Let It Shine: Making Fire from the Sun

Reader Contribution by John Perlin
Published on January 22, 2014
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The following post summarizes the author’s selection from his book Let It Shine: The 6,000-Year Story of Solar Energy.

Like an “Indiana Jones” adventure, Chinese archaeologists have recently found the oldest solar device – a bronze concave mirror – capable of almost instantaneously making fire from sunlight. The discoverer called the 3,000-year-old apparatus “a world-class marvel…one of the great inventions of ancient Chinese history.”

Confucius wrote that the eldest son started the noon-day cooking fire by focusing the sun’s rays with such a concave mirror onto kindling. Around the 3rd century BCE, the Greeks independently developed concave mirrors. Both the Chinese and Greeks called them burning mirrors because they concentrate enough solar energy onto a combustible object to burst the object into flames. The Europeans, like the Chinese, used them to kindle wood for cooking.

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