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> But it sounds like it just achieves high power by taking ordinary energy pulses and compressing them in time.
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> Well yes, increasing the output energy more than the input energy would violate the laws of physics, but increasing the power would not. This could do more than just make new weapons, it could increase the possibility of controlled nuclear fusion by means of inertial confinement; and to get it going and ignite a deuterium tritium pellet you have to put a huge amount of energy into a short burst, and the shorter the better.
On Mon, Sep 12, 2022 at 2:44 PM John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Well yes, increasing the output energy more than the input energy would violate the laws of physics, but increasing the power would not. This could do more than just make new weapons, it could increase the possibility of controlled nuclear fusion by means of inertial confinement; and to get it going and ignite a deuterium tritium pellet you have to put a huge amount of energy into a short burst, and the shorter the better.
And if you've got a laser with 90% efficiency and you don't have to worry about damaging the optical components (and if they're made of plasma you don't) then the number of super short laser pulses you produce each second is limited only by the electrical power supply feeding the laser.
There's no reason you couldn't hook it up to Hoover Dam, and 90% of the electrical energy it produced would go into the light energy of the output beam of the laser.
9vq
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>> And if you've got a laser with 90% efficiency and you don't have to worry about damaging the optical components (and if they're made of plasma you don't) then the number of super short laser pulses you produce each second is limited only by the electrical power supply feeding the laser.
> I doubt that. To lase the atoms need to be pumped up to excited states, which takes time.
> This appears really to not so much about making a high-power laser as it is with optical components that work with such light.