World's Most Powerful Laser Diode Arrays Deployed 63
Zothecula writes: The High-Repetition-Rate Advanced Petawatt Laser System (HAPLS) under construction in the Czech Republic is designed to generate a peak power of more than 1 petawatt. The key component to this instrument – the laser "pump" – will be a set of solid-state laser diode arrays recently constructed by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. At peak power, this electronic assemblage develops a staggering 3.2 million watts of power and are the most powerful laser diode arrays ever built.
Don't look at the... (Score:4, Informative)
Laser Diode Arrays with remaining eye.
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Laser in your next life.
Re:Don't look at the... (Score:5, Funny)
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A leaked Pentagon memo I had access to states that the ultimate weapon will be laser-turtles. Stability is a huge concern, to maximize accuracy and prevent friendly fire incidents. The fact that they already have armor was also factored in.
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You go first.
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I'm pretty sure this would blind you so hard that your children would inherit blindness. Even the ones already born.
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More like: Don't look at the Laser Diode Arrays with remaining head.
Yes Zaphod, you.
I can now (Score:2)
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It's a LASER - the A stands for Amplification
Re:Consistency (Score:5, Interesting)
the pump is probably 3.2MW for a long pulse (100s of microseconds), and the output is petawatts for a short time (femtoseconds).Diodes are often used to pump solid state laser materials that store energy for many microseconds, then release it much more quickly. (along with chirp pulse amplification to get even larger power compression).
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It doesn't draw 3.2 gigawatt from the power grid but fires 1 petawatt of light energy (or used by the lasers?) when it's actually fire.
As in at most fire 1/300 of the time.
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Sorry. Didn't cared about the units here.
The point was more important than being correct =P
1/300 000 of the time :)
Lost Opportunity (Score:3)
If only they had called it the High-repetition-rate Advanced Petawatt Laser Emission SyStem.
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Haven't even read the article, but I can tell you that such a thing is pretty much an essential requirement to have a chance of commercializing any sort of laser-driven inertial confinement fusion. A fusion reactor that can only fire off a pulse once every day or so is pretty worthless ;) The other high repetition rate component that you need is a high repetition precision injection of holhraums.
There's two main types of reactors in particular to which this would apply. First you have your pure inertial co
What's it for (Score:1)
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In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
World's largest cat goes mental
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My mod points lapsed; if they hadn't, you'd have got a "Funny" from me because I laughed. Thanks for that! :D
Re:In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
A complimentary comment is worth to me than mod points.
But not as much as cash, so, y'know, if you really want to show your appreciation...
Nerdy facts about this pulse (Score:5, Interesting)
T=30fs, P=1PW => E=30J
Each pulse carries about 30 joules of energy.
The pulse only lasts for 30 fs. In that time, it travels s=30fs*300 000 000 m/s = 9 um.
The pulse is thus only 9 microns thick.
They don't state the wavelength in the article, but since they say laser and not maser or IR laser, it's visible.
With a nice green colour, i.e. 500 nm, the pulse is only 18 wavelengths long.
The energy of each (green) photon is E=hc/lamda = 2.2E-20 J. Thus, each pulse packs about
30J/2.2E-20J = 1.36E21 photons. [That's 1.5E26 photons per meter (mass of earth ~5E24 kg).]
Good job, coordinating that rather sizable pack of riotous photons in a timely manner.
How not to edit a story (Score:3)
If you're going to edit an article, don't just cut out the least significant words, or you'll be left with nonsense.
According to the summary, this laser somehow generates power instead of consuming it, and it generates "3.2 million watts of power", which is "more than 1 petawatt".
Things sure have changed... (Score:3, Interesting)
The future really is a much nicer place than the past.
Quick Call Agent P (Score:2)
The project lead is one Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz!
Link for further proof: http://phineasandferb.wikia.com/wiki/S%27Winter/Transcript
Big Ole Laser (Score:2)
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Combine that with a large spinning mirror, (Score:2)
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laser pointer (Score:2)
when can I buy this in the form of a laser pointer for my cat?