Hanukkah can be green, too!

12/12/09  Print This Post Print This Post    1 Comment      Written by Julie Schwietert
    Share

Photo: CarbonNYC

Yeshiva University physics students invent a wind-powered menorah.

Hanukkah doesn’t seem to pose the same kinds of environmental problems that Christmas does, what with the latter’s cut and artificial trees and excess waste in the form of wrapping paper, ribbons, and bows.

But that doesn’t mean that Hanukkah can’t be greener.

Though most menorahs lit at home feature candles, public menorahs often blaze with the glow of electric light.

Two Yeshiva University physics students wanted to “green” these public menorahs, so they invented a wind-powered menorah, which they tested out this evening to mark the first night of Hanukkah.

From the New York Times City Blog:

“Their menorah is four feet wide and four feet tall, made of plastic and spray-painted gold. The lights are nine compact fluorescent bulbs. A cable connects them to a car battery. Another cable connects the battery to a wind turbine with a two-foot propeller…. The propeller turns a generator that generates current to charge the batteries. They provide a constant current and voltage to the compact fluorescent bulbs, which give more light on less power than incandescent bulbs.”

As Mark Stauber, one of the student inventors, remarked:

“In the miracle of the menorah, they got back to the temple and there was only enough oil for one night, but they made it last eight days…. I see an analogy with the world’s fight for sustainable energy, to take that and make it last as long as we’re going to need it.”

Happy Hanukkah.


    Share

About the Author

Matador ID: collazo

Julie Schwietert is the managing editor of Matador Network. She contributed a chapter to the recently published book, The Voluntary Traveler, and is currently working on five features for Fodor's Puerto Rico, 6th Edition.

1 Comment... join the discussion!

  • Nancy replied on December 12, 2009

    Great timely analogy-making one day’s oil last for 8 days. Wind-powered menorahs sound fun!

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply

Leave a Comment

Get Matador in your inbox and around the web.

Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter.


View full list of RSS feeds

Jump To Category:



Explore the Community



Popular Stories on Matador

A Meditation On Washing Dishes

Dirty dishes: the ultimate symbol of household drudgery... 

1% of American Students Study Abroad

Congress acts to improve study abroad opportunities for... 

Notes on Codification and Commodification in Travel Writing

Because codification enables a "common frame of referen... 

Experience the Art of Improv Travel

Travel is more about how you do it, not where you go. F... 

24 Hours at Burning Man

A day in the life of a burner.... 

Learning Experiences: Dancing Cueca in Chile

A few friends and I were sitting around a table watchin... 

Brand Obama: Organizing T-Shirts for America

Barack Obama may have Health Care Reform Bill t-shirts,... 

If Guidebooks Could Talk

Choosing the right 2D companion for your travels.... 

Doc (Not) in a Box

... 

Stand-Up Paddle Surfing, Hurricane Style

Beginners, we suggest starting elsewhere.... 



Focus


Blogroll




Editor Blogs