Electric Power Transmitted Wirelessly In Japan

Electric Power Transmitted Wirelessly In Japan
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Highlights

In a breakthrough, Japanese researchers have successfully transmitted electric power wirelessly to a pinpoint target using microwaves, an advance that brings space-based solar power closer to reality.

In a breakthrough, Japanese researchers have successfully transmitted electric power wirelessly to a pinpoint target using microwaves, an advance that brings space-based solar power closer to reality.

According to Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or Jaxa, the researchers were able to transform 1.8 kilowatts of electric power into microwaves and transmit it with accuracy into a receiver located 55 meters away. In an experiment conducted last week in Hyogo prefecture in western Japan, the microwaves were successfully converted into direct electrical current, 'The Wall Street Journal' reported.

The experiment was the first in the world to send out high-output microwaves wirelessly to a small target, a Jaxa spokesman said. In space-based solar power generation, sunlight is gathered in geostationary orbit and transmitted to a receiver on Earth. Unlike solar panels set on Earth, satellite-based solar panels can capture the energy around the clock and are not affected by weather conditions. If implemented, microwavetransmitting solar satellites would be set up approximately 35,000 kilometres from Earth. Researchers "are aiming for practical use in the 2030s," Yasuyuki Fukumuro, a researcher at Jaxa, said.

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