Science, asked by chinmayeedas1977, 6 months ago

What are wind farms? What are they set up for?​

Answers

Answered by stmjkliu
1

Answer:

Wind farms are areas where many large wind turbines have been grouped together. They “harvest” the power of the wind. These large turbines look a bit like super-tall windmills. A large wind farm can have hundreds of wind turbines spread out over hundreds of miles.

Answered by bhasinkomal
0

Answer:

HI FRIEND-

A wind farm is any group of wind turbines that, together, generate a sizeable amount of electricity and act as a power plant. Individual wind turbines were used to generate electricity as far back as 1887

Professor James Blyth of Glasgow constructed a 10m windmill that charged an early battery, which he used to power the lights in his home – although those living in the local town of Marykirk turned him down when he offered to light the main street from this windmill, saying that “electrical power was the work of the devil.” Devil’s work or not, we all rely on it to an increasing extent in the modern world.Wind power is arguably one of the oldest human technologies. Today, wind power is symbolized in most people’s minds by a big, white, monolithic wind turbine. As we try to move into the post-carbon era, it’s worth remembering that only wind, nuclear, and solar have the same technical potential to provide energy as fossil fuels do today. Perhaps the face of future power generation won’t be huge smokestacks, but fields of wind turbines.

HOPE THIS HELPS YOU

THANXS

BYE

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