is really possible, cause it is a game.
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Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Even with 100% efficiency, you need 6.67 kW/m^2. That is 6 times as bright as the earth's equator at noon.
That is 2 kilowatt-hours/m^2. You need to divide by 4 hours to get the average radiation, 0.5 kW/m^2.Khyron wrote:On a clear day in Melbourne, Australia (ie: pretty far South) we can get over 2kW/m2 between 11am and 3pm. Without checking I'd expect it gets near to 3kW/m2 for a longer part of the day at the equator.
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Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Has anyone attempted to calculate how big a tile actually is? We have a confirmed max speed of a single locomotive, so I think rapidly taking screenshots and counting how many tiles pass in a certain amount of time, and divide that by the speed, to get how big a tile is. I think that's how it works.ssilk wrote:We can assume, that 1 tile = 1m² , cause too much things are matching together with that measure. Any other leaves more question-marks.
EDIT: I'm guessing you could count how many tiles pass in one second, and see how it relates to the speed in m/s.
So:
Code: Select all
tiles/s = 259.2 km/s --> 72 m/s
tiles/s = 72 m/s
tiles = 72m //cancel out seconds
tiles/tiles = 1m/tiles
1 tile = ??? m
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Interesting, but where did you take the speed from? Never heard of it...
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Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Tooltip from hovering over the trainssilk wrote:Interesting, but where did you take the speed from? Never heard of it...
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
You will find the train moves 72 tiles/s.
Code: Select all
/c game.player.print("x:" .. game.player.character.position.x .. " y:" .. game.player.character.position.y .. " s:" .. game.tick/60)
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Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Well there you have it. Every tile is 1 meter squared.DaveMcW wrote:You will find the train moves 72 tiles/s.
Code: Select all
/c game.player.print("x:" .. game.player.character.position.x .. " y:" .. game.player.character.position.y .. " s:" .. game.tick/60)
So transport belts are a meter, and the splitters are a ridiculously wide piece of machinery? Why not?
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
Nope. I meant what I wrote, which is why I used kW/m2 instead of kWh/m2.DaveMcW wrote:That is 2 kilowatt-hours/m^2. You need to divide by 4 hours to get the average radiation, 0.5 kW/m^2.
However, my source had bad data. Our peak irradiance is more inline with OPs working value of 1kW during our summer.
Last edited by Khyron on Thu Mar 19, 2015 5:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: How bright is this planet anyway?
I'm waiting to see how far down the rabbit hole this thread goes... If a 2m x 1m piece of machinery requires 16 iron to build, how much does each piece of iron weigh? If an inserter only uses 13kW for whatever duration to move a piece of iron 2 meters, what must the gravitational strength of the planet be?bigyihsuan wrote:Well there you have it. Every tile is 1 meter squared.
So transport belts are a meter, and the splitters are a ridiculously wide piece of machinery? Why not?