From the Library: Solar Cooker
Here’s another “what is it?” from the image collection:
If you’re like me, you associate the phrase “solar cooker” with a summer camp construction project made out of cardboard and aluminum foil, used to toast a marshmallow. But that’s not the limit of solar ovens. At the extreme end of the range, the Odeillo solar furnace is southern France is capable of producing temperatures of 3,500 °C. Or course, it’s over 50 meters tall. Still, much more modest solar furnaces are still capable of producing usefully high temperatures.
This device, called a vertical access solar furnace, could focus sunlight into the small dome seen in the center. A small sample of material could be placed in the center dome, and it would then be subjected to a beam of extremely powerful light capable of heating the sample to high temperature. I haven’t found a record of how hot it could go, but a slightly larger version of this device in Texas managed 3,000 °C. These temperatures could simulate the extreme conditions that particles could experience in space or when entering the earth’s atmosphere.