This method is accurate, requires only basic oversight and (most importantly) fast. It took just weeks to map the country where a conventional approach might take so long that the data could be years out of date by the time it's ready. This could help governments decide on renewable energy strategies, track solar adoption rates or even pinpoint economic differences based on the number of panels in a given neighborhood.

There are already a few insights. It won't shock you to hear that California and the Southwest have the highest concentrations of solar panels. However, the researchers also learned of sweet spots for panel deployment (any place above a given sunlight level was virtually guaranteed to have panels), and that income was a determining factor for solar panel installs even in areas where there's enough sunlight to turn a profit. Companies may need to lower the initial cost of panels if they expect wider use.

There are obstacles to clear before DeepSolar is ready. It's only as timely as the map data itself, and satellite pictures can't tell you how efficient a given deployment is. Are they old panels, or cutting-edge? It also won't surprise you to hear that such a large-scale project requires a lot of computational power -- Stanford professor Ram Rajagopal described it to Gizmodo as "non-trivial." Still, it's significant that this kind of undertaking is even an option.