Awards & Nominations
The yellow power has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!

The yellow power has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!
We created an application that lets you monitor the energy production of your solar panels on a daily and weekly basis. It uses parameters from NASA POWER API to know the actual solar irradiance on your location and calculate the output from your solar panels based on user-provided specifications. We took in consideration factors like temperature, wind speed, solar panel tilt and orientation to accurately measure energy production. We are also working on a feedback unit consisting of three pieces, to calculate the actual production and compare it to the supposed estimate.
Methodology:
We started with comprehensive research about the variables needed to calculate the power output from a solar panel system. They are:
For the sake of our demo we used the following numbers:
The actual data was extracted from NASA POWER. The solar panel information, the cable information as we are assumed for the purpose of the demo.
Reference for solar panel specifications: https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/2000-watt-solar-panels-200-panel_62068476499.html?spm=a2700.7724857.normal_offer.d_title.55e6227aioZtuY
Reference for actual NASA POWER data:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZE0sbWVIhW94cLrmP20BX-2l1NqMOTLA/view?usp=sharing
Calculator for cable size:
https://www.solar-wind.co.uk/info/dc-cable-wire-sizing-tool-low-voltage-drop-calculator
. Inverter efficiency:
Then we started working on the application as a demo to integrate NASA’s API within the application, we fetched the map from google maps. The sunshine hours have been calculated specifically for the location for now, but we intend on implementing a whole API for sunlight hours.
The website used for the specific number of sunlight hours that day is:
https://weather-and-climate.com/average-monthly-hours-Sunshine,Cairo,Egypt
The calculations on the application are all relatively simple mathematics but they will be mentioned in full in our documentation once we test the statistics several times and make sure they are all valid. We are using these website for the advanced mathematics:
https://www.pveducation.org/pvcdrom/properties-of-sunlight/solar-radiation-on-a-tilted-surface
(This will be used when sunlight hits the solar panel with an angle and the solar panel is fixed.)
https://www.alternative-energy-tutorials.com/solar-power/solar-irradiance.html
https://www.8msolar.com/what-is-a-peak-sun-hour-psh
We also created a mind map for the app itself (it only includes the demo app):
https://drive.google.com/file/d/13nbocq2YgAe5mlK3qfIO6nhFzhPCvVxO/view?usp=sharing
for the coding we used flutter and created an application that works for android and IOS
We used NASA POWER as the source of information about solar irradiance and temperature on a location as well as humidity and wind speed. We then integrated the API into our application to provide the daily and weekly calculations about solar irradiance and solar panel output.
We definitely tried to achieve as much as possible for our project. Our main setback was the lack of time and the knowledge of the many features and possibilities to be added. For example:
#POWER #API #SOLARPANELS
This project has been submitted for consideration during the Judging process.
NASA produces a variety of surface solar and meteorological data parameters that are useful to commercial renewable energy and sustainable building ventures, but this information is not easily accessible to the typical homeowner. Your challenge is to develop a mobile application to access the information on NASA’s Prediction of Worldwide renewable Energy Resources (POWER) web services portal and provide useful information about sunshine to the general public.
