13-Year Old Uses Fibonacci Sequence for Better Solar Power UPDATED

Updated content follows at the end of the story.

While walking through a forest in the winter, 7th grader Aidan Dwyer thought he saw a pattern in the way leaves and limbs grew from trees. Some photography, measurements, and investigating the work of other naturalists confirmed that plants produce new growth following a Fibonacci sequence.

This pattern, where the previous numbers are added together to make the next number in sequence (1+1=2, 2+1=3, 3+2=5, 5+3=8, etc.), and its corresponding golden ratio have been observed all over the nature world. This got Dwyer thinking about why trees grew in this way, and if there was an evolutionary advantage in doing so. He knew that trees, like all plants, use their leaves to photosynthesize and decided to make that the focus of his investigation.

To do so, he constructed a “tree” using the sequence of leaves found on an oak tree. Except on his tree, Dwyer placed photovoltaic cells instead of leaves. He compared the amount of energy collected by his tree against a normal, flat array of solar cells. His results may surprise you:

The Fibonacci tree design performed better than the flat-panel model. The tree design made 20% more electricity and collected 2 1/2 more hours of sunlight during the day. But the most interesting results were in December, when the Sun was at its lowest point in the sky. The tree design made 50% more electricity, and the collection time of sunlight was up to 50% longer!

Whether Dwyer’s work is actually “groundbreaking” is probably open for debate. After all, scientists have been observing and investigating plants for centuries. However, his work is certainly impressive and has attracted some attention towards using a design drawn from nature to gather energy more efficiently. As much as it captures power, it also captures the imagination. As impressive as vast solar arrays in the desert are, I would much rather walk through a powerplant forest made of Dwyer’s trees. Not bad for a 13-year old.

UPDATE:

It seems we may have gotten ahead of ourselves on this one. A blog called the Capacity Factor presents a compelling, albeit pretty technical, argument that Dwyer’s results may be deeply flawed. You can read it here, and see further comments over on Hacker News.

I have no reason to doubt the validity of the science over on Capacty Factor and other media outlets who ran the original story, such as the Atlantic, are posting links to it as well. However, I do find it a bit odd that the original post has disappeared and seems to be only accessible via Google cache.

If anyone with a greater understanding of electrical engineering and would like to weigh in, I’d be interested to see what you have to say. Lay down your knowledge in the comments, please.

 

(American Museum of Natural History via Inhabitat)

  • http://www.facebook.com/fslurrehman Faisal Rehman

    genius – he should write a journal paper on this.

  • http://ksl.com Rod Decker (bearded) on U92

    For most people, graduate studies are a waste of time.  Just extra debt for folks who are too scared to enter the workforce.

    But this kid GETS IT.  He deserves a scholarship … after he gets 10 years older.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Z4CJFSWSF6NJQ2QO56FEBHKHJM K

    I partially disagree, having been denied a job I was wholly qualified for solely because I lacked a Master’s.  Really – if you don’t check off “Master’s degree in hand” they do not process the application.

    However I believe all levels of education should be accelerated – there are far too many jobs that “require” PhD’s that people could do perfectly fine if they’d had Master’s or even Bachelor’s, providing the Bachelor’s “education” wasn’t spent teaching students things they should have learned in MIDDLE SCHOOL.

    There are some people who do well on their own, but think of what this kid will be able to do with a mentor, instead of scrabbling on his own.  Amazing.

  • Anonymous

    tinyurl.com/2a7usxg

  • Anonymous

    Do not wait for a mentor. You don’t need one unless you are in a corporation. On your own, it is too much trouble to sell someone else on your ideas. Have confidence in your ideas and invest your own money. And if you won’t invest your money, that is a judgement as to how successful your dream might be. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/stpaz Hank Gallegos

    Sorry Max, this has been debunked already. This article disgusts me, to be honest. If you had stopped to use common sense for a second, it’s entirely clear that the logic behind this is flawed.

  • Anonymous
  • Dave

    He really should write a paper, but so his experimental design can be critiqued and debugged. Others have pointed out fatal flaws in his experiment that, if true, would render his results void. In particular, he measured open-circuit voltage rather than current output. The voltage output remains fairly constant even when a panel isn’t optimally oriented – not true of current.output. Maximum current flow is only seen when a panel is pointed directly at the sun. I suspect if he does it correctly the results will be quite different.

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