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A random thought occurred to me:

Can we harness the energy from cosmic rays or particles or deadly radiation that's found (in space) just like we do for solar energy?

Artemis2100
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  • I think the answer is pretty yes, theoretically - but when you compare the energy density of that to the blowtorch that is solar radiation in space, it's probably not worth the trouble. – Chris B. Behrens Oct 21 '19 at 15:46

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It's not practical.

Energy density of cosmic rays: 1.8 eV/cm3, about 10-13 J/m3.

Energy density of the Sun on Earth: 103 J/m3, or 16 orders of magnitude more.

Hobbes
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    If the energy density of cosmic rays would be sufficient for energy harvesting, manned space flight would be impossible and semiconductor electronics would be destroyed. – Uwe Oct 21 '19 at 17:35
  • In the manner of a fresnel lens or parabolic mirror solar concentrator, you might use a giant magnetic field to concentrate cosmic rays (like a Bussard Ramjet collected hydrogen, in Larry Niven's stories). But the power you'd harvest would still be a tiny fraction of the power you'd spend to maintain the field. – Camille Goudeseune Oct 21 '19 at 19:45