wait if this is 600 watt club what are you doing posting pictures of outdoors? thats gotta be like 20,000 watts + easy. or more.
A sub club of the 600 is club yottawatt, so the suns cool.
fyi
"
​The Sun produces energy at the mass to energy conversion rate of 4.26 million metric tons per second, or 384.6 yottawatts (3.846×10[SUP]26[/SUP] W), or 9.192 × 10[SUP]10[/SUP] megatons of TNT per second."
Also
"The incident solar radiation at the highest point in our atmosphere is about 1400W per square meter.
By the time you reach
ground level, it is approximately 1000W/m^2 HOWEVER this value is VERY rough. It varies drastically as a function of zenith angle, latitude, time of year, etc, etc.
"
[TABLE="class: results"]
[TR]
[TH="bgcolor: #CCCCCC, align: left"]Bibliographic Entry[/TH]
[TH="bgcolor: #CCCCCC, align: center"]Result
(w/surrounding text)[/TH]
[TH="bgcolor: #CCCCCC, align: center"]Standardized
Result[/TH]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]Heimler, Neal.
Principles of Science. New York: Merrill, 1979.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"temperature surface: 6000 °C"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]4.1 × 10[SUP]26[/SUP] W[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]
SPARTAN 201-3: The Sun. Solar Data Analysis Center. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"… surface temperature is less than 6000 K"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]4.1 × 10[SUP]26[/SUP] W[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]
Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. 1996.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"The sun has a surface temperature of 5800 K"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]3.6 × 10[SUP]26[/SUP] W[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]Muirden, James.
Stars and Planets. Kingfisher, 1993.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"… outer layer of sun is 5800 K"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]3.6 × 10[SUP]26[/SUP] W[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"Sun."
World Book Encyclopedia. Field Enterprises, 1970.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"… about 126 trillion horsepower is sent to earth"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]4.7 × 10[SUP]25[/SUP] W[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"BNSG 133, Sun."Bill Nye The Science Guy. PBS. 20 November 1998.[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]"Four-hundred septillion watts! That's 400 trillion-trillion watts!"[/TD]
[TD="bgcolor: #FFFFCC, align: center"]4 × 10[SUP]26[/SUP] W
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]