PATENT ABSTRACT
Increased utilization of solar power is highly desirable as solar power is a readily available renewable resource with power potential far exceeding total global needs; and as solar power does not contribute to pollutants associated with fossil fuel power, such as unburned hydrocarbons, NOx and carbon dioxide. The present invention provides low-cost inflatable heliostatic solar power collectors, which a range of embodiments suitable for flexible utilization in small, medium, or utility scale applications. The inflatable heliostatic power collectors use a reflective surface or membrane “sandwiched” between two inflated chambers, and attached solar power receivers which are of concentrating photovoltaic and optionally also concentrating solar thermal types. Floating embodiments are described for certain beneficial applications on. Modest concentration ratios enable benefits in both reduced cost and increased conversion efficiency, relative to simple prior-art flat plate solar collectors.

PATENT DESCRIPTION
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Increased utilization of solar power is highly desirable as solar power is a readily available renewable resource with power potential far exceeding total global needs; and as solar power does not contribute to pollutants associated with fossil fuel power, such as unburned hydrocarbons, NOx and carbon dioxide. Solar powerplants produce no carbon dioxide that contributes as a greenhouse gas to global warming-in sharp contrast to fossil fuel powerplants such as coal, oil and even natural gas powerplants. Limitations to the widespread deployment of solar power has largely been a consequence of higher power cost per kilowatt-hour for traditional solar power systems as compared with fossil fuel power systems, driven in large part by the cost to make these solar power systems. 
     BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention provides inventive development of inflatable heliostatic solar collector devices. More specifically, the present invention provides for low-cost inflatable heliostatic solar power collectors, which are stand-alone units suitable for use in small, medium, or utility scale applications, as opposed to prior art “power tower” concepts best suited for utility scale application. In one preferred embodiment the inflatable heliostatic power collector uses a reflective surface or membrane “sandwiched” between two inflated chambers, and an elongated linear solar power receiver which receives solar insolation reflected and concentrated by this reflective surface. 
     The power receiver includes a photovoltaic receiver and may optionally also include a solar thermal receiver element, in preferred embodiments of the invention. The utilization of modest concentration ratios enables benefits in both reduced cost and increased conversion efficiency, relative to simple prior-art flat plate solar panels using silicon solar cells. 
     In a preferred embodiment the inflatable structure includes inventive application of simple lightweight and low cost frame members, and polar axis heliostatic aiming for Sun tracking, using simple and low cost motorized pointing control means. The polar axis will typically be oriented in a North-South orientation, with a tilt corresponding to latitude or a value within 25 degrees of the latitude. Air or liquid cooling means will preferably be utilized to keep temperatures in the photovoltaic receiver from exceeding limit values. The invention is intended to provide great flexibility and value in tailored applications using varying numbers of the low-cost inflatable heliostatic power collectors, of varying scalable size designs, for optimal use in applications ranging from (i) one or a few units for private home installations on a rooftop or back-yard, to (ii) estate/farm/ranch/commercial building installations with a small/medium field of units, to (iii) utility scale installations with medium/large/very large field(s) of units. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         FIG. 1A  shows a side view of a preferred air-cooled embodiment of the inflatable concentrating photovoltaic module invention. 
         FIG. 1B  shows an end view of the embodiment of  FIG. 1A . 
         FIG. 1C  shows an end view of the embodiment of  FIGS. 1B and 1A , in an inverted stow configuration. 
         FIG. 2A  shows a side view of a preferred thermosiphon (also spelled thermosyphon) cooled embodiment of the inflatable concentrating photovoltaic module invention. 
         FIG. 2B  shows an end view of the embodiment of  FIG. 2A . 
         FIG. 3  shows a side view of a preferred embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 2A , but also fitted with a pump. 
         FIG. 4A  shows a side view of an alternate embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1A . 
         FIG. 4B  shows a side view of another alternate embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1A . 
         FIGS. 5A through 5F  show side views of liquid-cooled embodiments of the invention with liquid transport pipes exiting the solar photovoltaic module. 
         FIGS. 6A and 6B  show side views of combinations of plural solar modules of different types in sequence. 
         FIG. 7  shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention that has a solar module with a liquid cooling system. 
         FIGS. 8A and 8B  show plan views of embodiments with connected arrays of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules. 
         FIGS. 9A through 9H  show side views of alternate embodiments of the invention. 
         FIGS. 10A through 10J  show partial cross-sectional views of alternate embodiments of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module, illustrated as a solar photovoltaic module, without limitation. 
         FIGS. 11A through 11D  show partial side views of the right end structure portion of the left and right end structures. 
         FIGS. 12 and 13  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of an upper module portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module that is a solar photovoltaic module. 
         FIGS. 14 and 15  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of a reflector module portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module that is a solar photovoltaic module, similar to that shown and described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A . 
         FIGS. 16A and 16B  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of a lower module of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module that is a solar photovoltaic module, similar to that shown and described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A . 
         FIG. 17  and  FIG. 18  show side sectional views of 40 foot and 20 foot representative scale solar modules, disassembled and packed into a representative shipping container. 
         FIG. 19  shows a partial end view of an embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1B . 
         FIG. 20  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with a connected array of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules, with two axis heliostatic tracking 
         FIG. 21  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with a connected array of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules, with one axis heliostatic tracking. 
         FIGS. 22A through 22G  show plan views of various floating embodiments of the invention. 
         FIGS. 23A through 23D  show partial sectional views of various floating embodiments of the invention. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
       FIG. 1A  shows a tilted side view of a preferred air-cooled embodiment of the inflatable concentrating photovoltaic module invention. 
       FIG. 1A  shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; an elongated upper inflatable volume  9  above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  9 ; an elongated lower inflatable volume  12  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower inflated volume  12 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
     In the illustrated embodiment the linear axis  4  is tilted from the horizontal plane  5  by a value corresponding substantially to the latitude of the installation of the solar photovoltaic module  1 , such that incoming sunrays would be substantially perpendicular or normal to the linear axis  4  at the time of the vernal and autumnal equinoxes, and tilted at the time of the summer and winter solstices. The illustrated angle of the incoming sunrays  8  coming from a sunward direction  8 D, corresponds approximately to winter solstice at solar noon, when the Sun&#39;s effective location will be lower or Southward towards the horizon for Northern Hemisphere installations, and lower or Northward towards the horizon in the Southern Hemisphere installations. Note that the sunrays  8  penetrate through the substantially transparent upper surface  11 , get reflected by the reflection and concentration surface  7  and then go through the transparent upper surface  11  again, before impinging on an elongated linear capture area on the typically downward facing solar cells of the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 . The sunrays reflected by the reflecting and concentration surface  7  converge towards a focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F and diverge after passing this focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F. It should be noted that a true focal line exists when the reflective surface is a true parabola in shape, but for typical approximate circular section reflectors we define the focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F as the centerline in the middle of the narrowest width part of the reflected beams of sunlight that occurs between where the reflected beams converge and diverge. The location of the focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F is just very slightly below the crown (top) line of the transparent upper surface  11  in the illustrated embodiment in  FIG. 1A , and will be seen with greater clarity in  FIG. 1B  following. The transparent upper surface  11  will preferably utilize a transparent material system that has very high transmissivity, is durable and tough, does not deteriorate when exposed to light and temperature variations and weather elements, and has a “self cleaning” attribute when naturally washed with rainwater. An example material that meets these attributes is ETFE, also known as Tefzel or Fluon, that has already found application in demanding applications in buildings, greenhouses, etc. The reflection and concentration surface should be highly reflective, light weight and low cost, and a reflectorized membrane such as mirror aluminized mylar could be used. The bottom surface  13  should be low cost, rugged and tough and hard to puncture, and suitable for protecting the solar module from hail or damage from storm induced falling twigs etc, when the device is in an inverted storm stow mode. Some examples, without limitation, are (i) a bottom surface material such as thick gage reinforced polyethylene membrane such as the material used in pond liners, and (ii) bubble wrap sandwich plus an external strong skin for the lower surface of the bottom surface  13 . 
       FIG. 1A  also shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16  with said linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
     In the embodiment of  FIG. 1A  the fan  28  blows cool ambient air up a air cooling pipe  22 A, which is preferably made of heat conductive material such as aluminum or copper alloys, to cite a couple of examples without limitation. The air cooling pipe  22 A conducts excess heat  27  from the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  to a stream of air flowing up the air cooling pipe  22 A, to the right in  FIG. 1A . The air serves as the heated cooling fluid  26  in this embodiment, and is driven in part to the right in  FIG. 1A  (upward and Northward in a typical Northern Hemisphere installation, upward and Southward in a typical Southern Hemisphere installation) by the natural buoyancy force that acts on heated fluid, and driven in part by the fan  28 . The heated air exits the air cooling pipe  22 A through an exhaust hood  22 E that serves as heat transfer means  32 , for venting the hot air which is the heated cooling fluid  26 , out into the cool atmosphere which is the cooler environment  34 . The illustrated exhaust hood  22 E has a roof element to prevent rain or other precipitation from falling into the air cooling pipe  22 A. The exhaust orifice of the exhaust hood  22 E and the intake orifice to the fan  28  may optionally covered with grille, mesh or screen material that allows mostly free flow of air, but prevents birds or insects or debris from entering into the air cooling pipe  22 A. While a blowing fan located near the bottom of the air cooling pipe is shown in the illustrated embodiment, it will be understood that alternate fan locations in the cooling pipe, or a sucking fan located near the top of the air cooling pipe, could be employed alternatively or in combination in other embodiments of the invention as claimed. 
       FIG. 1A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  includes at least one of (i) a single row  35 S of solar cells  36  (shown), (ii) a double row of solar cells (not shown), and (iii) multiple substantially linear rows of solar cells (not shown); which solar cells  36  are connected together by wires  38  at least in one of in series, in parallel, and in a combination of series and parallel; and which solar cells  36  are attached to a substantially linear upper beam structure  40  that serves as conductive heat transfer means  41  for enabling conductive heat transfer from said solar cells  36  to said heated cooling fluid  26 , which heated cooling fluid  26  is heated by heat from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  when the Sun  8 S is shining and said solar photovoltaic module  1  is operating. 
     The upper beam structure  40  may incorporate heat sink extrusion members in its interior to facilitate cooling performance, and in a version with two sided solar cells at the bottom of the upper beam structure  40 , the top of the upper beam structure  40  may be made of transparent material. Solar cells  36  may be monocrystalline or polycrystalline, or special high temp CPV cells known in the art; may have leads/connections in the back only or back and front; may have antireflective coatings and/or a protective film cover; may use encapsulant and/or side seals; and may have highly conductive wire side leads. 
       FIG. 1A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heated cooling fluid  26  comprises heated cooling air  26 A and wherein a fan  28  further contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 ; said cooling means  21  further including heat transfer means  32  for transferring heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34  outside said solar photovoltaic module  1 , which heat transfer means  32  includes at least one of (i) a cooling tube  82  with internal air flow  82 I at least partially driven by said fan  28 , (ii) cooling fins  83 , (iii) a cooling plate  83 P (not shown), (iii) cooling spikes  83 S (not shown), (iv) a cooling extrusion  83 E (here the same as the cooling fins  83 ) and (v) a cooling radiator  83 R (not shown). 
       FIG. 1A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the solar photovoltaic module  1  includes a central portion  44  with an approximately constant cross-section on planar cuts perpendicular to the axis of elongation of said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , and further includes left and right end structures  45  attached at least one of (a) hingedly and (b) fixedly, near the left and right ends of said upper beam structure  40 , which left and right end structures  45  each comprise at least one of (i) a beam member  46 B (shown), (ii) a wheel member  46 W (shown), (iii) a rim member  46 R (shown), (iv) plural spoke members  46 S (shown), (v) a hub member  46 H (shown), (vi) an axle member  46 A (shown), (vii) a plate member  46 P (not shown), (viii) a dished plate member  46 D (not shown) and (ix) a second beam member  46 SB (not shown) substantially perpendicular to said beam member  46 B. 
     The left and right end structures  45  provide end containment for at least one of normal and non-normal conditions, for the left and right ends of the reflection and concentrating surface  7  as well as for the left and right ends of the upper inflatable volume  9  and lower inflatable volume  12 . 
     The embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 1A  also shows a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the elongated upper inflatable volume  9  includes an inflatable central portion  47  with an approximately constant cross-section on planar cuts perpendicular to the axis of elongation of said elongated upper inflatable volume  9 , and further includes left and right end closure portions  48  on the left and right sides of said inflatable central portion  47 , which left and right closure portions  48  serve to provide left and right side enclosure for said elongated upper inflatable volume  9 , wherein said left and right end closure portions  48  are at least one of (a) transparent, (b) partially transparent, (c) reflective, (d) partially reflective or reflective on the inner side only, and (e) nontransparent; and wherein said left and right end closure portions  48  comprise at least one of (i) a membrane  48 M, (ii) an at least partially framed membrane  48 F (shown), (iii) an at least partially rigid dome segment  48 R (not shown), (iv) a plate member  48 P (not shown), and (v) a dished plate member  48 D (not shown). 
     The left and right end closure portions  48  may optionally use single or double wall ETFE or polycarbonate or other transparent material. Optional end members that close the right and left ends of the lower inflatable volume  12  may be nontransparent, and may use the same material or sheeting that is used for the bottom surface  13 . 
       FIG. 1A  also shows a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the reflection and concentration surface  7  includes a frame  7 F with perimeter structural members  50 P supporting said reflection and concentration surface  7  along at least portions of the perimeter of said reflection and concentration surface  7 ; and further comprising structural connection means  43  for at least one of detachably and permanently structurally connecting said frame  7 F to said left and right end structures  45 . 
     The embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 1A  further illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the reflection and concentration surface  7  includes at least one of (i) a reflective membrane  7 R which is reflective on its upper side and wherein an upwardly concave desired shape  7 S (not visible in this view) of said reflective membrane  7 R is at least in part maintained by the application of differential inflation pressure between said upper inflatable volume  9  and said lower inflatable volume  12 , (ii) a mirror element  7 M (not shown) which is reflective and concave on its upper side  7 U, and (iii) a frame supported reflective membrane  7 FR which is supported by a frame  7 F and is reflective and concave on its upper side  7 U, wherein said frame  7 F comprises at least one of (a) perimeter structural members  50 P supporting said reflection and concentration surface  7  along at least portions of the perimeter of said reflection and concentration surface  7 , which perimeter structural members  50 P also contribute to perimeter restraint of at least one of said substantially transparent surface  11  and said bottom surface  13 ; (b) shaping means  50 S adjacent to said reflection and concentration surface  7  serving as shaping means for contributing to an upwardly concave desired shape  7 S of said reflection and concentration surface  7 ; and (c) frame supported damping means  50 FD (not designated but corresponding to the element shown by the designator  50 D in the illustrated embodiment) adjacent to said reflection and concentration surface  7  serving as damping means  50 D for damping undesirable motion of said reflection and concentration surface  7 . 
     Note that the word “upwardly” refers to a direction with a sunward vector component, and typically best aligned with the direction vector to the Sun at solar noon. Note that the adjacent shaping means  50 S may comprise at least one of connected substantially rigid shaping structure and connected shaping tension elements, and that the damping means  50 FD may include viscoelastic damping materials or layer(s). Note also that undesirable motion may be induced by wind loads, by motor driven heliostatic pointing, by structural oscillations or vibrations, and by other causes. 
     The embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 1A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , further comprising rotatable attachment means  52  for at least one of detachably and permanently rotatably attaching said left and right end structures  45  to said support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein said rotatable attachment means  52  includes at least one of (i) a hub  53 H, (ii) an axle  53 A, (iii) a shaft  53 S, (iv) a bearing  53 B, (v) a pillow-block bearing  53 PB (not shown), and (vi) a joint  53 J (not shown); and wherein said heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  includes powered means  55  for controllably rotating at least one of said left and right end structures  45 , relative to said support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16 . 
     The illustrated powered means  55  provides means for controllably rotating the left end structure  45  and uses a motor driving a belt via a pulley, as illustrated. Different belt types such as timing belts, toothed belts or belt analogues such as chains can alternatively be used. The belt engages and drives the rim member  46 R of a wheel member  46 W in the illustrated embodiment of the invention, with a substantial gear reduction inherent in the belt drive as the wheel rim has a much larger diameter than the diameter of the pulley. This gear reduction is over and above any gear reduction built into the motor, which may for instance be a gearmotor (illustrated) or a stepper motor (an alternative). 
     Thus a solar photovoltaic module  1  is shown, wherein the heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, includes powered elevation control means  56  for orienting said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  over varying elevation angle  60  (see view in  FIG. 1B ) to follow the apparent daily motion of the Sun  8 S from East to West, wherein said powered elevation control means  56  comprises at least one of (a) a motor  61 M, (b) a gear motor  61 G, (c) a stepper motor  61 S (not shown), and (d) an actuator  61 A (not shown); and wherein said powered elevation control means  56  further comprises control linking means  62  serving as controllable means for variable-geometry linking between said support structure  15  on the first hand, and said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  on the second hand; said control linking means  62  comprising at least one of (i) a powered pulley  63 P engaging and driving an elevation control revolving drive element  63 E selected from the group consisting of a belt  63 B (not designated but corresponding to the element shown by the designator  63 E in the illustrated embodiment) and a chain  63 H (not shown) and a cable  63 C (not shown), (ii) a powered sprocket  63 S (not shown) engaging and driving an elevation control revolving drive element  63 E selected from the group consisting of a chain  63 H (not shown) and a toothed belt  63 TB (not shown) and a belt with periodic holes  63 BP (not shown) and a toothed cable  63 TC (not shown), (iii) a powered gear element  63 PG (not shown) engaging and driving a driven gear element  63 DG (not shown), and (iv) an orientation drive linkage  63 OD (not shown). 
     The embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 1A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , further comprising ballast means  57  located at a lower end region  45 E of at least one of said left end and right end structures  45 , for acting at least in part as a counterbalancing weight to the weight of said upper beam structure  40 , which ballast means  57  comprises at least one of (a) a ballast weight  58 W (not shown) located at the lower end region  45 E of left end structure  45 L, (b) a ballast weight  58 W (not shown) located at the lower end region  45 E of right end structure  45 R, (c) a ballast beam  58 B that connects the lower end regions  45 E of said left end structure  45 L and said right end structure  45 R, through at least one of detachable and permanent connection means, and (d) a fillable hollow ballast beam  58 F that connects the lower end regions  45 E of said left end structure  45 L and said right end structure  45 R, through at least one of detachable and permanent connection means. 
       FIG. 1A  also shows a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16  comprises a base frame  72  including at least one of (i) tubular frame elements  73 TU, (ii) beam elements  73 B, (iii) a plate element  73 P (not shown), (iv) a truss element  73 TR, (v) a frame tilting structure  74 , (vi) a variable height adjustable frame tilting structure  74 V, (vii) a controllable height frame tilting structure  74 C and (viii) at least one of a motorized and an actuated controllable height frame tilting structure  74 MAC (not shown); wherein said supporting surface  16  comprises at least one of (a) a ground surface  16 G (optional but not specifically called out in this Figure), (b) a paved surface  16 P (optional but not specifically called out in this Figure), (c) a floor surface  16 F (optional but not specifically called out in this Figure), (d) a roof surface  16 R (optional but not specifically called out in this Figure), and (e) a water surface  16 W (not shown) comprising at least one of (i) a frozen water surface and (ii) a liquid water surface on which said solar photovoltaic module  1  is supported at least in part by a buoyancy force  16 B (not shown). 
     Note that a variable height adjustable frame tilting structure  74 V, a controllable height frame tilting structure  74 C, or a motorized or actuated controllable height frame tilting structure  74 MAC, could be beneficially used to increase harvestable solar energy at seasons away from the vernal and autumnal equinoxes, when the Sun&#39;s apparent elevation angle can change by over 20 degrees from the nominal latitude tilt of the axis of rotation of the typical tilt frame structure with a North-South axis. The variable height adjustable frame tilting structure  74 V may have fixed stops corresponding to discrete times, e.g. one position per month. 
     The legs of the frame tilting structure  74  may either stand on the supporting surface  16  optionally using some kind of nonskid leg cap or footing, or may be positively anchored to or in the supporting surface  16 . 
       FIG. 1B  shows a partial end view of the embodiment of  FIG. 1A  from the left end at approximately double the scale of  FIG. 1A , and more clearly illustrates some of the features of the invention of  FIG. 1A  that can be better understood through the addition of this end view to supplement the side view of  FIG. 1A . Examples of more clearly illustrated features include (i) the elevation angle  60  and (ii) the sunrays reflected by the reflecting and concentration surface  7  converging towards a focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F and diverging after passing upward past this focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F. 
     A few additional features are visible in the view of  FIG. 1B , including: (i) a motor  61 M driving a powered pulley  63 P that in turn drives a drive belt  63 B that rotates the rotatable portion  19  of the solar photovoltaic module  1  to perform heliostatic one-axis tracking; (ii) belt tensioning means  63 BT for keeping the drive belt  63 B for heliostatic control at an appropriate tension; (iii) the wheel member  46 W with a hub member  46 H engaging an axle member  46 A, spoke members  46 S connecting the hub member  46 H with a rim member  46 R that is ringed around its perimeter by a rim member  46 R that is driven by the drive belt  63 B; (iv) cooling means  21  using a fan  28  blowing cooling air into an air cooling pipe  22 A that serves as a cooling tube  82 , fitted with the illustrated cooling fins  83  here comprising cooling extrusions  83 E; (v) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above an upwardly concave reflection and concentrating surface  7  that is supported and shaped by perimeter structural members  50 P and shaping means  50 S, with a substantially transparent surface  11  above the upper inflatable volume  10 U; and (vi) a lower inflatable volume  10 L below the upwardly concave reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below the lower inflated volume  10 L. 
       FIG. 1C  shows an end view of the embodiment of  FIGS. 1B and 1A , in an inverted stow configuration.  FIG. 1C  shows a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, further includes inverted stow means  70 IS for stowing said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  in an at least partially inverted configuration  70 PI, when commanded by at least one of (i) a user command  70 UC, (ii) a protective stow command  69 SC algorithmically computed from at least one signal  64  from a sensor  65  indicating a potentially hazardous environmental condition, and (iii) a protective stow command  69 SC algorithmically computed from at least one signal  64  from a sensor  65  indicating a failure condition. 
     As an example, inverted stow can be beneficially used in a hailstorm where hail may fall on the solar photovoltaic module  1 , or wind storm where blowing debris may fall on the solar photovoltaic module  1 . Other threats for which inverted stow may be warranted include heavy rain, snow, sleet, a sandstorm, heavy bird droppings, and falling debris such as twigs and windfalls from trees. With inverted stow, the potentially damaging falling items would hit a puncture-resistant, tough/rugged and potentially multi-layer bottom surface  13  cushioned by the lower inflatable volume  10 L, rather than the substantially transparent surface  11  bounding the upper inflatable volume  10 U. In some conditions such as a sandstorm where an environmental threat is from the side rather than the top of the solar photovoltaic module  1 , a sideward stow position could be commanded based on sensed/computed threat, with the bottom surface  13  facing the threat direction. Examples of a sensor  65  indicating a potentially hazardous environmental condition could include sensors for wind, precipitation, hail, impact, and load. 
       FIG. 2A  shows a side view of a preferred thermosiphon cooled embodiment of the inflatable concentrating photovoltaic module invention, that is similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1A  but with the air cooling system replaced by a liquid cooling system. 
       FIG. 2A  illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heated cooling fluid  26  comprises at least one of heated cooling water  84 W [option not shown] and heated liquid coolant  84 C [shown]; wherein at least one of a pump  30  [not shown] and a thermosiphon  31  [shown] contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 ; and further comprising at least one of: (a) heat transfer means  32  [shown] for transferring heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34  outside said solar photovoltaic module  1 ; and 
     (b) beneficial heat use means  77  for beneficially using heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  [not shown]. 
     [c19 but without beneficial heat specifications] 
     The illustrated thermosiphon  31  includes liquid heating tube means  31 H here comprising a shallow depth enclosed near-rectangular tubular flow path immediately above and adjacent to the back sides of the solar cells in the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , in which the heated cooling fluid  26  heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  rises due to buoyancy forces that naturally act on heated liquids. At the upper end (right end in this Figure) of the tubular flow path, the enclosed closed-loop flow path curves upward and back into a radiator  31 R here comprising a cooling radiator  83 R in the form of a spiral radiator. An upper tank for the heated cooling fluid  26  may optionally be provided but is not shown, in a manner as known from the art of thermosiphon systems. In the illustrated embodiment, the heated liquid spirals downward through the radiator  31 R whilst cooling and transferring heat by heat transfer means  32  (through the walls of the spiral radiator) for transferring heat from the heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34  (the atmosphere) outside the solar photovoltaic module  1 . The cooled fluid then loops down and around to the lower end (left end in the Figure) inflow connection into the liquid heating tube means  31 H. Note that the illustrated thermosiphon system requires no external power and has no pump, but that alternate embodiments may utilize a supplementary pump. 
       FIG. 2A  shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; an elongated upper inflatable volume  9  above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  9 ; an elongated lower inflatable volume  12  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower inflated volume  12 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
       FIG. 2A  also shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16  with said linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
       FIG. 2A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  includes at least one of (i) a single row of solar cells (not shown), (ii) a double row  35 D of solar cells  36  (shown), and (iii) multiple substantially linear rows of solar cells (not shown); which solar cells  36  are connected together by wires  38  at least in one of in series, in parallel, and in a combination of series and parallel; and which solar cells  36  are attached to a substantially linear upper beam structure  40  that serves as conductive heat transfer means  41  for enabling conductive heat transfer from said solar cells  36  to said heated cooling fluid  26 , which heated cooling fluid  26  is heated by heat from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  when the Sun  8 S is shining and said solar photovoltaic module  1  is operating. 
     The substantially linear upper beam structure  40  here also doubles as the previously described liquid heating tube means  31 H here comprising a shallow depth enclosed near-rectangular tubular flow path immediately above and adjacent to the back sides of the solar cells in the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 . 
     The illustrated powered means  55  provides means for controllably rotating the left end structure  45  and uses a motor-driven powered sprocket  63 S engaging and driving an elevation control revolving drive element  63 E consisting of a toothed belt  63 TB, as illustrated. Different belt types including timing belts, toothed belts or belt analogues such as chains can alternatively be used. The toothed belt  63 TB engages and drives a tooth-engaging rim member  46 R of a wheel member  46 W in the illustrated embodiment of the invention, with a substantial gear reduction inherent in the belt drive as the wheel rim has a much larger diameter than the diameter of the pulley. This gear reduction is over and above any gear reduction built into the motor, which may for instance be a stepper motor  61 S (illustrated) or a gearmotor (an alternative). 
     Thus a solar photovoltaic module  1  is shown in  FIG. 2A , wherein the heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, includes powered elevation control means  56  for orienting said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  over varying elevation angle  60  (see view in  FIG. 2B ) to follow the apparent daily motion of the Sun  8 S from East to West, wherein said powered elevation control means  56  comprises at least one of (a) a motor  61 M, (b) a gear motor  61 G (not shown), (c) a stepper motor  61 S (shown), and (d) an actuator  61 A (not shown); and wherein said powered elevation control means  56  further comprises control linking means  62  serving as controllable means for variable-geometry linking between said support structure  15  on the first hand, and said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  on the second hand; said control linking means  62  comprising at least one of (i) a powered pulley  63 P (not shown) engaging and driving an elevation control revolving drive element  63 E selected from the group consisting of a belt  63 B and a chain  63 H and a cable  63 C, (ii) a powered sprocket  63 S (shown) engaging and driving an elevation control revolving drive element  63 E (shown) selected from the group consisting of a chain  63 H (not shown) and a toothed belt  63 TB (shown) and a belt with periodic holes  63 BP (not shown) and a toothed cable  63 TC (not shown), (iii) a powered gear element  63 PG (not shown) engaging and driving a driven gear element  63 DG, and (iv) an orientation drive linkage  63 OD (not shown). 
     Finally,  FIG. 2A  also shows the solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, performs its aiming function as a function of at least one of (i) a signal  64  (shown) from a Sun angle sensor  65 S (shown), (ii) time of day from a clock  66 C, (iii) time of year from a clock  66 C, (iv) year from a clock  66 C, (v) latitude data  66 LA of the location of installation  66 LI of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , (vi) longitude data  66 LO of the location of installation  66 LI of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , (vii) true heading orientation  66 TH of said support structure  15  relative to said supporting surface  16 , and (viii) slope  16 SL of said supporting surface  16 . 
     The Sun angle sensor  65 S sends signals to the powered elevation control means  56  to rotate the solar reflector and receiver subsystems to track the Sun&#39;s apparent motion through the skies. During periods of darkness such as night or cloud cover, the rotation will stop, and resume when the Sun is again visible. Therefore at dawn, the device will rotate back from facing West to facing East to face the rising Sun. For adverse weather conditions necessitating an downward facing emergency stow orientation, an emergency stow command will override the pointing command from the Sun angle sensor  65 S. 
       FIG. 2B  shows an end view of the embodiment of  FIG. 2A , that is also similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1B  but with the air cooling system replaced by a liquid cooling system. 
       FIG. 2B  shows a partial end view of the embodiment of  FIG. 2A  from the left end at approximately double the scale of  FIG. 2A , and more clearly illustrates some of the features (e.g., elevation angle  60 ) of the invention of  FIG. 2A  that can be better understood through the addition of this end view to supplement the side view of  FIG. 2A . 
     A few additional features are visible in the view of  FIG. 2B , including: (i) a motor  61 M (here a stepper motor  61 S) driving a powered sprocket  63 S that in turn drives a toothed belt  63 TB that rotates the rotatable portion  19  of the solar photovoltaic module  1  to perform heliostatic one-axis tracking; (ii) belt tensioning means  63 BT for keeping the toothed belt  63 TB for heliostatic control at an appropriate tension; (iii) the wheel member  46 W with a hub member  46 H engaging an axle member  46 A, spoke members  46 S connecting the hub member  46 H with a rim member  46 R that is ringed around its perimeter by a rim member  46 R that is driven by the toothed belt  63 TB; (iv) a substantially linear upper beam structure  40  that also doubles as the previously described liquid heating tube means  31 H comprising a shallow depth enclosed near-rectangular tubular flow path immediately above and adjacent to the back sides of the solar cells in the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , and thus serves as an integral part of the cooling means  21  using heated cooling fluid  26  comprising heated liquid coolant  84 C that flows in a thermosiphon  31 , and further comprising heat transfer means  32  including a radiator  31 R comprising a cooling radiator  83 R in the form of a spiral radiator for transferring heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34 ; (v) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above an upwardly concave reflection and concentrating surface  7  that is supported and shaped by perimeter structural members  50 P and shaping means  50 S, with a substantially transparent surface  11  above the upper inflatable volume  10 U; and (vi) a lower inflatable volume  10 L below the upwardly concave reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below the lower inflated volume  10 L. 
       FIG. 3  shows a side view of a preferred embodiment of a solar photovoltaic module  1  similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 2A , but also fitted with a pump  30 . The pump  30  increases or augments the buoyancy induced flow in the liquid cooling system with the thermosiphon  31 . Pump augmented cooling can be provided either all the time when the solar photovoltaic module  1  is operational, or at selected times when augmented cooling is needed such as times of maximum solar radiation and/or maximum ambient temperature and/or when a temperature sensor adjacent to or imbedded in a solar cell indicates a temperature above a threshold value. 
       FIG. 3  thus illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heated cooling fluid  26  comprises at least one of heated cooling water  84 W [shown] and heated liquid coolant  84 C [option not shown]; wherein at least one of a pump  30  [shown] and a thermosiphon  31  [also shown] contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 ; and further comprising at least one of: (a) heat transfer means  32  [shown] for transferring heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34  outside said solar photovoltaic module  1 ; and 
     (b) beneficial heat use means  77  for beneficially using heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  [not shown]. 
     [c19 but without beneficial heat specifications] 
       FIG. 4A  shows a side view of an alternate embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1A , wherein the fan  28  blows cooling air not only directly into the air cooling pipe  22 A, but also into a bypass air pipe  22 B which in the illustrated embodiment is bifurcated into a branch in front and branch behind the air cooling pipe  22 A, as seen in from this side view perspective. The bypass air pipe  22 B in each branch also has a contracting or tapering cross-sectional area going with the flow from left to right, to prevent adverse pressure gradients. The bypass cooling air feeds into the primary air cooling pipe  22 A through air feed holes  22 H on the near and far side walls of the air cooling pipe  22 A, at representative selected locations down the length of the pipe as illustrated. The motivation of providing a bypass air flow path is as follows. The cooling air in the primary air cooling pipe  22 A would normally get hotter and hotter moving from left to right along the pipe as illustrated, as more waste heat from the solar cells gets transferred progressively into the cooling air flow tube. By inserting fresh cool air from the bypass ducts into middle portions of the air cooling pipe  22 A through the air feed holes  22 H and preferably impinging at least in part on the cooling fins  83 , cooling air temperatures and adjacent photovoltaic receiver/solar cell temperatures can be kept from getting very high towards the right or exhaust end of the air cooling pipe  22 A, and in this manner the efficiency loss of the solar cells near the right end of the Figure (due to higher operating temperatures) can be reduced or mitigated. 
     Alternate geometries of bypass air paths are of course possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, including separate pipes and internal flow control or guide walls within the air cooling pipe  22 A. 
       FIG. 4A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , further comprising at least one of (i) user input computer means  68 IC for receiving and executing a user input instruction  68 I, (ii) sensor input computer means  68 SIC for receiving and processing an input signal  64  from a sensor  65  (a Sun angle sensor  65 S in the illustrated embodiment), (iii) aiming computer means  68 AC for algorithmically computing and commanding desired orientation  69 DO (reflective mean surface facing sunward) of said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , (iv) stow computer means  68 SC (not shown) for computing and commanding a protective stow position  69 S (not shown) of said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , and (v) diagnostic computer means  68 DC for identifying at least one of nonoptimal operation, faulty operation and a failure condition of said solar photovoltaic module  1 . 
     Examples of computer means that could be employed include a digital computer, analog computer, hybrid computer, digital processor, microprocessor, computer hardware, computer firmware and computer software. 
       FIG. 4A  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , further comprising means for performing inflation control  75  including at least one of means for increasing inflation pressure  75 I, means for maintaining inflation pressure  75 M, means for decreasing inflation pressure  75 D, means for limiting inflation pressure  75 L (not specifically shown) and means for controllably adjusting inflation pressure  75 C (not specifically shown), in at least one of said upper inflatable volume  9  and said lower inflatable volume  12 , wherein said means for performing inflation control  75  includes at least one of an inflation valve  76 I, a deflation valve  76 D, a pressure limiting valve  76 PL, a pressure relief valve  76 PR (not specifically shown), an adjustable gang valve  76 G (not specifically shown), a differential pressure maintaining device  76 DP (not specifically shown), an openable orifice  76 O (not specifically shown) and an air pump  76 AP (not specifically shown). 
     In the illustrated embodiment, separate inflation valves are shown provided for inflating the upper inflatable volume  9  and the lower inflatable volume  12 , with each having features similar to an automobile tire inflation valve to enable inflation, deflation, and flow blocking as desired by a user with an air pump and a deflation prong to engage a valve tip. The inflation valves will preferably incorporate a pressure limiting function and automatically stop inflation beyond optionally different threshold values for the upper inflatable volume  9  and the lower inflatable volume  12 . In normal use the target set pressure in the upper inflatable volume  9  will be set at a value higher than the target set pressure in the lower inflatable volume  12 . 
       FIG. 4B  shows a side view of another alternate embodiment similar to the embodiments of  FIG. 1A  and  FIG. 4A , but with a forced air cooling system comprising a downward blowing fan  28  that receives air through an inlet hood  22 I, with the air from the downward blowing fan  28  forking into left and right flowing streams of internal air flow  82 I, as shown, that cool the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and exhaust through left and right exhaust hoods  22 E. The inlet hood  22 I and fan  28  are located partway along the length of the air cooling pipe  22 A, as illustrated. A nominal location below the halfway point of the air cooling pipe is shown, as the left (downward) flowing stream in the view of the Figure has to overcome the opposing buoyancy forces acting on the heated air, while the right (upward) flowing stream is aided by the buoyancy forces acting on the heated air. 
       FIGS. 5A through 5F  show side views of liquid-cooled embodiments of the invention with liquid transport pipes exiting the solar photovoltaic module  1 . 
       FIG. 5A  shows an embodiment of the invention in many respects similar to the embodiments of  FIG. 1A  and  FIG. 2A , but with a cooling system now comprising a liquid cooling system with liquid transport pipes  33  into and out of the solar photovoltaic module  1 . Cooler liquid  84 CL is transported by an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I that originates at a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 , which inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I is then is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  to feed into the bottom end (left end in the view of  FIG. 5A ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H, where the liquid (e.g., a heated liquid coolant  84 C shown) flows upwards (to the right in the view of  FIG. 5A ) while absorbing heat from the elongated solar receiver  2 A (that may be one or both of an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and/or an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T) and increasing in temperature. The hotter liquid  84 HL, which may also be mixed phase with some boiling occurring in some embodiments, exits the top end (right end in the view of  FIG. 5A ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O, which outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  and subsequently exits to a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 . While the cooling liquid flow path is shown on the back side of the downward facing solar cells of the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , in alternate embodiments the liquid flow path may be on the front side of the downward facing solar cells with a transparent cooling fluid such as water flowing in a transparent (e.g., glass, polycarbonate, ETFE, etc) flow channel, and/or on the lateral sides of the solar cells, and/or in a combination of geometric locations relative to the solar cells. 
     Note that the illustrated inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O both include fluid flow rotary joints  53 RJ including an axle member  46 A. It should be understood that in alternate embodiments rotary joints, rotary unions or flexible hose fittings can alternatively be used to transport liquid across the rotating interfaces between (a) the nonrotating support structure  15  and (b) the rotatable portion  19  of the solar photovoltaic module  1  that includes the reflection and concentration surface  7  and the elongated solar receiver  2 A. 
     The liquid cooling system of  FIG. 5A  can effectively cool an elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and keep the photovoltaic cells or solar cells on the photovoltaic receiver at a lower temperature where they are not at risk of thermally induced damage and where they operate at higher electric power harvesting efficiency. The liquid cooling system can be either closed-loop or open-loop, and use water or other coolant liquids, as known from the prior art of many variant liquid cooling systems. Furthermore, additional renewable energy can optionally be harvested by utilizing the temperature difference between the hotter liquid  84 HL and the cooler liquid  83 CL to run a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E (not shown) and/or a thermoelectric device  81 D (not shown), to produce mechanical and/or electrical output. In the case of this option, the elongated solar receiver  2 A serves as both an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T concurrently. In a still further variant embodiment, a photovoltaic receiver  2  may be absent, with the elongated solar receiver  2 A serving only as an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, and all the useful renewable energy extraction being through use of a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E and/or a thermoelectric device  81 D, to produce mechanical and/or electrical output. 
     In the case of a closed-loop liquid cooling system, means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC may be provided between the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O carrying hotter liquid  84 HL and eventually returning into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I as cooler liquid  84 CL, which means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC may include at least one of a liquid reservoir, a heat exchanger, a radiator and a cooling tower. 
       FIG. 5B  shows a variant embodiment wherein an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and a separate and distinct elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T are both incorporated, in a stacked geometry and sequential liquid flow configuration. Thus in this embodiment two elongated solar receivers  2 A are provided, one being an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and the other a separate and distinct elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. 
     In the illustrated embodiment the focal line  8 F of reflected sunrays  8  that are reflected and concentrated by the reflection and concentration surface  7 , is shown to be above both the stacked elongated solar receivers  2 A, at a location such that some of the reflected and concentrated sunrays fall on the downward facing solar cells of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , while the balance of reflected and concentrated sunrays pass by the front and/or back sides (in this view) of the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  and fall on the underside of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T with at higher concentration in suns than on the elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  (as the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T has a linear axis location closer to the focal line  8 F than does the linear axis location of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ). 
       FIG. 5B  shows an embodiment of the invention in many respects similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 5A , with a cooling system now comprising a liquid cooling system with liquid transport pipes  33  into and out of the solar photovoltaic module  1 . Cooler liquid  84 CL is transported by an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I that originates at a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 , which inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I is then is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  to feed into the bottom end (left end in the view of  FIG. 5A ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H, where the liquid (e.g., a heated liquid coolant  84 C shown) flows upwards (to the right in the view of  FIG. 5A ) while absorbing heat from the elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . This heat can be considered “waste heat” from the solar cells, but the “waste heat” nomenclature is not entirely appropriate as the heat can be put to use as will be explained in the following. At the (right) end of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  the liquid is an intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, which serves as a preheated input liquid for the upper, left flowing portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H that corresponds with the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. The liquid is heated to higher temperatures as it flows through the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, until it exits as a hotter liquid  84 HL at the left end of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in this illustration. The hotter liquid  84 HL, which may also be mixed phase with some boiling occurring in some embodiments, exits the left end of the upper portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O, which outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  and subsequently exits to a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 . 
     Note that the illustrated inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O traverse a dual-flow fluid rotary joint  53 RJ in this illustrated embodiment. It should be understood that in alternate embodiments a dual-flow rotary union or flexible concentric insulated hose fittings can alternatively be used to transport liquid across the rotating interfaces between (a) the nonrotating support structure  15  and (b) the rotatable portion  19  of the solar photovoltaic module  1  that includes the reflection and concentration surface  7  and the elongated solar receiver  2 A. 
     Note also that the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O would come down different A-frame leg members of the support structure  15 , fore and aft behind one another in this view, in a preferred embodiment. In an alternate embodiment both the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O could be routed down from the dual-flow fluid rotary joints  53 RJ along or inside a single leg member of the support structure  15 , within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
     The liquid cooling system of  FIG. 5B , as in the embodiment of  FIG. 5A , can effectively cool an elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and keep the photovoltaic cells or solar cells on the photovoltaic receiver at a lower temperature where they are not at risk of thermally induced damage and where they operate at higher electric power harvesting efficiency. The liquid cooling system can be either closed-loop or open-loop, and additional renewable energy will preferably be harvested by utilizing the temperature difference between the hotter liquid  84 HL and the cooler liquid  83 CL to run a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E and a thermoelectric device  81 D, to produce mechanical and electrical output. 
     Preferably means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC (not shown) will be provided between the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O carrying hotter liquid  84 HL and downstream of the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, before returning into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I as cooler liquid  84 CL, which means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC may include for example a liquid reservoir, a heat exchanger, or a radiator. In variant embodiments some or all of the heat from the hotter liquid  84 HL can be beneficially used for heating purposes, such as providing hot water for a home, building or swimming pool or hot tub, and/or for home or building heating, and/or for cooking and/or for industrial or commercial process heat. The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E and thermoelectric device  81 D may be absent in some of these variant embodiments. 
     In the illustrated embodiment since both thermodynamic and thermoelectric energy harvesting means are included, the thermoelectric device  81 D serves as supplemental thermoelectric means  81  for harvesting additional power from the Sun, which supplemental thermoelectric means acts as means for directly harvesting electrical energy from the heat carried in the hotter liquid  84 HL. 
       FIG. 5B  also illustrates generator means  80  connected to the mechanical energy output from the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, serving as generator means  80  for converting at least some of the mechanical energy into electrical energy. Electric power conditioning means  80 C are shown for conditioning electrical output from the various sources such as the downward facing solar cells of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , the generator means  80  and the thermoelectric device  81 D. The electrical power conditioning means  80 C may perform one or more of electrical power conditioning functions known from the prior art, such as DC to or from AC conversion (e.g., inverter function), voltage changing, voltage and/or current stabilizing, phase control or changing, and/or other electrical power conditioning functions as are known from the prior art. The electrical power conditioning means  80 C may also serve as grid-engagement means for permitting said power output to feed back into an electrical power grid and at least one of slow, stop and reverse an electrical meter measuring net power flow from or to said electrical power grid. 
     The output from the electrical power conditioning means  80 C is transmitted by electric power transmission means  80 T such as electrical wire or cable, to users of electric power such as a home or building that may be off-grid or grid-connected, and may optionally feed back into an electric grid through a net-metering or other mechanism as known in the art. 
       FIG. 5B  therefore illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the electrical power means  20  further includes supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises at least one of (i) supplemental thermodynamic power means  78 T for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, wherein said heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  serves at least in contributory part as a working fluid  94  for a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H including said heat  27 , with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E; and (ii) supplemental thermoelectric means  81  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental thermoelectric means  81  acts as means for directly harvesting electrical energy  79 E from said heat  27 . 
       FIG. 5B  also illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein the heated cooling fluid  26  comprises at least one of heated cooling water  84 W and heated liquid coolant  84 C; wherein at least one of a pump  30  and a thermosiphon  31  contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 ; and further comprising at least one of: 
     (a) heat transfer means  32  for transferring heat from said heated cooling fluid  26  to a cooler environment  34  outside said solar photovoltaic module  1 ; and 
     (b) beneficial heat use means  77  for beneficially using heat from said heated cooling fluid  26 , which beneficial heat use means  77  comprises at least one of: 
     (i) supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises supplemental thermodynamic power means  78 T for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, wherein said heated cooling fluid  26  serves at least in contributory part as a working fluid  94  for a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H in said heated cooling fluid  26 , with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E;
 
(ii) supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises supplemental thermoelectric means  81  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental thermoelectric means  81  acts as means for directly harvesting electrical energy  79 E from heat energy  79 H in said heated cooling fluid  26 ; and
 
(iii) means for using heat energy  79 H in said heated cooling fluid  26  for providing beneficial heat (optional and not shown) to at least one of a building, a home, a swimming pool, a hot water tank, a heating appliance, a heating device, a dryer, a cooking appliance, a cooking device, an industrial process, and a chemical process.
 
       FIG. 5C  illustrates an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 5A , but with a thermosiphon cooling system for an elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  with the addition of a temperature stratified liquid holding tank  33 T between the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O carrying hotter liquid  84 HL before returning into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I as cooler liquid  84 CL. Note that in this embodiment the structure of the liquid holding tank  33 T doubles as the portion of the support structure  15  that supports the upper (right in this view) part of the solar photovoltaic module  1 . A hot water outlet pipe  33 HO and a cold water inlet pipe  33 CI are also shown connected to the upper hot strata level and lower cool strata level respectively of the liquid holding tank  33 T. Hot water from the hot water outlet pipe  33 HO can be beneficially used as hot water per se and/or for heating purposes, such as providing hot water for a home, building or swimming pool or hot tub, and/or for home or building heating, and/or for cooking and/or for industrial or commercial process heat. The cold water inlet pipe  33 CI can supply cold water to replenish the water quantity in the liquid holding tank  33 T when hot water is taken out, or in the event of any leaks in the cooling system. It will be understood that other coolants or liquids could be used in lieu of water, in variant embodiments of the invention. It will also be understood that a simple thermosiphon system could be replaced by a pump-augmented thermosiphon system in variant embodiments, within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
       FIG. 5D  shows a partial side view of an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 5B , with two elongated solar receivers  2 A being provided, one being an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and the other a separate and distinct elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. However, in  FIG. 5D  the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T is located below the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . In  FIG. 5D  the focal line  8 F of reflected sunrays  8  that are reflected and concentrated by the reflection and concentration surface  7 , is shown to be between the two stacked elongated solar receivers  2 A, at a location such that some of the reflected and concentrated sunrays fall on the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, while the balance of reflected and concentrated sunrays pass by the front or/and back sides (in this view) of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, pass substantially through the focal line  8 F and then before expanding too much, fall on the downward facing solar cells of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . A working fluid  94   94  that also serves as liquid coolant for the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , enters the solar photovoltaic module  1  pumped by a pump  30  into an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I as cooler liquid  84 CL. The working fluid  94  then moves up (to the right in the figure) in liquid heating tube means  31 H that is typically a rectangular cross-section tube immediately adjacent to and heat-conductively connected to the back side of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , where the working fluid  94  cools the solar cells and concurrently becomes a heated liquid coolant  84 C. Buoyancy forces acting on the heated liquid coolant  84 C assist the pump  30  in motivating and driving the flow to the right in the upper liquid heating tube means  31 H, as illustrated. The heated liquid coolant  84 C that is an intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, serves as preheated working fluid  90  for the lower, left flowing portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H that corresponds with the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. The liquid is heated to higher temperatures as it flows through the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, until it exits as a hotter liquid  84 HL at the left end of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in this illustration. The hotter liquid  84 HL, exits the left end of the lower portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O. As in the embodiment of  FIG. 5B , for the embodiment of  FIG. 5D  also, the liquid cooling system can be either closed-loop or open-loop, and additional renewable energy will preferably be harvested by utilizing the temperature difference between the hotter liquid  84 HL and the cooler liquid  83 CL to run a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, to produce mechanical and electrical output over and above the electrical output from the solar cells in the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . 
       FIG. 5E  shows a partial side view of another embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 5B , with two elongated solar receivers  2 A being provided, one being an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and the other a separate and distinct elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T stacked above it. However, in this variant the fluid flow is upward (to the right in the view of the Figure) in both the two liquid heating tube means  31 H, one associated each with the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. This is accomplished through the use of a double-back or connecting tube  31 C, and offers the benefit of hot fluid buoyancy forces assisting in driving the thermosiphon effect in both of the two liquid heating tube means  31 H. A pump  30  is optional and not necessarily required for this variant embodiment. 
       FIG. 5F  shows a partial side view of another embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 5B , but with the liquid transport pipes  33  comprising the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O connect to the upper ends (left on this Figure as the local gravity vector  6  tilts the opposite way as in  FIG. 5B ) rather than the lower ends of the two elongated solar receivers  2 A, one being an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and the other a separate and distinct elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T stacked above it. A pump  30  pushes the fluid down the lower liquid heating tube means  31 H (associated with the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ), and the heated liquid coolant  84 C that is an intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, serves as preheated working fluid  90  for the upper, left flowing portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H that corresponds with the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. The liquid is heated to higher temperatures as it flows (assisted by buoyancy force acting on the increasingly hot fluid) through the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, until it exits as a hotter liquid  84 HL at the left (upper) end of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T through the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O in this illustration. The flows from the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O can both go through a dual-flow fluid rotary joints  53 RJ (not shown), as in the embodiment of  FIG. 5B . 
       FIGS. 6A and 6B  show side views of combinations of plural solar modules  1 A of different types in sequence. 
       FIG. 6A  shows two solar modules  1 A in sequence, where the module on the left of the Figure is a solar photovoltaic module  1  that is a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F; while the module on the right of the Figure is a solar thermal module  1 T that is a second solar module  1 S. 
     Cooler liquid  84 CL is transported by an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I that is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  that is a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F, to feed into the bottom end (left end in the view of  FIG. 6A ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H, where the liquid flows upwards (to the right in the view of  FIG. 6A ) while absorbing heat from the elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . This heat can be considered “waste heat” from the solar cells, but the “waste heat” nomenclature is not entirely appropriate as the heat can be put to use as will be explained in the following. At the (right) end of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  the liquid is an intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, which serves as a preheated input liquid for the solar thermal module  1 T that is the second solar module  1 S, with the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. 
     The intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL is then heated to higher temperatures as it flows through the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in the second solar module  1 S, until it exits as a hotter liquid  84 HL at the right end of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in this illustration. The second solar module  1 S is therefore a higher temperature second solar module, as compared with the solar photovoltaic module  1  that is a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F, as described. The hotter liquid  84 HL, which may also be mixed phase with some boiling occurring in some embodiments, exits the right end of the upper portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O, which outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O is routed through members of the second solar module  1 S and subsequently exits to a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E. The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E harvests additional renewable energy over and above electric energy harvested by the solar cells in the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  in the first solar photovoltaic module  1 F. The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E converts thermal energy from the hotter liquid  84 HL to mechanical energy, which in turn is converted to electrical energy by generator means  80  for converting at least some of the mechanical energy into electrical energy. Electric power conditioning means  80 C are shown for conditioning electrical output from the various sources such as the downward facing solar cells of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , the generator means  80  and an optional thermoelectric device (not shown). The electrical power conditioning means  80 C may perform one or more of electrical power conditioning functions known from the prior art, such as DC to or from AC conversion (e.g., inverter function), voltage changing, voltage and/or current stabilizing, phase control or changing, and/or other electrical power conditioning functions as are known from the prior art. The output from the electrical power conditioning means  80 C is transmitted by electric power transmission means  80 T such as electrical wire or cable, to users of electric power such as a home or building that may be off-grid or grid-connected, and may optionally feed back into an electric grid through a net-metering or other mechanism as known in the art. 
     Preferably means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC, such as the illustrated liquid return pipe  33 R, will be provided downstream of the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O carrying hotter liquid  84 HL in the second solar module  1 S, and downstream of the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, to transport liquid back into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I for the first solar photovoltaic module  1 F, as cooler liquid  84 CL. The means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC may include not just the liquid return pipe  33 R, but also may incorporate liquid reservoir, heat exchanger, or radiator elements. 
     In variant embodiments some of the heat from the hotter liquid  84 HL from the solar thermal module  1 T and/or downstream of the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, can be beneficially used for heating purposes such as providing hot water for a home, building, swimming pool or hot tub, and/or for home or building heating, and/or for cooking and/or for industrial or commercial process heat. 
     Note that the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E may comprise at least one of a Brayton cycle engine, a Rankine cycle engine, a Stirling cycle engine, an Otto cycle engine, a hybrid cycle engine and an alternative thermodynamic cycle engine. 
     The embodiment of the invention shown in  FIG. 6A  illustrates a solar photovoltaic module  1 , further comprising a higher temperature second solar module  88  that is connected to said solar photovoltaic module  1 ; 
     wherein said heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  in said solar photovoltaic module  1 , is piped by connecting pipe  89  to said second solar module  88  and used as preheated working fluid  90  for a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E in said second solar module  88 ; and
 
wherein said second solar module  88  serves as second electrical power means  93  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which second electrical power means  93  comprises at least one of
 
(i) second module thermodynamic power means  92  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, wherein said preheated working fluid  90  serves at least in contributory part as a working fluid  94  for said thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H including said heat  27 , with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E; and
 
(ii) a combination of a higher temperature solar photovoltaic receiver  99  (optional but not shown) and second module thermodynamic power means  92  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, wherein said preheated working fluid  90  serves at least in contributory part as a working fluid  94  for said thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H including said heat  27 , with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E.
 
       FIG. 6B  shows plural (three illustrated) solar modules  1 A in sequence, where the module on the top left of the Figure is a solar photovoltaic module  1  that is a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F; while the module on the top right of the Figure is a second solar module  1 S that is a solar thermal module  1 T combined with a higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H with a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H; and the rightmost module in the string of connected modules is shown on the bottom left of the Figure, connected through the Figure break line A-A, and comprises a downstream solar module  1 D that in this case is also a solar thermal module  1 T that is intended to operate at a still higher solar receiver temperature than the second solar module  1 S. Note that the higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H in  FIG. 6B  includes a higher temperature solar photovoltaic receiver  99  (that was optional but not shown in  FIG. 6A ). Note also that variant embodiments may have varying numbers of solar photovoltaic modules  1 , higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H, and downstream solar modules  1 D that are solar thermal modules  1 T, with combinations of series and optionally also parallel connectivity, within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
     In  FIG. 6B , cooler liquid  84 CL is transported by an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I that is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  that is a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F, to feed into the bottom end (left end in the view of  FIG. 6B ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H, where the liquid flows upwards (to the right in the view of  FIG. 6B ) while absorbing heat from the elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . This heat can be considered “waste heat” from the solar cells, but the “waste heat” nomenclature is not entirely appropriate as the heat can be put to use as will be explained in the following. At the (right) end of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  the liquid is an intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, which serves as a preheated input liquid for the second solar module  1 S that comprises a solar thermal module  1 T with an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, and also comprises a higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H with a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H. The higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H will preferably utilize solar cells or photovoltaic receptors that are tolerant of higher temperatures without damage or excess loss of efficiency or performance. Examples of types of higher temperature solar cells include higher temperature silicon solar cells, gallium arsenide solar cells, and multijunction solar cells, without being limiting. 
     The intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL is then heated to higher temperatures as it flows through the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in the second solar module  1 S, until it exits as a hotter liquid  84 HL at the right end of the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T in this illustration. The hotter liquid  84 HL, which may also be mixed phase with some boiling occurring in some embodiments, exits the right end of the upper portion of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O, which outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O is routed through members of the second solar module  1 S and subsequently exits to a downstream solar module  1 D and thereafter to a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E. 
     In the embodiment of  FIG. 6B , the downstream solar module  1 D is a solar thermal module  1 T that is intended to operate at a still higher solar receiver temperature than the second solar module  1 S, and increases the temperature of the working fluid as it transitions from being a hotter liquid  84 HL before the downstream solar module  1 D, to being a very hot liquid  84 VHL downstream of the downstream solar module  1 D. Plural downstream solar modules  1 D in series (not shown) can optionally be used to further increase the temperature of the working fluid, in conjunction with optimized design features for solar concentration in suns in each module, fluid flow rate control optimization, and optimized thermal insulation for piping that carries the very hot liquid  84 VHL. Different types of high temperature fluid can also be used in variant embodiments, including unpressurized or pressurized water based fluids, glycol type fluids, eutectic mixtures of biphenyl (C12H10) and diphenyl oxide (C12H10O) (such as “Dowtherm”), mixtures of tri- and di-aryl compounds (such as “Dowtherm G”), mixtures of alkylated aromatics or isomers of alkylated aromatics (such as “Dowtherm MX” or “Dowtherm J”), mixtures of diphenylethane and alkylated aromatics (such as “Dowtherm Q”), diaryl alkyls (such as “Dowtherm RP”), mixtures of C14-C30 alkyl benzenes (such as “Dowtherm T”), hot oils, molten salt fluids, alkali metals and combinations of fluids either together or connected in separate circuits connected by heat exchanger means. 
     In the embodiment of  FIG. 6B , the very hot liquid  84 VHL downstream of the downstream solar module  1 D connects to an optional thermal energy storage system  79 T, which can store thermal energy for subsequent use to generate electric power when the solar modules are not working, e.g. during periods of cloud cover and night time periods. A variety of thermal energy storage systems  79 T, such as the use of molten salt thermal storage to cite just one example from the art, can be optionally and beneficially used. 
     In the embodiment of  FIG. 6B , the very hot liquid  84 VHL downstream of the downstream solar module  1 D provides heat to a steam (Rankine) thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E at diminishing temperatures first a solar super-heater  29 SH and a solar re-heater  29 RH, then to a solar steam generator  29 SG, then to a solar pre-heater  29 PH, as illustrated. The high temperature fluid is no longer a very hot liquid  84 VHL, but substantially cooler as it enters a expansion vessel  29 EV, and thence into a fluid pump  30 F that returns the fluid into the liquid return pipe  33 R that feeds back into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I of the first solar photovoltaic module  1 F. The liquid return pipe  33 R may run through a water body, a heat exchanger, and/or a radiator to desirably further cool the liquid before it returns into the liquid return pipe  33 R. 
     The steam thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E that is illustrated pumps water with a water pump  30 W into the solar pre-heater  29 PH, where it is heated. The heated water then flows into the solar steam generator  29 SG where it is boiled to form steam. The steam then flows into the solar super-heater  29 SH, where it is super heated to a higher temperature and a high pressure. The super heated high pressure steam then drives a high pressure steam turbine  37 H, which converts heat energy into mechanical energy. The cooler lower pressure steam output from the high pressure steam turbine  37 H is then heated again in a solar re-heater  29 RH, which also obtains solar heat from a branch of the fluid that is the very hot liquid  84 VHL, as shown. The re-heated steam then drives a lower pressure turbine  37 L, and the output flow which may be a mixture of steam and water, flows into a condenser  37 C, optionally through a low pressure pre-heater (not shown) and a deaerator  37 D before feeding back into the water pump  30 W to restart the steam cycle of the steam thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E. 
     The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E harvests additional renewable energy over and above electric energy harvested by the solar cells in the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  in the first solar photovoltaic module  1 F and in the higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H in the higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H. The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E converts thermal energy from the very hot liquid  84 VHL to mechanical energy, which in turn is converted to electrical energy by generator means  80  for converting at least some of the mechanical energy into electrical energy. Electric power conditioning means  80 C are shown for conditioning electrical output from the various sources such as the downward facing solar cells of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H, the generator means  80  and an optional thermoelectric device (not shown). The electrical power conditioning means  80 C may perform one or more of electrical power conditioning functions known from the prior art, such as DC to or from AC conversion (e.g., inverter function), voltage changing, voltage and/or current stabilizing, phase control or changing, and/or other electrical power conditioning functions as are known from the prior art. In the illustrated embodiment, electrical energy storage means  80 S are also shown connected to the electrical power conditioning means  80 C. The electrical energy storage means  80 S may comprise for example a capacitor, a super capacitor, and ultra capacitor, or a flywheel connected to an electric motor-generator, or connected water reservoirs at different elevations with a pump-turbine and electric motor-generator in the connection, to cite some examples without limitation. The output from the electrical power conditioning means  80 C is transmitted by electric power transmission means  80 T such as electrical wire or cable, to users of electric power such as a home or building that may be off-grid or grid-connected, and may optionally feed back into an electric grid through a net-metering or other mechanism as known in the art. 
     In variant embodiments some of the heat from the very hot liquid  84 VHL and/or the hotter liquid  84 HL and/or intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, can be beneficially used for heating purposes such as providing hot water for a home, building, swimming pool or hot tub, and/or for home or building heating, and/or for cooking and/or for industrial or commercial process heat.  FIG. 6B  therefore illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, which solar modules include (a) a solar module  1 A that is an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating cooled solar photovoltaic module  1  and (b) a solar module  1 A that is a downstream solar module  1 D consisting of a solar thermal module  1 T having exclusively a solar collector that is a solar collector configured in the form of an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, 
     wherein said (a) inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating cooled solar photovoltaic module  1  includes: 
     an elongated solar receiver  2 A that is at least one of (e) an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  of a first photovoltaic module  1 F and (f) a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H of a second photovoltaic module  1 S, the elongated solar receiver  2 A including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4 ;
 
a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ;
 
and a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (c) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (d) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ;
 
and wherein said (a) inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating cooled solar photovoltaic module  1  includes cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said at least one of (e) an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  of a first photovoltaic module  1 F and (f) a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H of a second photovoltaic module  1 S, said cooling means  21  including a heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said at least one of (e) an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  of a first photovoltaic module  1 F and (f) a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H of a second photovoltaic module  1 S;
 
and wherein said (b) downstream solar module  1 D consisting of a solar thermal module  1 T, includes:
 
a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ;
 
and a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (c) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (d) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ;
 
and wherein the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T of said solar thermal module  1 T is designed to operate at a higher solar receiver temperature than said at least one of (e) an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  of a first photovoltaic module  1 F and (f) a higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 H of a second photovoltaic module  1 S;
 
and wherein the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T includes a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4 ;
 
further comprising connecting means  85  for connecting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprising heated fluid connecting means  85 F for conveying heat energy in heated cooling fluid  26  outflow from said (a) inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating cooled solar photovoltaic module  1  to a heated fluid stream inflow into said (b) downstream solar module  1 D consisting of a solar thermal module  1 T wherein the heated fluid stream is further heated to outflow a very hot liquid  84 VHL, by concentrated radiation energy received from the reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8  in said (b) downstream solar module  1 D;
 
further comprising support structure  15  for supporting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A on a supporting surface  16 ;
 
further comprising heliostatic control means  18  for aiming at least one rotatable portion  19  of said connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, as a function of time, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and Concentration surfaces  7 , onto said elongated solar receivers  2 A at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; and
 
further comprising electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 .
 
       FIG. 6B  also illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, 
     further comprising beneficial heat use means  77  for beneficially using heat, which beneficial heat use means comprises at least one of: 
     (i) supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, wherein said very hot liquid  84 VHL provides heat to said thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H, with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E; and
 
(ii) beneficial means  79 B for using heat energy  79 H for providing beneficial heat to at least one of a building, a home, a swimming pool, a hot water tank, a heating appliance, a heating device, a dryer, a cooking appliance, a cooking device, an industrial process, and a chemical process.
 
     The embodiments of the invention shown in each of  FIG. 6A  and  FIG. 6B  illustrate a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A including at least one inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein: 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises an elongated solar receiver  2 A including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4 ; 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ;
 
each said solar photovoltaic module  1  includes cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from its elongated solar receiver  2 A comprising an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 ;
 
further comprising connecting means  85  for connecting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprising at least one of (i) structural connecting means  85 S (not shown) for structurally connecting a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F to a second solar module  1 S and (ii) heated fluid connecting means  85 F (shown) for conveying heat energy in heated cooling fluid  26  outflow from a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F to a heated fluid stream  26 S inflow into a higher temperature non-photovoltaic solar module comprising a solar thermal module  1 T wherein the heated fluid stream  26 S is further heated by concentrated radiation energy received from the reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8  in the solar thermal module  1 T;
 
further comprising support structure  15  for supporting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A on a supporting surface  16 ;
 
further comprising heliostatic control means  18  for aiming at least one rotatable portion  19  of said connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surfaces  7 , onto said elongated solar receivers  2 A at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; and
 
further comprising electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 .
 
     The embodiments of the invention shown in each of  FIG. 6A  and  FIG. 6B  also illustrate the connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A of claim  3 , wherein the elongated solar receiver  2 A of the second solar module  1 S includes an elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T which heats the heated fluid stream  26 S to a higher temperature by using concentrated radiation energy received from the reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8  in the second solar module  1 S; 
     and further comprising beneficial heat use means  77  for beneficially using heat from said heated fluid stream outflow  26 SO from said second solar module  1 S, which beneficial heat use means  77  comprises at least one of: 
     (i) supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises supplemental thermodynamic power means  78 T (shown in  FIG. 6A ) for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, wherein said heated fluid stream outflow  26 SO from said second solar module  1 S that has been heated by the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T serves at least in contributory part as a working fluid  94  for a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E serves as means for harvesting mechanical energy  79 M from heat energy  79 H in said heated fluid stream outflow  26 SO, with generator means  80  for converting at least some of said mechanical energy  79 M into electrical energy  79 E;
 
(ii) supplemental electrical power means  78  for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental electrical power means  78  comprises supplemental thermoelectric means  81  (shown in  FIG. 6B ) for harvesting additional power from the Sun  8 S, which supplemental thermoelectric means  81  acts as means for directly harvesting electrical energy  79 E from heat energy  79 H in said heated fluid stream outflow  26 SO from said second solar module  1 S; and
 
(iii) beneficial means  79 B for using heat energy  79 H (shown in  FIG. 6B ) in said heated fluid stream outflow  26 SO from said second solar module  1 S for providing beneficial heat to at least one of a building, a home, a swimming pool, a hot water tank, a heating appliance, a heating device, a dryer, a cooking appliance, a cooking device, an industrial process, and a chemical process.
 
     Note that a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E may comprise at least one of a Brayton cycle engine, a Rankine cycle engine, a Stirling cycle engine, an Otto cycle engine, a hybrid cycle engine, and an alternative cycle engine. 
       FIG. 7  shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention that has a solar module  1 A with a liquid cooling system, where the solar module  1 A is a solar photovoltaic module  1  similar to the first solar photovoltaic module  1 F shown in  FIG. 6A . The embodiment of  FIG. 7  uses a liquid cooling system, with a cooling system now comprising a system with liquid transport pipes  33  into and out of the solar photovoltaic module  1 . Cooler liquid  84 CL is transported by an inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I that originates at a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 , which inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I is then is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  to feed into the bottom end (left end in the view of  FIG. 7 ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H, where the liquid (e.g., a heated liquid coolant  84 C shown) flows upwards (to the right in the view of  FIG. 5A ) while absorbing heat from the elongated solar receiver  2 A (that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ) and increasing in temperature. The hotter liquid  84 HL, exits the top end (right end in the view of  FIG. 5A ) of the liquid heating tube means  31 H into an outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O, which outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O is routed through members of the solar photovoltaic module  1  and subsequently exits to a location external to the solar photovoltaic module  1 . For this embodiment where the hotter liquid  84 HL is used to heat water in a water tank for various beneficial purposes, the preferred but not limiting temperature range for the hotter liquid is between 65 degrees C. and 85 degrees C. inclusive. A sensor  65  that is a temperature sensor  65 T can optionally be provided to measure the temperature of the hotter liquid  84 L, and can feed a sensor signal into a control system that controls an optional pump  30  that is a fluid pump  30 F, to pump fluid at an appropriate rate such that the sensed temperature is at a desired value (e.g., some value selected between 65 and 85 degrees C., without being limiting). 
     Note that the illustrated inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I and outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O could both include fluid flow rotary joints including an axle member. It should be understood that in alternate embodiments rotary joints, rotary unions or flexible hose fittings can alternatively be used to transport liquid across the rotating interfaces between (a) the nonrotating support structure  15  and (b) the rotatable portion  19  of the solar photovoltaic module  1  that includes the reflection and concentration surface  7  and the elongated solar receiver  2 A. 
     The liquid cooling system of  FIG. 7  can effectively cool an elongated solar receiver  2 A that is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and keep the photovoltaic cells or solar cells on the photovoltaic receiver at a lower temperature where they are not at risk of thermally induced damage and where they operate at higher electric power harvesting efficiency (typically no more than 85 degrees C. for nonspecialty silicon solar cells, without being limiting). The liquid cooling system can be either closed-loop (shown) or open-loop, and use water or other liquid coolant (shown, so as to avoid freezing during subfreezing weather conditions), as known from the prior art of many variant liquid cooling systems. Additional plumbing elements known from the art, such as valves, overflow valves, pressure relief valves, filters, traps, means for eliminating trapped air bubble, flow control devices such as faucet controls, drains, junctions and other elements can optionally also be provided, within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
     With a closed-loop liquid cooling system, means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC can be provided between the outflow liquid transport pipe  33 O carrying hotter liquid  84 HL and eventually returning into the inflow liquid transport pipe  33 I as cooler liquid  84 CL, which means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC may include at least one of a liquid reservoir (water tank  33 W shown acts as a heat sink or heat absorber), a radiator  31 R (shown), a heat exchanger and a cooling tower.  FIG. 7  shows beneficial means  79 B for using heat energy  79 H in the heated fluid stream (hotter liquid  84 HL) for providing beneficial heat to at least one of a hot water tank (water tank  33 W shown, being heated by heat transfer means  32  comprising the illustrated spiral tube heat transfer means  32 ST), a home, a building, an in-floor heating system, a radiator heating system, a swimming pool, a hot tub, a jacuzzi, a spa, a sauna, a heating appliance, a heating device, a dryer, a cooking appliance, a cooking device, an industrial process, and a chemical process. The illustrated water tank  33 W is shown with the addition of a (non-solar) alternate heater means  32 A for heating water, to heat water in the water tank  33 W during periods of cloud cover or night time periods when the solar module  1 A is not collecting solar energy. The alternate heater means  32 A may comprise an electric water heater or gas water heater, for example. 
       FIGS. 8A and 8B  show plan views of embodiments with connected arrays  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. 
       FIG. 8A  shows a plan view of an embodiment of the invention with a connected array  17  of eight inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. The 8 solar modules are shown in a substantially linear array, but it should be understood that varying numbers of modules and varying geometric arrangements of the connected array are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
     The illustrated connected array  17  has solar modules  1 A including a pair of solar photovoltaic modules  1  that are first solar photovoltaic modules  1 F at the left end of the connected array  17 , and another pair of solar photovoltaic modules  1  that are first solar photovoltaic modules  1 F at the right end of the connected array  17 . Each first solar photovoltaic module uses liquid cooled solar cells that harvest electric power from concentrated sunlight, with the liquid cooling system using an input fluid stream that is cooler liquid  84 CL (pumped by at least one pump  30 ), and an output fluid stream that is intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL, as illustrated. 
     Moving inward in the connected array  17  from the first solar photovoltaic modules  1 F, the next pair of solar modules  1 A comprise second solar modules  1 S which are higher temperature second solar modules  88 , and that comprise higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H that are also solar thermal modules  1 T. Each higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H uses a liquid cooling with an input fluid stream that is intermediate temperature liquid  84 IL coming from the first solar photovoltaic modules  1 , with the fluid stream getting heated by “waste heat” from the higher temperature solar photovoltaic module  1 H and leaving as a hotter liquid  84 HL. The higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H will preferably utilize solar cells or photovoltaic receptors that are tolerant of higher temperatures without damage or excess loss of efficiency or performance. Examples of types of higher temperature solar cells include higher temperature silicon solar cells, gallium arsenide solar cells, and multijunction solar cells, without being limiting. 
     Moving inward in the connected array  17  from the second solar modules  15 , two more solar modules  1 A are shown, which are downstream solar modules  1 D that are solar thermal modules  1 T that are intended to operate at a still higher solar receiver temperature than the second solar modules  1 S. The downstream solar modules  1 D increase the temperature of the working fluid as it transitions from being a hotter liquid  84 HL before said downstream solar modules  1 D, to being a very hot liquid  84 VHL downstream of said downstream solar modules  1 D. Plural downstream solar modules  1 D in series (not shown) can optionally be used to further increase the temperature of the flowing working fluid, in conjunction with optimized design features for solar concentration in suns in each module, fluid flow rate control optimization, and optimized thermal insulation for piping that carries the very hot liquid  84 VHL. 
     The very hot liquid carries heat energy harvested from reflected concentrated sunlight from the Sun, at a very hot temperature to a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E that converts the heat energy  79 H into mechanical energy  79 M. The efficiency of the thermodynamic cycle is high, as the temperature of the input heat energy is very hot, as is well known from the science of thermodynamics. The thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E may comprise at least one of a Brayton cycle engine, a Rankine cycle engine, a Stirling cycle engine, an Otto cycle engine, a hybrid cycle engine and an alternative thermodynamic cycle engine. Mechanical energy  79 M is converted by generator means  80  for generating electricity, into electrical energy  79 E, that is subsequently combined with electrical energy from other sources and appropriately conditioned, by electric power conditioning means  80 C. The other sources of electrical energy feeding into the electric power conditioning means  80 C include electricity harvested by the solar cells in each of the solar photovoltaic modules  1  and higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H, as well as electricity harvested by the illustrated supplemental thermoelectric means  81  that harvests additional energy and power from the working fluid outflow from the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E before it flows into means for cooling a flowing liquid  33 MC. Conditioned electric power is output from the electric power conditioning means  80 C via electric power transmission means  80 T, for transmission eventually connecting to users of electric power. 
       FIG. 8B  shows a plan view of an embodiment of the invention similar to that of  FIG. 8A , but showing two laterally separated connected arrays  17  of eight inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A each, in a substantially linear array arranged substantially along a North-South orientation, with the lateral separation in an East-West orientation, as illustrated. The orientation of the illustrated view is with North 95 towards the right, as illustrated, for a Northern Hemisphere installation. An analogous illustration for the Southern Hemisphere would have South to the right. Note that the two laterally separated connected arrays  17  can also be considered as a single two-dimensional array. 
     The lateral separation of the two laterally separated connected arrays  17  greatly minimizes any shadowing of solar modules  1 A in one array from other solar modules  1 A in the other array, for morning and evening conditions when the Sun is at very low elevation angle. North-South staggering of the solar modules  1 A in adjacent laterally separated connected arrays  17  may optionally be provided to further reduce shadowing effects in different geographic locations. The land in the area of lateral separation, in one preferred embodiment, can be a field  96 . The field  96  could be a grazing field, an agricultural field planted with crops, or even a parking lot. An access road  97  could optionally be provided as illustrated, for purposes that may vary from maintenance and installation access for the solar modules  1 A, to transportation purposes. 
     Embodiments of the class of  FIG. 8B  are well suited for application on farm land or other low-height land uses, such as recreational land, parks and parking lots. For a typical agricultural land implementation, large fields can be divided into plural long North-South oriented fields with rows of solar modules  1 A between them. A grid of North-South and also some widely spaced East-West access roads or unpaved roads can optionally be provided. The solar module rows may optionally be fenced around. In this manner a substantial majority (e.g., 60% to 99%) of the land can still be beneficially used for the original intended (e.g., agricultural) purpose, while the balance of the land is efficiently and effectively used for solar energy harvesting with very minimal shadowing effects. 
     While a certain combination and arrangement of solar photovoltaic modules  1 , higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H, and downstream solar modules  1 D that are solar thermal modules  1 T are shown, it will be understood that other combinations and arrangements are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. Similarly, while a certain number and arrangement of thermodynamic cycle engine(s)  78 E generator means  20  are shown, varying number(s) and arrangements are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, with greater or lesser distribution or federation. 
       FIGS. 9A through 9H  show side views of alternate embodiments of the invention. 
       FIG. 9A  shows a side view of an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 1A , but with a less elongated solar photovoltaic module  1 . Without being limiting, for comparison if the embodiment of  FIG. 1A  has an elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  that is about 20 feet long, the embodiment of  FIG. 9A  has an elongated photovoltaic receiver that is about 9 feet long. And without being limiting, for comparison where the embodiment of  FIG. 1A  has an elongated photovoltaic receiver  2  that is tilted at a latitude tilt of about 35 degrees, the embodiment of  FIG. 9A  has an elongated photovoltaic receiver that is tilted at a latitude tilt of only 5 degrees, representative of a much more near-Equatorial location. 
       FIG. 9B  shows a side view of an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 9A , but wherein the embodiment of  FIG. 9B  has an elongated photovoltaic receiver that is tilted at a latitude tilt of 55 degrees, representative of a much more near-polar location. The embodiment of  FIG. 9B  requires a tall frame tilting structure  74  to maintain the 55 degree latitude tilt, as illustrated. With the steep tilt of the cooling means  21 , a version with just hot gas buoyancy induced flow and no fan would certainly be a possible variant embodiment. 
       FIG. 9C  shows a side view of an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 9B , but wherein the support structure  15  supports the solar photovoltaic module  1  with a cantilevered support from one end of the device, the left end in the illustrated view. 
       FIG. 9D  shows a side view of an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 9B , but wherein the frame tilting structure  74  comprises at least one of a motorized and an actuated controllable height frame tilting structure  74 MAC, here being both a controllable height frame tilting structure  74 C and a variable height adjustable frame tilting structure  74 V. Variable tilt angles could be used for optimized performance at different locations in different seasons, or optionally for two-axis heliostatic tracking. 
       FIG. 9E  shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention which is an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A (illustrated is a solar photovoltaic module  1  similar to that of  FIG. 2A , without limitation), now mounted on a roof surface  16 R on a building  98 , and hence not necessarily requiring a frame tilting structure  74 . The roof preferably has a slope  16 SL towards the South in Northern Hemisphere installations (shown), and a slope towards the North 95 in Southern Hemisphere installations (not shown). The slope would ideally match the latitude, but clearly this concept of rooftop mounting can work with variations in roof slope and direction through the use of adaptor fittings or legs. 
       FIG. 9F  shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention with a connected array of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A including at least one inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1  are mounted on a serrated shape roof surface  16 R on a building  98 , and hence not necessarily requiring frame tilting structures  74 . The roof preferably has slopes  16 SL towards the South in Northern Hemisphere installations (shown), and a slope towards the North 95 in Southern Hemisphere installations (not shown). The slope would ideally match the latitude, but clearly this concept of rooftop mounting can work with variations in roof slope and direction through the use of adaptor fittings or legs. The embodiment of  FIG. 9F  can incorporate the various features earlier described in the context of  FIGS. 6A and 6B . Also, in addition to the heated fluid connecting means  85 F between the plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A,  FIG. 9F  shows connecting means  85  for connecting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprising also structural connecting means  85 S (through the structure of the building  98  as illustrated) for structurally connecting a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F to a second solar module  1 S. 
       FIG. 9G  shows an embodiment similar to that of  FIG. 9E , but supported on a water surface  16 W instead of on a roof surface  16 R. The support structure  15  now includes  15 F floating support structure  15 F and underwater tethers  15 T. 
       FIG. 9H  shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention which is an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A (illustrated is a solar photovoltaic module  1  similar to that of  FIG. 1A , without limitation), now supported by support structure  15  on a supporting surface  16  (that may be a land or water surface) without tilt and, and therefore not requiring a frame tilting structure  74 . The device can be mounted with either a North-South orientation or an East-West orientation along with heliostatic control means  18  to follow the apparent motion of the Sun so as to reflect and concentrate sunrays  8  on the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  over a period of operating solar time. The embodiment shown has some left to right slope on either side of the reflection and concentration surface  7  as shown, so that (i) the focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F and (ii) the linear axis  4  of the portion of substantially linear geometry  3  of the elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  and (iii) the orientation  24  of the tilted fluid path  23 , all also have some left to right slope, as shown in the Figure. Thus the illustrated embodiment has cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . Left and right side cooling streams converge and exhaust through a central exhaust hood  22 E, as illustrated. 
       FIG. 9H  therefore shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; an elongated upper inflatable volume  9  above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  9 ; an elongated lower inflatable volume  12  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower inflated volume  12 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
       FIG. 9H  also shows a tilted inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , comprising: an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 ; support structure  15  for supporting said solar photovoltaic module  1  on a supporting surface  16  with said linear axis  4  in its installed orientation being tilted up from a horizontal plane  5  that is perpendicular to the local gravity vector  6 ; heliostatic control means  18  for aiming a rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surface  7 , onto said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 ; and cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a tilted fluid path  23  that is tilted up in an orientation  24  including a component along said linear axis  4 , wherein buoyancy force acting on heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 , contributes to moving said heated cooling fluid  26  upward in said tilted fluid path  23 . 
       FIGS. 10A through 10J  show partial cross-sectional views of alternate embodiments of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A, illustrated as a solar photovoltaic module  1 , without limitation. 
       FIG. 10A  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment very similar to that shown in  FIG. 1B , with the notable change being the use of suitably angled and shaped reflective flanges  7 RF on either side of the downward facing solar cells  36 , so that in the event of motion or distortion of various members of the device (e.g., such as the reflection and concentration surface  7 ), reflected light that spills laterally off to the right or left sides of the solar cells  36  will be re-reflected (at least to some extent) by the reflective flanges  7 RF to fall on the solar cells  36  and contribute to solar energy harvesting without spillage loss. 
       FIG. 10B  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10A , with a substantially circular inflatable envelope cross-section shape made by the substantially transparent surface  11  and the bottom surface  13  in conjunction. 
       FIG. 10C  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in FIG.  10 A, with a “double bubble” piecewise circular inflatable envelope cross-section shape, analogous to the “double bubble” piecewise circular cross-sections used on some aircraft pressurizable fuselages. The embodiment also shows the substantially transparent surface  11  contacting the bottom smooth flange surfaces of the two reflective flanges  7 RF. 
       FIG. 10D  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10C , with the substantially transparent surface  11  split into two separate pieces with upper ends fastened and/or bonded to the bottom smooth flange surfaces of the two reflective flanges  7 RF, and no transparent surface in the reflected light path between the reflection and concentration surface  7  and the downward facing solar cells  36 .  FIG. 10D  also shows a “triple bubble” piecewise circular inflatable envelope cross-section shape, with the left and right bottom lobes meeting at a location held in place by a ballast beam  58 B. 
       FIG. 10E  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10B , with an approximately elliptical (in lieu of circular) inflatable envelope cross-section shape made by the substantially transparent surface  11  and the bottom surface  13  in conjunction, as shown. Periodic framing members (not shown) can help maintain the approximately elliptical shape even when the upper and lower inflatable chambers are inflated to an above ambient pressure (with the upper chamber pressure typically being held a bit higher than the lower chamber pressure) with small or modest amounts of inflation induced pillowing between the framing members (not shown). 
       FIG. 10F  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment with a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above the reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above the upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  (with a frame  7 F) below the reflection and concentrating surface  7 , and with a bottom surface  13  below the lower volume  14 . The illustrated frame  7 F maintains the reflection and concentrating surface  7  in shape and resists shape changing forces arising from pressurization of the upper inflatable volume  10 U, and protects it from harm from any objects impacting the bottom surface  13  (as for example hail when the device is in an inverted safety stow configuration). 
       FIG. 10G  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10D , with a “triple bubble” piecewise circular inflatable envelope cross-section shape, with the left and right bottom lobes meeting at a location held in place by a ballast beam  58 B. However, the embodiment of  FIG. 10G  shows the inflatable volumes bounded by the left and right bottom lobes respectively, as being separated by a membrane  48 M that is an internal substantially impermeable central membrane. 
       FIG. 10H  shows a partial cross-sectional view of a piecewise circular inflatable envelope cross-section shape, with less tall inflatable volumes above and below the reflection and concentration surface  7 , as compared with the circular inflatable envelope of  FIG. 10B . An elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T is provided near the focal line of reflected sunrays  8 F, and in addition a double row  35 D of solar cells  36  is provided above the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T, with the two rows separated so as to avoid shadowing losses on to the solar cells  36  on each row. Structure connecting the double row  35 D and the solar thermal receiver  2 T is not shown in this partial cross-sectional view. The heated cooling fluid  26  that cools the dual elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2  can be optionally be used as a preheated input fluid flowing into the elongated solar thermal receiver  2 T. 
       FIG. 10I  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10A , with a substantially vertically oriented (when the Sun is at solar noon) double-sided elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 D that receives reflected and concentrated sunlight on both sides, from the reflection and concentration surface  7 , as shown. The double-sided elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 D acts naturally to some extent as a cooling fin, but additional cooling means as described elsewhere in this specification, may also optionally be provided. In variant embodiments the double-sided elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 D may be partially or wholly below the substantially transparent surface  11 , instead of above as illustrated. 
       FIG. 10J  shows a partial cross-sectional view of an embodiment similar to that shown in  FIG. 10B , with a wedge-shaped elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  with solar cells  36  on both the downward facing faces of the wedge shape, as illustrated. While air cooling using an air cooling pipe  22 A is shown in the illustrated embodiment of  FIG. 10J , liquid cooling can be provided in variants thereof. 
       FIGS. 11A through 11D  show partial side views of the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45 . 
       FIG. 11A  shows a partial side view of the same right end structure  45 R as shown and described earlier with reference to  FIG. 1A . The illustrated right end structure  45  comprises at least one of (i) a beam member  46 B (shown), (ii) a wheel member  46 W (shown), (iii) a rim member  46 R (shown), (iv) plural spoke members  46 S (shown), (v) a hub member  46 H (shown), (vi) an axle member  46 A (shown), (vii) a plate member  46 P (not shown), (viii) a dished plate member  46 D (not shown) and (ix) a second beam member  46 SB (not shown) substantially perpendicular to said beam member  46 B. The lower end region  45 E of the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45  is also visible, and as shown the right end structure  45 R is part of the rotatable portion  19  of the solar module, rotatable around the axle member  46 A (shown) by the heliostatic control means  18  (not visible in this partial side view, but shown and described earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A ). 
       FIG. 11B  shows a partial side view of the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45 , wherein the right end structure  45 R comprises a plate member  46 P. 
       FIG. 11C  shows a partial side view of the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45 , wherein the right end structure  45 R comprises a dished plate member  46 D. 
       FIG. 11D  shows a partial side view of the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45 , wherein the right end structure  45 R comprises a beam member  46 B that is shown in a substantially vertical orientation when the solar module is operational at solar noon (e.g., an orientation similar to that shown in  FIG. 1A ), and further comprises a second beam member  46 SB that is shown in a substantially horizontal orientation (in to and out of the page and substantially perpendicular to and integral with or attached to the beam member  46 B). The second beam member  46 SB is preferably designed to attach or mate with the right end member of the frame  7 F (not shown) that surrounds the reflection and concentration surface  7  (not shown), at an interface that serves as structural connection means  43 , which structural connection means  43  is shown in both  FIG. 11D  and at the corresponding location in  FIG. 1A . 
       FIGS. 12 and 13  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of an upper module  1 U portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 . 
       FIG. 12  shows a partial side view of the deployed configuration of an upper module  1 U portion of a modular design embodiment of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 . The illustrated elongated solar receiver  2 A is an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 . The features of the upper module  1 U correspond with those shown in the embodiment of  FIG. 1A , without being limiting. The illustrated left end structure  45 L portion and right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45 , correspond with the cross beam design illustrated in  FIG. 11D , with both a beam member  46 B and a second beam member  46 SB on each end structure. An optional substantially circular rim member  46 R is shown ringing around the beam member  46 B and the crosswise second beam member  46 SB, for both the illustrated left end structure  45 L and right end structure  45 R. The left and right end structures  45  are attached to the upper beam structure  40  by hinges  39 , as illustrated. Strong, load-bearing, two position lockable hinges will preferably be provided. One or both of the end rim members  46 R (prefer the left end rim member when only one is used) are preferably designed to be engaged by a control drive element (not shown) such as a belt  63 B or a chain  63 H or a cable  63 C or a toothed belt  63 TB or a belt with periodic holes  63 BP or a toothed cable  63 TC, which serve as the actuation means for the heliostatic control means  18  (not shown in this partial side view Figure) to rotate a rotatable portion  19  of the solar module including the upper module  1 U, around an axis going through the axle members  46 A. The ballast beam  58 B part of the upper module  1 U is not shown in  FIG. 12 , but can be readily attached to the bottom ends of the beam members  46 B, as in  FIG. 1A . 
       FIG. 13  shows a partial side view of the same embodiment as  FIG. 12 , with a compact shipping configuration of the upper module  1 U portion of a modular design embodiment of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 . The compact shipping configuration is obtained by folding the left end structure  45 L and right end structure  45 R inwards around the hinges  39  so that they stow compactly approximately adjacent to the upper beam structure  40 , as illustrated.  FIG. 13  shows compact shipping means  42  for shipping said solar photovoltaic module  1  in a reduced volume configuration in a shipping container  25  (to be shown in  FIGS. 17 and 18  following), which compact shipping means  42  comprises at least one of (a) disconnectable connecting means  85 D (shown, being the structural connection means  43 ) providing means for easy disconnection of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L for more compact shipping; (b) folding means  86  (shown, being the hinges  39 ) in at least one of the upper module  1 U (shown) and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L for folding constituent members for more compact shipping; and (c) provision of deflation means  76 M (not applicable to the upper module  1 U) for deflating the substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  for more compact shipping. 
     The embodiment of  FIGS. 12 and 13  can be constructed in many varying scales within the spirit and scope of the invention. However, as selected representative scales, a first scale would have an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2  that is about 20 feet long, and a second scale would have an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver that is about 40 feet long. Two modules of the first scale could fit lengthwise end to end, with compact protective packaging, within a representative standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container, with representative exterior dimensions of 45′ 0″×8′ 0″×9′ 6″ and representative interior dimensions of 44′ 4″×7′ 8.59375″×8′ 9.9375″. One module of the second scale could fit lengthwise, with compact protective packaging, within that same representative standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container. 
       FIGS. 14 and 15  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of a reflector module  1 R portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 , similar to that shown and described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A . The reflector module  1 R shown in  FIGS. 14 and 15  is attachable to the upper module  1 U of  FIGS. 12 and 13  at structural connection means  43  for structurally connecting, as shown in FIGS.  12  through  14 . 
       FIG. 14  shows a partial side view of the deployed configuration of the reflector module  1 R portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 . The solar photovoltaic module  1  has a reflection and concentration surface  7  includes at least one of (i) a reflective membrane  7 R which is reflective on its upper side and wherein an upwardly concave desired shape  7 S of said reflective membrane  7 R is at least in part maintained by the application of differential inflation pressure between said upper inflatable volume  9  and said lower inflatable volume  12 , (ii) a mirror element  7 M which is reflective and concave on its upper side  7 U, and (iii) a frame supported reflective membrane  7 FR (shown) which is supported by a frame  7 F and is reflective and concave on its upper side  7 U, wherein said frame  7 F comprises at least one of (a) perimeter structural members  50 P (shown) supporting said reflection and concentration surface  7  along at least portions of the perimeter of said reflection and concentration surface  7 , which perimeter structural members  50 P also contribute to perimeter restraint of at least one of said substantially transparent surface  11  and said bottom surface  13 ; (b) shaping means  50 S (shown) adjacent to said reflection and concentration surface  7  serving as shaping means for contributing to an upwardly concave desired shape  7 S of said reflection and concentration surface  7 ; and (c) frame supported damping means  50 FD (shown) adjacent to said reflection and concentration surface  7  serving as damping means  50 D (shown) for damping undesirable motion of said reflection and concentration surface  7 . 
     The reflection and concentration surface  7  is protected from the weather and from external physical or pressure induced disturbances by the elongated upper inflatable volume  9  and the elongated lower inflatable volume  12 . There is a substantially transparent surface  11  above the upper inflatable volume  9 , and a bottom surface  13  below the lower inflated volume  12 . 
     The embodiment of  FIG. 14  shows the solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein said elongated upper inflatable volume  9  includes an inflatable central portion  47  with an approximately constant cross-section on planar cuts perpendicular to the axis of elongation of said elongated upper inflatable volume  9 , and further includes left and right end closure portions  48  on the left and right sides of said inflatable central portion  47 , which left and right closure portions  48  serve to provide left and right side enclosure for said elongated upper inflatable volume  9 , wherein said left and right end closure portions  48  are at least one of (a) transparent, (b) partially transparent, (c) reflective, (d) partially reflective and (e) nontransparent; and wherein said left and right end closure portions  48  comprise at least one of (i) a membrane  48 M, (ii) an at least partially framed membrane  48 F (shown), (iii) an at least partially rigid dome segment  48 R, (iv) a plate member  48 P (shown), and (v) a dished plate member  48 D. 
     Features of the illustrated left and right closure portions  48  can be better understood with reference to the legends shown on the right closure portion that also apply equally to the left closure portion. Upward and downward projecting (transparent) plate members  48 P are hingedly attached by hinges  39  to the top and bottom respectively of the right end portion of the frame  7 F, that is also the right end portion of the perimeter structural members  50 P. The plate members  48 P are preferably centrally located on, and less than the full width of the right end portion of the perimeter structural members  50 P. When the upper inflatable volume  9  and lower inflatable volume  12  are inflated, as illustrated, the four plate members  48 P will be pressed outwards up to when the plate stop members  48 PS butt against the beam members  46 B of the upper module  1 U, as shown in  FIG. 12  (but not shown here in  FIG. 14 ). 
     The at least partially framed membranes  48 F extend from the sides of the upward projecting plate member  48 P and are preferably attached (e.g., bonded and/or fastened &amp; sealed) on their inner sides to the plate member  48 P, on their upper end to a plate cap rim member  48 PC that is at the top of the plate member  48 P, on their outer sides to the right edges of the substantially transparent surface  11 , and on their bottom sides to the right end portion of the perimeter structural members  50 P. In this manner the upper right end closure portion  48  encloses the right end of the upper inflatable volume  9  and prevents pressurized air from leaking out. 
     Similarly, the at least partially framed membranes  48 F extend from the sides of the downward projecting plate member  48 P and are preferably attached (e.g., bonded and/or fastened &amp; sealed) on their inner sides to the plate member  48 P, on their lower end to a plate cap rim member  48 PC that is at the bottom of the plate member  48 P, on their outer sides to the right edges of the bottom surface  13 , and on their top sides to the right end portion of the perimeter structural members  50 P. In this manner the lower right end closure portion  48  encloses the right end of the lower inflatable volume  12  and prevents pressurized air from leaking out. 
     The upper and lower left end closure portions  48  similarly enclose the left ends of the upper inflatable volume  9  and lower inflatable volume  12  respectively. 
     It will be understood that various closure portion engineering design and construction solutions are feasible to perform similar inflatable volume end closure, within the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed. 
       FIG. 15  shows a partial side view of a compact shipping configuration of the embodiment of  FIG. 14 , being the shipping configuration of the reflector module  1 R portion of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 . Both the upper and lower plate members  48 P are rotated or folded inwards around the hinges  39 , on both the right and left sides of the reflector module  1 R, as illustrated. The flexible membranes of the substantially transparent surface  11  (not shown for clarity) and bottom surface  13  (not shown for clarity) are folded and packed down to within the space envelope defined by the folded plate members  48 P, in a manner known from the art of compact packing of flexible membranes using appropriate membrane folding patterns and geometries. Of course the upper inflatable volume  9  and lower inflatable volume  12  are substantially deflated in the compact shipping configuration of the reflector module  1 R, using means such as valve means or deflation valve means (not shown). 
       FIG. 15  thus shows compact shipping means  42  for shipping said solar photovoltaic module  1  in a reduced volume configuration in a shipping container  25  (to be shown in  FIGS. 17 and 18  following), which compact shipping means  42  comprises at least one of (a) disconnectable connecting means  85 D (shown, being the structural connection means  43 ) providing means for easy disconnection of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L for more compact shipping; (b) folding means  86  (shown, being the hinges  39 ) in at least one of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R (shown) and the lower module  1 L for folding constituent members for more compact shipping; and (c) provision of deflation means  76 M (shown) for deflating the substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  for more compact shipping. 
       FIGS. 16A and 16B  show partial side views of deployed and shipping configurations of a lower module  1 L of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 , similar to that shown and described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A . The lower module  1 L shown in  FIG. 16A  is attachable to the upper module  1 U via the axle members  46 A of the upper module  1 U, and is attachable through the upper module  1 U to the reflector module  1 R at structural connection means  43  for structurally connecting, as shown in  FIGS. 12 through 16A  inclusive. 
       FIG. 16A  shows a partial side view of the deployed configuration of a lower module  1 L of an inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar module  1 A that is a solar photovoltaic module  1 , similar to that shown and described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 1A . The frame tilting structure  74  and belt  63 B from  FIG. 1A  are not shown in the lower module  1 L, but can be readily attached when the solar photovoltaic module  1  is assembled by assembling together the lower module  1 L, the upper module  1 U (with ballast beam  58 B) and the reflector module  1 R along with the aforementioned frame tilting structure  74  and belt  63 B, in a manner similar to the embodiment shown and described in detail with reference to  FIG. 1A . 
       FIG. 16B  shows a partial side view of the compact shipping configuration of the lower module  1 L of  FIG. 16A , with the upper “A frame” type tubular frame elements  73 TU folded inward and down around hinges  39 , as shown. 
       FIG. 16B  thus shows compact shipping means  42  for shipping said solar photovoltaic module  1  in a reduced volume configuration in a shipping container  25  (to be shown in  FIGS. 17 and 18  following), which compact shipping means  42  comprises at least one of (a) disconnectable connecting means  85 D (bearings  53 B) providing means for easy disconnection of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L (shown) for more compact shipping; (b) folding means  86  (shown, being the hinges  39 ) in at least one of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L (shown) for folding constituent members for more compact shipping; and (c) provision of deflation means  76 M (not applicable for lower module  1 L) for deflating the substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  for more compact shipping. 
       FIG. 17  and  FIG. 18  show side sectional views of 40 foot and 20 foot representative scale solar modules, disassembled and packed into a representative shipping container. 
       FIG. 17  shows a side sectional view of a representative standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container  25 , with representative exterior dimensions of 45′ 0″×8′ 0″×9′ 6″ and representative interior dimensions of 44′ 4″×7′ 8.59375″×8′ 9.9375″. In this side sectional view the interior length is 44′ 4″ and the interior height is 8′ 9.9375″. For representative but not limiting scale, a 10 foot ruler segment  100  is also shown. Two disassembled solar modules with 40 foot long solar receivers (e.g., elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2 ) are shown packed into the 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container. Without limitation, a representative solar photovoltaic module with a 40 ft long solar receiver, about 10 inches wide with dual row solar cells, and about 25 square meters of reflective area, would produce about 4 kilowatts of power with 16% efficient solar cells (and more power with more efficient concentrating solar cells that work at around 8 suns concentration).  FIG. 17  shows packed within the standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container  25 , the following items: 
     2 upper modules  1 U including elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2 ; 
     2 reflector modules  1 R; 
     2 lower modules  1 L; 
     2 frame tilting structures  74 , each split in halves for shipping; and 
     2 ballast beams (shown in dashed lines behind the lower modules  1 L in this view). 
     Other miscellaneous items for the 2 disassembled solar modules, such as 2 belt  63 B for the heliostatic control drive train, for example, can be suitably packed into available remaining volume in the shipping container  25 . 
       FIG. 18  shows a side sectional view of a representative standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container  25 , with representative exterior dimensions of 45′ 0″×8′ 0″×9′ 6″ and representative interior dimensions of 44′ 4″×7′ 8.59375″×8′ 9.9375″. In this side sectional view the interior length is 44′ 4″ and the interior height is 8′ 9.9375″. For representative but not limiting scale, a 10 foot ruler segment  100  is also shown. Sixteen disassembled solar modules with 20 foot long solar receivers (e.g., elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2 ) are shown packed into the 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container, with eight visible in the view and another eight behind these. Without limitation, a representative solar photovoltaic module with a 20 ft long solar receiver, about 5 inches wide with a single row of solar cells, and about 6.25 square meters of reflective area, would produce about 1 kilowatt of power with 16% efficient solar cells (and more power with more efficient concentrating solar cells that work at around 8 suns concentration).  FIG. 18  shows packed within the standard 45 foot hi-cube intermodal freight shipping container  25 , the following item totals (including hidden back items): 
     16 upper modules  1 U including elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2 ; 
     16 reflector modules  1 R; 
     16 lower modules  1 L; 
     16 frame tilting structures  74  (not necessary to split in half at this scale); and 
     16 ballast beams (shown in dashed lines behind each of the lower modules  1 L). 
     Other miscellaneous items for the 16 disassembled solar modules, such as 16 belt  63 B for the heliostatic control drive train, for example, can be suitably packed into available remaining volume in the shipping container  25 . 
     It should be understood that while  FIGS. 17 and 18  show some specific compact shipping configurations for submodules of modular solar modules to be cost-effectively shipped in one specific high cube standard intermodal shipping container, many variant device sizes, modular disassembly involving folding elements and at least some deflation of inflatable members, and geometrically preferred or optimized packaging means in containers of varying sizes and shapes, are also possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
       FIGS. 12 through 18  collectively therefore shows solar photovoltaic modules  1 , wherein each said solar photovoltaic module  1  comprises plural connected constituent modules  1 C comprising: 
     (i) an upper module  1 U including an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , 
     (ii) a reflector module  1 R including the reflection and concentration surface  7  and the substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U and the bottom surface  13  below said lower volume  14 , and 
     (iii) a lower module  1 L including said support structure  15 ; 
     and further comprising compact shipping means  42  for shipping said solar photovoltaic module  1  in a reduced volume configuration in a shipping container  25 , which compact shipping means  42  comprises at least one of (a) disconnectable connecting means  85 D providing means for easy disconnection of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L for more compact shipping; (b) folding means  86  in at least one of the upper module  1 U and the reflector module  1 R and the lower module  1 L for folding constituent members for more compact shipping; and (c) provision of deflation means  76 M for deflating the substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  for more compact shipping. 
       FIG. 19  shows a partial end view of an embodiment similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 1B  (and  FIG. 1A ) from the left end, at approximately the scale of  FIG. 1B . 
     The illustrated left end structure  45 L portion of the left and right end structures  45  shown in  FIG. 19 , is similar to the right end structure  45 R portion of the left and right end structures  45  shown in  FIG. 11D . A beam member  46 B is shown in a substantially vertical orientation when the solar module is operational at solar noon (e.g., an orientation similar to that shown in  FIGS. 1A and 1B ), and further comprises a second beam member  46 SB that is shown in a substantially horizontal orientation (substantially perpendicular to and integral with or attached to the beam member  46 B). The second beam member  46 SB is preferably designed to attach or mate with the left end member of the frame  7 F that surrounds the reflection and concentration surface  7 , at an interface that serves as structural connection means  43 . The use of crossed beams for the end structures  45  is similar to the embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 11D . 
     The embodiment of  FIG. 19  shows a motor  61 M that is a stepper motor  61 S, that drives a chain  63 H as actuation means for the heliostatic control means  18  to actuate rotation of the rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1  to a commanded desired orientation. The embodiment of  FIG. 19  also shows sensors  65 , which is at least one of sensors from the set of a Sun angle sensor, a light sensor, a temperature sensor, a wind sensor, an adverse weather sensor, an adverse condition sensor, a precipitation sensor, a time sensor, a power sensor, an energy sensor, a voltage sensor, a current sensor, a maintenance sensor, a failure sensor, a diagnostic sensor, a fluid flow sensor, a position sensor, an angle sensor, and a digital or count sensor. The embodiment of  FIG. 19  also shows a computer  68 C which may comprise a microprocessor, digital computer, calculator or analog computer. The computer  68 C serves as at least one of (i) user input computer means for receiving and executing a user input instruction, (ii) sensor input computer means for receiving and processing an input signal from a sensor  65 , (iii) aiming computer means for algorithmically computing and commanding desired orientation of said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , (iv) stow computer means for computing and commanding a protective stow position of said rotatable portion  19  of said solar photovoltaic module  1 , and (v) diagnostic computer means for identifying at least one of nonoptimal operation, faulty operation and a failure condition of said solar photovoltaic module  1 . 
       FIG. 19  also illustrates lift element engagement means  49  (such as the illustrated hole in structure or other means known in the art) for engaging an element of a lift such as a forklift, a high lift, a crane, a jack, or other lift device, mechanism or machine for lifting all or part of the solar module  1 A, for installation, relocation, adjustment, maintenance or repair, for example. This feature will be particularly useful for installation of solar modules  1 A on the roof of a house or building. 
       FIG. 20  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. 
     More specifically,  FIG. 20  illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A including at least one inflatable linear cooled heliostatic concentrating solar photovoltaic module  1 , wherein: 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises an elongated solar receiver  2 A including a portion of substantially linear geometry  3  with a linear axis  4 ; 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises a reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8 ; 
     each said solar module  1 A comprises a substantially enclosed elongated inflatable volume  10  comprising (i) an upper inflatable volume  10 U above said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a substantially transparent surface  11  above said upper inflatable volume  10 U, and further comprising (ii) a lower volume  14  (hidden and not visible in this view) below said reflection and concentrating surface  7 , with a bottom surface  13  (hidden and not visible in this view) below said lower volume  14 ;
 
each said solar photovoltaic module  1  includes cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  from its elongated solar receiver  2 A comprising an elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 , said cooling means  21  including a heated cooling fluid  26  that is heated by heat  27  from said elongated photovoltaic receiver  2 ;
 
further comprising connecting means  85  for connecting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprising at least one of (i) structural connecting means  85 S (shown) for structurally connecting a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F to a second solar module  1 S and (ii) heated fluid connecting means  85 F (not shown and not present in this embodiment) for conveying heat energy in heated cooling fluid  26  outflow from a first solar photovoltaic module  1 F to a heated fluid stream  26 S inflow into a higher temperature non-photovoltaic solar module comprising a solar thermal module  1 T wherein the heated fluid stream  26 S is further heated by concentrated radiation energy received from the reflection and concentration surface  7  for reflecting and concentrating sunrays  8  in the solar thermal module  1 T;
 
further comprising support structure  15  for supporting said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A on a supporting surface  16 ;
 
further comprising heliostatic control means  18  for aiming at least one rotatable portion  19  of said connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, as a function of at least one of time and other parameters, such that incoming sunrays  8  from a sunward direction  8 D will be reflected and concentrated by said reflection and concentration surfaces  7 , onto said elongated solar receivers  2 A at a concentration ratio of at least two suns; and
 
further comprising electrical power means  20  for collecting and transmitting electrical power from said elongated solar photovoltaic receiver  2 .
 
     Floating support structure  15 F is shown, which serves both a structures purpose and a buoyancy purpose. An example of floating support structure  15 F entails the use of sealed hollow structural members such as pipe section material. The cooling means  21  for removing excess heat  27  can optionally use air cooling means or liquid cooling means, as described in detail with reference to earlier described embodiments of the invention. Air cooling means can use fan powered cooling air flow in a air cooling pipe  22 A (not shown). Liquid cooling means (shown) can use a pump  30  to pump cooling liquid in cooling fluid flow direction  21 F in tubes and/or chambers adjacent to the elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2  so as to keep the solar cells therein at low risk of heat damage and high photovoltaic conversion efficiency. A closed loop liquid cooling system is shown, wherein a pump  30  pumps cooling liquid through the cooling means  21 , and then return flow of heated cooling fluid runs through underwater spiral tube heat transfer means  32 ST where heat is dumped into the water under the water surface  16 W. 
       FIG. 20  also illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A of claim  3 , wherein said supporting surface  16  comprises a water surface  16 W above an underwater ground surface  16 UG, wherein said connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprises a floating connected array  17 F supported at least in part by a buoyancy force  16 B; 
     wherein said heliostatic control means  18  comprises at least one of 
     (i) (not shown) azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A for rotating said floating connected array  17 F on said water surface  16 W to substantially follow the azimuth angle  8 A (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a solar noon azimuth) of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time with the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A aligned substantially parallel with said azimuth angle  8 A of the incoming sunrays; and
 
(ii) (shown) a combination of (a) azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A for rotating said floating connected array  17 F on said water surface  16 W to substantially follow the azimuth angle  8 A (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a solar noon azimuth) of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time with the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A aligned substantially perpendicular to said azimuth angle  8 A of the incoming sunrays, and (b) elevation heliostatic control means  18 E (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a 90 degree elevation angle) for controlling the elevation orientation of rotatable portions  19  of said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A including said reflection and concentration surfaces  7  and said solar receivers  2 A, to substantially follow the elevation angle  8 E of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time.
 
     Thus the embodiment of  FIG. 20  has two axis heliostatic tracking of the Sun&#39;s apparent motion in azimuth and elevation, resulting in maximum solar power harvest. 
     The embodiment of  FIG. 20  can be built at any arbitrary size scale. Some examples include solar modules  1 A with elongated solar receivers  2 A that are about 21 feet long, so two disassembled solar modules  1 A can fit end on end in a 45 foot long high cube container; solar modules  1 A with elongated solar receivers  2 A that are about 42 feet long, so one disassembled solar module  1 A can fit lengthwise in a 45 foot long high cube container, and other scales from small to gigantic. 
       FIG. 20  also illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A of claim  22 , wherein said floating connected array  17 F can be held in a desired position envelope  17 PE by position holding means  17 PH for holding said floating connected array  17 F in said desired position envelope  17 PE, which position holding means  17 PH includes anchor means  17 A for anchoring members  17 M in said underwater ground surface  16 UG, and underwater link means  17 UL comprising at least one of underwater tethers  15 T, cables, rods, posts, beams, trusses and plates for linking the underwater anchor means to at least one positioning float  17 F; and wherein said azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A includes powered control means  17 PC for azimuthally rotating said floating connected array  17 F relative to at least one positioning float  17 F. 
     Note that the illustrated embodiment has a single central positioning float  17 F, while variant embodiments may have plural positioning floats  17 F around the periphery of the connected array  17 , such as connected to the illustrated wave breaking means  16 WB. Note also that the underwater link means  17 UL such as the underwater tethers  15 T can also be beneficially used to tow the floating solar module to an installation site (e.g., being pulled by a tugboat of some sort), where it is subsequently tethered. 
       FIG. 20  also illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A of claim  22 , further comprising wave breaking means  16 WB located at least in part along a perimeter location  16 PL on the periphery around said floating connected array  17 F, which wave breaking means  16 WB serves as means for at least one of blocking and reducing the magnitude of incoming waves  16 WA on the water surface  16 W that approach said floating connected array  17 F from outside the vicinity of said floating connected array  17 F. 
     Note that a variety of wave breaking means  16 WB may be used, including rigid or semirigid walls, perforated or mesh walls, inflated ring or tube or sphere elements, shaped hulls, flow deflection vanes or foils, etc. 
       FIG. 21  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, similar to  FIG. 20  but with one axis heliostatic tracking. The only heliostatic tracking provided is azimuth tracking, with azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A for rotating said floating connected array  17 F on said water surface  16 W to substantially follow the azimuth angle  8 A (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a solar noon azimuth) of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time with the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A aligned substantially parallel (NOT perpendicular as for the embodiment of  FIG. 20 ) with said azimuth angle  8 A of the incoming sunrays. 
     Note that in  FIG. 21  no elevation heliostatic control means  18 E exist to substantially follow the elevation angle  8 E of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time; and there are no rotatable portions  19  of the solar module  1 A that rotate in elevation angle. Since the azimuth control aligns parallel rather than perpendicular to the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A, it is possible for the embodiment of  FIG. 21  to have solar modules located close to each other without shadowing losses, and this enables the connected array  17  of the embodiment of  FIG. 21  to have 4 rather than 2 solar modules  1 A, as illustrated. 
       FIG. 21  thus illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A of claim  3 , wherein said supporting surface  16  comprises a water surface  16 W above an underwater ground surface  16 UG, wherein said connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A comprises a floating connected array  17 F supported at least in part by a buoyancy force  16 B; 
     wherein said heliostatic control means  18  comprises at least one of 
     (i) (shown) azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A for rotating said floating connected array  17 F on said water surface  16 W to substantially follow the azimuth angle  8 A (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a solar noon azimuth) of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time with the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A aligned substantially parallel with said azimuth angle  8 A of the incoming sunrays; and
 
(ii) (not shown) a combination of (a) azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A for rotating said floating connected array  17 F on said water surface  16 W to substantially follow the azimuth angle  8 A (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a solar noon azimuth) of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time with the linear axis  1 AL of each said solar module  1 A aligned substantially perpendicular to said azimuth angle  8 A of the incoming sunrays, and (b) elevation heliostatic control means  18 E (not visible in this view with vertical downward sunrays  8  illustrated, corresponding to a 90 degree elevation angle) for controlling the elevation orientation of rotatable portions  19  of said plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A including said reflection and concentration surfaces  7  and said solar receivers  2 A, to substantially follow the elevation angle  8 E of the incoming sunrays  8  over a period of solar time.
 
       FIG. 22A  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with some of the features of the embodiment of  FIG. 20 , but with a combination of solar modules  1 A, similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 6A . Reference numerals for features shown in  FIG. 22A  correspond to the same reference numerals as described in detail with respect to  FIGS. 20 and 6A  preceding.  FIG. 22A  shows two types of solar modules  1 A in sequence, where the modules on the left and right of the Figure are solar photovoltaic modules  1  that are first solar photovoltaic modules  1 F; while the modules in the center of the Figure are solar thermal modules  1 T that are second solar modules  1 S. The relationship and functioning of the different solar modules  1 A in sequence are similar to the case described in detail with regard to  FIG. 6A . A total of 10 solar modules  1 A are shown in this floating embodiment, with two-axis heliostatic tracking similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 20 . 
       FIG. 22B  shows a plan view of a floating embodiment with similar features to that of  FIG. 22A , but with a combination of solar modules  1 A, similar to the embodiment of  FIG. 6B . Reference numerals for features shown in  FIG. 22B  correspond to the same reference numerals as described in detail with respect to  FIGS. 20 and 6B  preceding.  FIG. 22B  shows three types of solar modules  1 A in sequence, where the first in sequence are solar photovoltaic modules  1  that are first solar photovoltaic modules  1 F (2 rightmost modules and 2 leftmost modules in the view shown); while the second in sequence modules comprise second solar modules  15  that are solar thermal modules  1 T combined with a higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H with higher temperature elongated solar photovoltaic receivers  2 H (4 modules that are 3rd from right and 3rd from left in the view shown); and the last in sequence in the string of connected modules comprising downstream solar modules  1 D (2 center modules, or 4th from either left or right in the view shown) that in this case are also solar thermal modules  1 T that are intended to operate at a still higher solar receiver temperature than the second solar modules  1 S. Note that the higher temperature solar photovoltaic modules  1 H in  FIG. 22B  include higher temperature solar photovoltaic receivers  99 . 
       FIG. 22B  also shows a tethered barge  17 TB attached to or integral with a positioning float  17 PF, which tethered barge  17 TB also carries the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E and other members described in detail earlier in the context of  FIG. 6B . Note that alternate locations for all modules and members at various locations in the floating connected array  17 F, are also of course possible within the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed. 
       FIG. 22C  shows a plan view of an embodiment of a floating connected array  17 F similar in many aspects to the embodiments of  FIGS. 22A and 22B , but with more inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, numbering 18. Some features illustrated in this embodiment include use of different length solar modules  1 A to more effectively utilize the available plan view area for solar collection; a central platform location for a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E; the use of six positioning floats  17 PF for more precise and fault-tolerant position holding of the floating connected array  17 F in the presence of water currents and wind; and the optional use of heliostatic control means  18  wherein the linear axis  1 AL of the solar modules  1 A aligns with the solar azimuth angle for very low Sun elevation angles at times close to sunrise and sunset, to minimize shadowing losses, while the linear axis  1 AL of the solar modules  1 A is rotated to align perpendicular to the solar azimuth angle for most of the day, where shadowing losses are small or nonexistent, and two axis tracking using both azimuth heliostatic control means  18 A and elevation heliostatic control means  18 E effectively places the plane of each reflection and concentration surface  7  perpendicular or normal to the incident sunrays  8 . 
       FIG. 22D  shows multiple floating connected arrays  17 F of the type shown in  FIG. 22C , arranged in a pattern on the water surface  16 W above the underwater ground surface  16 UG, that includes a triangular pattern as shown. It will be understood that with shared anchor means  17 A connected by position holding means  17 PH (such as underwater tethers) to multiple proximal floating connected arrays  17 F, alternate geometric arrangements such as space filling triangular, space filling square, space filling rectangular, space filling hexagonal, and other space filling or non space filling two dimensional geometric arrangements, are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
       FIG. 22E  shows a plan view of an embodiment of a floating connected array  17 F similar in many aspects to the embodiments of  FIGS. 22A, 22B and 22C , but with more inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, numbering 152 but number not limiting. The scale of this embodiment will typically but not necessarily be larger than the scale of the embodiments of  FIGS. 22A, 22B and 22C . Representative diameters of the floating connected array  17 F may range from 20 meters to 20,000 meters, without limitation. 
       FIG. 22F  shows a plan view of the embodiment of a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A illustrated in  FIG. 22E , but now further comprising offshore wind and water current renewable energy harvesting subsystems substantially surrounding and connected to the connected array  17  that is a floating connected array  17 F. The illustrated wind and water current renewable energy harvesting subsystems are of a class previously described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/986,240 entitled “Fluid-Dynamic Renewable Energy Harvesting System.” 
       FIG. 22F  shows the connected array  17  that is a floating connected array  17 F, held in place by perimeter positioning floats  17  PF connected to tethered barges  17 TB, that are held in place relative to the underwater ground surface  16 UG by position holding means  17 PH such as underwater tethers that are anchored in the underwater ground surface  16 UG by anchor means  17 A. Features described earlier in the context of  FIG. 20  and  FIG. 22C  also apply to this embodiment of a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. The connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A harvests solar renewable energy using photovoltaic means supplemented in some preferred embodiments by solar thermal energy harvesting means. 
     The same tethered barges  17 TB that hold the floating connected array  17 F (for collecting solar energy) in place, also hold in place (i) a water current energy harvesting system  87 C with plural hydrofoils  87 H connected by a hydrofoil connecting structure  87 HC that is a ring shaped structure in the illustrated embodiment, and (ii) a wind energy harvesting system  87 W with plural airfoils  87 AF connected by an airfoil connecting structure  87 AC that comprises two concentric ring structures in the illustrated embodiment. Note for illustration clarity, only a few of the plural hydrofoils  87 H that are connected all around the ring shaped hydrofoil connecting structure  87 HC are shown in the Figure. The angles of attack of the airfoils  87 AF and hydrofoils  87 H are intended to be controllable as these fluid foils move along substantially circular paths, to optimize energy extraction from the wind and water current vector fields present at any given time. For the illustrated wind direction  87 AD (assumed uniform vector field for illustrative purposes) and the illustrated water current direction  87 HD (assumed uniform vector field for illustrative purposes), the illustrated angles of attack will cause both the airfoil connecting structure  87 AC and the hydrofoil connecting structure  87 HC to rotate clockwise in the illustrated view, with mechanical energy then convertible to electrical energy by generator means  80  at the interface between these connecting structures and the structural connections with the tethered barges  17 TB. These generator means  80  are over and above the generator means  80  associated with the thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E associated with the connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. Electrical power from the various generator means  80  as well as the solar cells of the solar photovoltaic modules  1  can be consolidated and conditioned at electric power conditioning means  80 C, optionally stored in electric energy storage means  80 S (e.g., a variety of means such as battery means, electrolysis plus fuel cell means, thermal storage means, mechanical storage means such as flywheel means, supercapacitor means, etc.), and transmitted by electric power transmission means  80 T such as underwater power transmission cables leading to utility or commercial or private customers or users. The electric power transmission means  80 T may comprise superconducting cables, high to ultra high voltage AC cables, high to ultra high voltage DC cables, and other transmission means known from the state-of-the-art. 
     It will be understood that in variant embodiments of the embodiment of  FIG. 22F , water current and wind energy harvesting systems may not both be provided, but only one or the other. Representative diameters of the floating connected array  17 F may range from 20 meters to 20,000 meters, without limitation. As illustrated, these would correspond with solar module  1 A lengths ranging from about 1.9 to 1900 meters, chords of airfoils  87 AF ranging from about 0.9 to 900 meters, and chords of hydrofoils  87 H ranging from about 0.25 meter to 250 meters. While airfoil and hydrofoil heights (or spans, out of the page and into the page in the plan view of  FIG. 22F ) may vary considerably for aspect ratios ranging from 2 to 40, as is known from the art of airfoil and hydrofoil wing design, for representative and not limiting aspect ratios of 5 and some typical taper ratios, the corresponding ranges of airfoils  87 AF heights would range approximately from 3 to 3,000 meters, while the corresponding range of hydrofoil  87 H heights (or depths under the water surface  16 W) would range approximately from 1 meter to 1000 meters. It will also be understood that varying scales of devices such as solar modules  1 A, airfoils  87 AF and hydrofoils  87 H, can be mixed and matched in embodiments of this class, within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
     In addition to the illustrated wind energy harvesting subsystem and ocean current/tidal current energy harvesting subsystem that are connected with the connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A,  FIG. 22F  further illustrates a connected ocean thermal energy harvesting system  87 T that includes deep cold water inlet means  87 DC for intaking deep cold water for use at the low temperature part of a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E, which may be the same and/or different from a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E using heat energy collected by at least some of the plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A. Where different, the high temperature part of the Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) subsystem may use heat from warmer water collected from near-surface warm water inlet means  87 SW. Electrical power from the OTEC will also preferably connect with the aforementioned electric power conditioning means  80 C, electric energy storage means  80 S, and electric power transmission means  80 T. 
       FIG. 22F  thus illustrates a connected array  17  of plural inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, further comprising an additional renewable energy harvesting system  87  that is connected to said floating connected array  17 F, which additional renewable energy harvesting system  87  comprises at least one of (i) a wind energy harvesting system  87 W with airfoils  87 AF that revolve around said floating connected array  17 F, (ii) a water current energy harvesting system  87 C with hydrofoils  87 H that revolve around said floating connected array  17 F, and (iii) an ocean thermal energy harvesting system  87 T that includes deep cold water inlet means  87 DC for intaking deep cold water for use at the low temperature part of a thermodynamic cycle engine  78 E. 
     Note that the airfoils  87 AF may be airfoils, wings, semirigid airfoils, inflated or partially inflated airfoils, wire or strut braced airfoils, sails, and other airfoil types known in the art. Various airfoil planforms, spans, chords, aspect ratios, tapers, twist distributions, camber distributions and airfoil sections may similarly be used. Various airfoil structures may also be used. Similarly a wide variety of hydrofoils  87 H may also be used. 
       FIG. 22G  shows a plan view of an embodiment of a floating connected array  17 F similar in many aspects to the embodiments of  FIGS. 22A, 22B, 22C and 22E , but with more inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, numbering 1,920 but number not limiting. The scale of this embodiment will typically but not necessarily be larger than the scale of the embodiments of  FIGS. 22A, 22B, 22C and 22E . Representative diameters of the floating connected array  17 F may range from 50 meters to 50 kilometers, without limitation. Electrical power from the generator means  80  as well as the solar cells of the solar photovoltaic modules  1  can be consolidated and conditioned at electric power conditioning means  80 C, optionally stored in electric energy storage means  80 S (e.g., a variety of means such as battery means, electrolysis plus fuel cell means, thermal storage means, mechanical storage means such as flywheel means, supercapacitor means, etc.), and transmitted by electric power transmission means  80 T such as underwater power transmission cables leading to utility or commercial or private customers or users. The electric power transmission means  80 T may comprise superconducting cables, high to ultra high voltage AC cables, high to ultra high voltage DC cables, and other transmission means known from the state-of-the-art. 
       FIG. 23A  shows a partial sectional view of the floating embodiment described earlier with reference to the plan view shown in  FIG. 22A . Some features of the embodiment of  FIG. 22A  can be better understood from the partial sectional view shown in  FIG. 23A . Note that the buoyancy force  16 B acts on support structure  15  that is floating support structure  15 F that uses plural tubular frame elements  73 TU with many watertight compartments (not visible in this view) so as to maintain buoyancy even in the event of damage or rupture of one watertight compartment. Note also that the illustrated wave breaking means  16 WB at the perimeter location  16 PL uses two spaced wall like members that may be continuous or have holes or slats or water flow deflection foils; and that the two spaced wall like members are shown connected by bracing wire and/or truss structure. Many alternate wave breaking means  16 WB using a variety of wave reflection and/or wave deflection and/or wave energy absorption elements, are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. 
       FIG. 23B  shows a partial sectional view of another floating embodiment, in which the buoyancy force  16 B acts directly on the inflatable linear heliostatic concentrating solar modules  1 A, with the water surface  16 W displaced by the bottom surfaces  13 . 
       FIG. 23C  shows a partial sectional view of a floating embodiment similar in many ways to that described in  FIG. 23A , with a few notable differences. One difference is the use of inflated perimeter rings combined with underwater skinned truss structure for the wave breaking means  16 WB, as illustrated. Another difference is the use of a support structure  15  that has portions significantly below the mean level of the water surface  16 W, to permit installation, removal and maintenance access using a shallow draught boat serving as a movable service support structure  15 S, as illustrated. The movable service support structure  15 S is shown in the process of transporting a replacement solar module  1 A between adjacent rows of installed solar modules  1 A. Lift or jack or crane means (not shown) may optionally be provided on the movable service support structure  15 S, for facilitating installation and de-installation of solar modules  1 A. In alternate embodiments a movable service support structure  15 S may utilize a wheel supported device (not shown) rather than a buoyancy supported device, with the wheels running on tracks or paved or fabricated support strips with edge guides. 
       FIG. 23D  shows a partial sectional view of a floating embodiment in many ways similar to that of  FIG. 23B , but different in having much more closely spaced solar modules  1 A that go with the type of floating solar energy harvesting system that has only azimuth heliostatic tracking with no elevation tracking, as described earlier in the context of the embodiment of  FIG. 21 .  FIG. 23D  also illustrates the installation of a warning device  91 , such as a light or beacon or flag or sign, to warn people in vehicles (e.g., boats or ships or planes) from coming dangerously close to the floating solar energy harvesting system. 
     The various embodiments described above will preferably incorporate appropriate safety features, warning labels to keep eyes away from concentrated light, fingers and body parts away from high temperature areas, and features to minimize risk of inflatable explosion, among others. 
     While several preferred embodiments have been described in detail above with reference to the Figures, it should be understood that further variations and modifications are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed. 
     REFERENCES 
     
         
         U.S. Pat. No. 5,404,868, “Apparatus Using a Balloon Supported Reflective Surface for Reflecting Light from the Sun” 
         U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/651,396, “Inflatable Heliostatic Solar Power Collector” 
         U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/986,240, “Fluid-Dynamic Renewable Energy Harvesting System”