Energy From Raindrops
conlaw writes to share that according to Discovery.com scientists have found a way to extract energy from rain. A new technique could utilize piezoelectric principles of a special kind of plastic to generate power from falling water in rainstorms or even commercial air conditioners. "The method relies on a plastic called PVDF (for polyvinylidene difluoride), which is used in a range of products from pipes, films, and wire insulators to high-end paints for metal. PVDF has the unusual property of piezoelectricity, which means it can produce a charge when it's mechanically deformed."
A typical raindrop has a fall velocity of about 8 m/s. Assuming a pretty healthy rainfall of 10cm (4 inches) we get 100 liters of water per square meter of land. 100 liters of water weighs 100kg, of course, and plugging that into the equation for kinetic energy gives us 6400 joules. Spread out over 2 hours, that's a whopping .89 watts per square meter.
All of that assumes 100% conversion efficiency and no losses due to standing water absorbing the impact of the drops. If the overall efficiency is, say, 50%, then you'd need something like 30 square meters to light a single compact fluorescent bulb. To generate a megawatt would require over 2 million square meters (over 500 acres).
Given that in most places it rains less often than the sun shines, this seems like an astonishingly inefficient way to generate electricity. There just isn't that much energy in rainfall.
Unfortunately, this is wrong. A raindrop doesn't keep on accelerating all of these 8 kilometers; it will reach it's terminal velocity, at which point the deceleration due to air resistance exactly cancels the acceleration due to gravity. Since raindrops are small, their surface area is large compared to their mass, so I'd imagine the terminal velocity to be rather small - which is a good thing, otherwise we'd get our skulls crushed to powder by rain, but sadly means that we can't extract all that much power from a single raindrop.
Actually, I checked, and according to WonderQuest, the average speed of a raindrop is between 2 (for small ones) to 9 (for large ones) meters per second. Since kinetic energy is mv^2, this works out to between 2000kg * 2m/s * 2m/s = 8000J (= 0.002 kWh) and 2000kg * 9m/s * 9m/s = 162 000J (= 0.045 kWh) per square meter per year.
Since the price of electricity is about 0.07 euros per kWh where I live, and a square meter of this thing would need about 22 years to produce a single kWh under optimal conditions and assuming a 100% efficient conversion, I don't think that it is a good investment.
Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.