Jonathan_S wrote:I've got a dumb question. If that's correct then 120 kW would require just over 214 square meters. So why does the ISS have a solar array of 2,500 square meters (over 11 times as large) to produce its stated "84 to 120 kilowatts of electricity"?
Average house uses maximum of 50 amps at 240V on a given day if say you are cooking, heating hot water, heating the house, and watching TV with all the lights on. Why do most homes have 150 or 200Amp service? Future considerations. Peak loads. Safety. Solar Panels are the ISS "service".
ISS was designed when? 80's 90's and was built to last effectively indefinetly. How often do you want to orient your panels to the sun? This leads to dynamics problems that must be dampened and parts that wear out. What were their Solar Panels initially? 20% efficient when PV were 10% on the ground(Not true later modules). Radiation also kills the panels so you need overkill to begin with. Did they know how long those panels would last? No. How bad was the die off of their initial panels? BAD. Thermal cycling cracked the wafers/wiring. Radiation killed their panels. Half way in building ISS they upgraded to MUCH superior panel technology if I recall correctly with higher solar conversion efficiencies(37% and the newer 40++%. Later versions have Carbon heat exchangers on their backsides which improved life endurance drastically as well if I remember correctly. You learn over 30 years of operations.
On top of this, when launching satellites etc, if you have spare tonnage left over and volume available inside the fairing, one keeps throwing more dirt cheap Solar Panels in until it is full or until you have to increase the sizing of the solar panel structural dynamic dampeners.
Now add the simple requirement for FOD damage redundancy. This has been used twice if I recall correctly and an array had to be fixed. I do not recall if they could fix it. Now add extra redundancy because this is space and humans are supposed to live on it full time.
Now add Day/Night reality.
If you see a picture of the ISS, quite often you will see half of its arrays completely turned away from the sun or not even deployed(extended) at all.
Ta Da, you have 10X more surface area than required.