How Do Solar Panels Produce Power?
This lesson is intended to be the second lesson within a series. After the first lesson, exploring the transfer of power within a system, Students utilize this lesson, lesson 2, to explain how and what that transfer of energy is. They will learn how solar panels work looking at how photons from the sunlight collide with electrons off of certain atoms within the panels, knocking the electrons from their valence shells, creating an electrical current and flow of electrons based on charges within the panels created with atoms. Using this concept, students then explore the two different types of circuits, hooking multiple solar panels up in both series and parallel to observe and calculate the differences of each to determine what amps and volts are and ultimately be able to calculate the power of their systems. Students should be able to observe that series circuits produce more force and therefore we can see the observable difference between the two circuits.
Lesson Plan Link/URL
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1hnfnk85GnYzlR6G_b0IMPn_ACKieSFKv/edit?u…Subject Area
Science Physical Science P1: Matter P4: Energy Transfer Engineering S1: Engineering & Global Society S4: Apply Science to Engineering S5: Apply Technology to Engineering Mathematics Operations and Algebraic Thinking (OA) English Language Arts (ELA) Speaking & ListeningRelated Content
Growing Crystals Part 2 is a unique lesson that has an emphasis on the synthetic growing of crystals in the laboratory. This activity also focuses on investigating the process of how synthetic
Students will study car barrier engineering in this lesson. They will study how Newton’s Second Law of motion can be applied to determine how to decrease the force of impact during a collision. They
Students will discover: I put rotted food into a container with earthworms, where did the food go?