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- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!sdd.hp.com!cs.utexas.edu!torn!utzoo!henry
- From: henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer)
- Subject: Re: Laser Divergence
- Message-ID: <By3BGq.CwH@zoo.toronto.edu>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 23:48:25 GMT
- References: <By38BE.Kyy.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Organization: U of Toronto Zoology
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <By38BE.Kyy.1@cs.cmu.edu> GFH101@URIACC.URI.EDU (Paul Klinkman) writes:
- >I'm looking for information about interstellar lasers. They sound like a
- >great idea. My question is: what keeps the laser beam from diverging
- >over long distances?
-
- Nothing. It does diverge. But with good optics on the sending end, it's
- relatively slow divergence.
-
- >A carbon dioxide laser in a physics lab has a 1/4 inch beam when it leaves
- >the laser and a one inch or two inch spotlight on the far wall.
-
- Run it through the right optics -- basically, a telescope -- and divergence
- will be much slower. You can't get rid of all of it, because of diffraction,
- but your laser's unassisted output is definitely not "diffraction-limited"
- quality. A modest astronomical telescope can hold a visible laser down to
- a 1-2km spot size on the Moon.
- --
- MS-DOS is the OS/360 of the 1980s. | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
- -Hal W. Hardenbergh (1985)| henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
-