The light and heat produced from the Sun’s interaction with the Earth is the driving force of many physical processes such as wind and precipitation, as well as biological processes such as photosynthesis. Both non-renewable energy resources as well as renewable energy resources contain energy that was transformed from Sun energy.
Energy must be in balance for a healthy life and world. One example of this in some Yupik cultures is the balance of the Sun and the Moon. Dance and song are also balanced and tell the stories of Yupik life and balance within life. When energy is not in balance, there are consequences such as rivers not freezing in the winter or not having enough or the right nutrition for our bodies.
It can be hard to imagine when we fill up our car or snow machine with gasoline or when we eat moose or salmon that the Sun made that possible. The following lesson will help students understand the path that sunlight takes to eventually become electricity or other usable energy. Examples include renewable systems like solar, hydro, or wind producing electricity, salmon and berries fueling our bodies, biomass heating our homes, or gasoline running a 4-wheeler.
For example, wind is created by the uneven heating of the Earth’s surface by the Sun. Wind can be used to spin wind turbines to power generators, which produce electricity for our homes and buildings. There are plenty of windy places in Alaska, and several wind farms to generate electricity, such as the Pillar Mountain wind farm in Kodiak, the Fire Island wind farm near Anchorage and the Eva Creek wind farm near Healy.
The sun also drives the water cycle, through evaporation and precipitation. The water from rain or melted snow helps plants to grow; it also allows lakes to maintain normal water levels, and supplies the water that keeps rivers flowing. Hydroelectric power is produced when water that enters dams, rivers, and streams spins turbines connected to a generator. An example of a hydroelectric facility in Alaska is the Bradley Lake project on the Kenai Peninsula.
Another way to transform the energy of moving water to electrical energy is hydrokinetic energy. Hydrokinetic energy is created by using the force of moving water in rivers and oceanic wave and tide to spin turbines connected to a power generator. In Alaska, Igiugig (ig-ee-aw-gig) is producing electricity from an in-river hydrokinetic system. While no energy is currently being produced from our tidal and wave resources in Alaska, companies are exploring projects for tidal energy in Cook Inlet near Anchorage and wave energy near Yakutat. Note that tides are caused by the combined effects of gravitational forces exerted by the Moon, the Sun, and the rotation of the Earth. This can be related back to the balance of the Sun and the Moon in Yupik culture during discussions with students.
The Sun also drives energy systems through photosynthesis in green plants, algae, and bacteria. These organisms use the energy from the sun to drive several processes in the plant, eventually ending up with oxygen and glucose, a source of energy that helps the plants, algea, and bacteria grow. Green plants, algae, and bacteria are ingested by larger organisms, which humans then devour (or eat the plants themselves).
Photosynthesis also contributes to multiple resources used to produce biomass, such as wood, sawmill waste, fish byproducts, and municipal waste, and is a form of renewable energy. Biomass has long been used for burning to produce heat for homes, but is also sometimes to produce electricity and has offset diesel use in many small communities, businesses, greenhouses, and schools around Alaska.
Non-renewable resources such as coal, crude oil, and natural gas, also known as fossil fuels, are the product of tiny photosynthetic plants and animals that died and sank to the bottom of shallow oceans and swamps millions of years ago. They are covered by thick layers of sediment and begin to decompose under intense heat and pressure. They were eventually transformed into fossil fuels and extracted from deep underground sources to be used for a wide variety of applications today.