Few Questions about building a Solar Oven.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on building a solar oven for a school project, emphasizing the use of a circular paraboloid design to concentrate sunlight for cooking. Key points include the need for a frame to create the paraboloid shape, the search for inexpensive, high-albedo materials, and the relationship between the size of the paraboloid and the heat generated for cooking. The idea of using a black box for heat absorption and the potential benefits of a glass cover for insulation are also explored. Overall, the conversation highlights practical considerations and design elements crucial for an effective solar oven.
Pinu7
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I hope I am posting this on the right section...

In my Environmental Science Class, we are to design and build a solar oven(without using solar panels!). We will be baking a cookie.

Me, being a "mathematician", remembered something about a parabola, that if light ray hits anywhere on the interior surface, it will reflect through its focus. I assumed for realistic three dimensions, this will work for a circular paraboloid(confirm that please). i.e. zr^2=x^2+y^2

If I put a cookie at its focus, it should cook well(or ignite).

The surface of the circular paraboloid will be reflectable

I have a few questions-

1. How exactly DO I create the frame of a circular paraboloid? I can't just stare at my calculator and yell "materialize!"

2. What material should I use that has a high albedo, but is cheap-ish? I will spend no more than $30 on this.

3. How will the size of the paraboloid effect the heat of the cookie?
THE HOTTER THE BETTER. I want a high powered oven, if the cookie turns to ash, I'd be ecstatic.
 
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You are right about the parabola first of all. Remember many many years ago when we first started learning about complex shapes. Remember the concept of a locus (loci?? sp?). Anyways, the locus of a parabola is a group of points that lie equidistant from a point and a straight line. See the wikipedia page for a proof showing the favorable reflective properties.

Anyways, having seen a man win $100k for a solar oven, I briefly looked at some designs. Unless you want to spin a large amount of liquid metal into a parabola, you're going to have discretize it (for lack of a better word). A common design that I've seen it referred to as a Parvati Parabolic Cooker.

Check out this site which has pretty good instructions for how to make a type of oven.

http://www.angelfire.com/80s/shobhapardeshi/ParvatiCooker.html

It seems that a common way to do this is to include a black box which will absorb the heat. Good luck,
 
Okay thanks, now I other questions.

Should I place glass at the top of the paraboloid to insulate the oven, or will light be dimmed too much?

Should I put a rod from the bottom point to the focus and putting a small level platform on it because I will be baking ONE cookie?
 
Glass on top contributing to a "greenhouse" effect may be good. There's only one way to find out!
 
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