Paper
9 September 2014 Nonimaging optics heating up Mongolia's harsh winter
Roland Winston, Bennett Widyolar, Lun Jiang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
One of the world’s oldest civilizations – with the worst air pollution and the coldest capital city – will employ cutting-edge technology from the newest UC campus starting in February. Professor Roland Winston, who leads the UC Merced-based UC Solar Institute, just returned from a trip to Ulaanbaatar (UB), Mongolia’s capital. He met with the owner of Mongolia National University (MNU), a 15-yearold institution with about 9,000 students, to discuss installing a solar-thermal unit on one of the campus buildings to generate 3 kilowatts of steam heat for a portion of the campus
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Roland Winston, Bennett Widyolar, and Lun Jiang "Nonimaging optics heating up Mongolia's harsh winter", Proc. SPIE 9191, Nonimaging Optics: Efficient Design for Illumination and Solar Concentration XI, 91910D (9 September 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2065269
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KEYWORDS
Nonimaging optics

Buildings

Air contamination

Solar energy

Calorimetry

Lead

Minerals

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