Stanford Creates Solar panels that generate Power at night using Earth radiated Heat

In a groundbreaking innovation, researchers at Stanford University, USA, have developed solar panels that generate electricity even at night — by harvesting heat radiatinge from the Earth into space!
These advanced panels use a special thermoelectric device that captures tiny amounts of power from the temperature difference between the cool night sky and the warmer Earth surface. Though they currently produce a small output (~50 milliwatts per square meter), it's enough to power LED lights or sensors in off-grid areas.
During the day, they function like regular solar panels — but at night, they flip the script and keep generating energy using a phenomenon called radiative cooling. This could be a game-changer for remote locations and could one day enhance our ability to harvest solar energy 24/7!
đ Developed by Professor Shanhui Fan and team at Stanford
đ§ Still in early stages — but full of potential
đ Could power sensors, lights & devices in low-resource regions
A step toward continuous clean energy — even after sunset! đđ
#StanfordInnovation
#solartech
#cleanenergy
#NightPower