Floating solar farms, also called floatovoltaics (PV), are innovative solar power systems that float on the surface of water bodies. Instead of installing photovoltaic (PV) panels on land, as is the case with traditional solar farms, these systems are mounted on buoyant structures that rest atop. Unlike traditional solar panels, which convert sunlight into electricity, a solar pond is a body of water that captures and stores solar energy as heat. This approach uses otherwise unused water surfaces to produce clean electricity. They are then placed on a body of water. Modern society demands food and sustainable energy, so science has an idea: To preserve agricultural land for crops and conservation lands for wildlife, place floating photovoltaic panels on lakes, rivers and reservoirs. The problem: No one has fully defined how acres of panel-topped bodies of.