Solar
in sentence
1475 examples of Solar in a sentence
Once upon a time some evil people made a movie about a guy that got shot into space, supposedly to go to Saturn, but really only to some stock footage of
solar
flares, and then he gets a nose bleed, and before you know it, he's laying in a hospital bandaged head to foot, and then an overweight nurse with an ill-fitting uniform comes in and gets eaten by the guy, whose supposed to be melting all over the place but never seems to lose any mass, and then NASA, or at least one guy at NASA, gets upset about it and calls one other guy in to hunt him down, but the guy they sent to hunt the melting guy has to go home and have soup first, and his oddly-shaped wife forgot the crackers, so he can't have crackers, and then he has to go out and look for the melting guy with a geiger counter, and that doesn't really work, so he really only follows the trail of half-eaten corpses, and then there's something about a sheriff, and two ugly old people in a lemon grove, and a women with a meat cleaver, and some kind of industrial plant with trigger-happy security guards, and since I can't tell you how the movies ends, all I can say is Jonathan Demme is in it somewhere with some guy with the stupid name of Burr DeBenning, and if there's any justice in the world everyone connected with this movie died a hideous, violent death and was unable to make more movies, and the world lived HAPPILY EVER AFTER - THE END!
The world is facing imminent destruction and a suicide mission is sent to the Sun to avert catastrophe by firing a bomb into its fiery heart: yes, it's
Solar
Crisis, aka Crisis 2050, which burned up a huge chunk of change that's never apparent on screen back in 1990 and returned barely enough to buy a Happy Meal for each of the cast in Japan before going straight to video (remember them?) in a re-edited version credited to one Alan Smithee.
The plot hook's pretty much the same as Sunshine - suicide mission to the Sun, saboteur on board, logic cast adrift - except that this time they're not trying to reignite the sun but to prematurely detonate a
solar
flare before it can reach Earth.
In this film, however, power from solar, Hydrogen, and wind sources are all dismissed out of hand as impracticable alternatives and cannot, or will not, be developed before we all suddenly starve, freeze, run amok, or whatever they suggest is going to happen in twenty years when oil reserves are suddenly depleted.
The movie has quite intense moments, something I don't experience too often, and the three disaster scenes, the aircraft, the subway trains and the
solar
flair are brilliantly carried off.
Yet, tre
solar
doesn't pull much off - due to the really lame script.
They take Lacombe and Melody to Shekkar's palace where a terrible fate awaits them at the hands of Shekkar and his evil witch Wandesa (Silvia Solar).
In this one, Adamson's buddy John Carradine and his crew of dorky associates blast off from Earth, are damaged by a
solar
something-or-other, and land on a planet inhabited by dinosaurs, vampires, lobstermen, batmen and cave people.
Quality-wise this movie isn't in the same
solar
system with its predecessor or the REAL sequel to "The Exorcist," the underrated "Exorcist III." Shun this movie unless you're looking for laughs.
Solar
Attack is about a large coronal mass ejection (CME) from the sun that threatens to ignite the atmosphere and kill everyone.
I will give you two reasons for watching this sci-fi potboiler about a
solar
burst that threatens to wipe out all life on our planet: martial artist Mark Dascascos as a disgraced scientist who figures out how to save the Earth and Lou Gossett Jr. as a black (!) U.S. president who decides to go along with Dascascos' seemingly harebrained plan.
The series was unbelievable until the Prof got killed off in, what was it 'a
solar
flare storm'.
his power is wind water and
solar
generated.
Hey, I noticed everyone spotted the spoof of Knight Rider, but did anyone pick up on this - the plot line about getting super powers from the sun after coming close to it in space is lifted straight from another doomed pilot show 'Northstar' - in which a NASA astronaut got hit in the face by a
solar
flare and then got super powers every time he looked at the sun!
As Madeline wanders the streets of suburban Long Island during a prolonged
solar
eclipse wondering if there's ever been a Wednesday, you can't help but identify on some level with her.
Vicky's husband Bill is a very famous Astromist who has recently discovered a new planet in the
solar
system and has no idea that his wife Vicky is not happy with him.
Armando Crispino's "Autopsy" begins deliciously enough with a two minute montage of
solar
flares and grisly suicides over the orgasmic moaning of a woman.
The largest
solar
emissions ever are detected and are about to set the whole damn world on fire.
With the international response to climate change at a critical juncture, the Trump administration is putting the US economy on a path to higher CO2 emissions by reversing emissions limits for coal-fired power plants, encouraging higher fossil-fuel production, and rolling back support for wind and
solar
power.
In November, Dubai announced the construction of a
solar
energy park that will produce electricity for less than $0.06 per kilowatt-hour – undercutting the cost of the alternative investment option, a gas or coal-fired power plant.
Indeed, hardly a week seems to pass without news of a major deal to construct a
solar
power plant.
In February alone, there were announcements of new
solar
power projects in Nigeria (1,000 megawatts), Australia (2,000 MW), and India (10,000 MW).
As efforts to improve the management of electricity from fluctuating sources yield further advances, the cost of
solar
power will continue to fall.
As Patrick Graichen, Agora’s executive director, points out, most forecasts of the world’s future energy supply fail to take into account
solar
power’s looming victory over its fossil-fuel competitors.
As
solar
power becomes increasingly cost-effective, countries located within the planet’s sun belt could develop entirely new business models as cheap, clean energy enables them to process their raw materials locally, adding value – and profit – prior to export.
Unlike large-scale conventional power plants,
solar
installations can be built in months; in addition to being cost-effective, they provide a quick means of responding to growing global demand.
And, because
solar
plants can generally be operated independently of complex interregional electricity grids, they provide less developed countries a way to electrify their economies without building expensive new infrastructure.
Solar
power plants thus could play the same role for energy that mobile phones did for telecommunications: rapidly reaching large, underserved communities in sparsely populated regions, without the need to invest in the cables and accompanying infrastructure that once would have been necessary.
There is no reason why
solar
power could not do likewise for access to electricity.
The time to invest in large-scale
solar
energy production is now.
Back
Next
Related words
Energy
Power
System
Panels
Electricity
Which
Other
There
Years
About
Could
Would
Renewable
Sources
Nuclear
Fuels
Technologies
World
Plants
Cells