The Texas Petawatt Laser 174
Roland Piquepaille notes the hype surrounding what the University of Texas at Austin is calling the world's most powerful laser. During a tenth of a femtosecond this laser is 2,000 times more powerful than all the power plants in the US, and is brighter than sunlight on the surface of the Sun. On his own blog Roland points out that UT's is not the first petawatt laser; that distinction belongs to a system installed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in 1996.
We're all wondering... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:We're all wondering... (Score:5, Informative)
In case this was a serious question: Giant capacitors, connected in parallel.
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Have they tried levitating a squirrel yet?
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Interesting)
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In case this was a serious question: Giant capacitors, connected in parallel.
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:5, Informative)
This also answers the "heating" problem. These lasers carry a relatively small amount of energy, and produce very little heat. However, the electric field that is produced when the beam is focused is huge, and many interesting phenomena can be studied with such a laser.
Btw, for the same reason, this type of laser is completely useless as a weapon. In order to cause any real damage one has to deposit energy into the substance that is to be damaged, and again, these laser pulses carry a relatively small amount of energy.
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks. Another slashdotter crushes another one of my hopes and dreams. Jerk
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Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Funny)
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Correction: (Score:5, Funny)
Fixed it for you.
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Nope. You are a factor of 1000 out. (Score:3, Informative)
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Nope. You are definitely wrong. (Score:2, Informative)
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So yes, a lot of energy, but not a HUGE amount.
It's time to bring back... (Score:2)
So the question arises, is the power delivered to the razor blade be enought to burn a hole through it, or will the shortness of the pulse mean that there's not enough time to do anything but vapourize a few of the surface atom
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Where do they get the power to run this thing anyway?
Thats where batteries are for... probably a huge array. Or capacitors, or a spinning object storing a huge load of kinetic energy or any other form of energy storage. It's the same way as KEMA (an electronics testing and certification institute I live near) stores it's energy for huge lightning bolts and power overloads they use to test kilovolt transformers, massive power breakers and other high voltage equipment. ...
They could store the energy for those 200 femtoseconds. Notice it's only 200 femtoseconds
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Informative)
That wouldn't even put a dent in my electricity bill.
Yes I know, I know...
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And how does it make sense to refer to the generating capacity of all the power plants the US in terms of energy? There are no times, femtosecond or not, involved, watts are rates of energy consumption.
And by integrating that power over a femtosecond, calculus tells me the result is energy. ;)
Over the duration of the 200 femtosecond pulse, it's perfectly reasonable to compare either the average power or total energy released to any other energy source, whether it be terrestrial power generation or the sun.
ZPM's are used for power (Score:2)
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:5, Funny)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d3/BFG9000doom2.jpg [wikimedia.org]
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The parent comment is modded "funny," but it could equally be modded "informative." When an intense femtosecond pulse is focused into many materials, including water, nonlinear effects will lead to fillamentation and continuum generation. Here [univ-lyon1.fr] are some pictures from lasers with roughly an order of magnitude less power focused in air.
(I corrected a link. Please mod my previous comment down)Re: (Score:1)
Re:We're all wondering... (Score:4, Funny)
"Kent, this is Jesus.... And stop playing with yourself..."
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Pish. (Score:3, Funny)
(Just don't go glaring at yourself in the mirror...)
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Will if come with a heavy duty mains lead, or a BIG box of AA cells?
Re:Pish. (Score:4, Funny)
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What do you know of fire? You prance around like you have laser eyes!
</Oglethorpe>
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Sorry boys (Score:5, Funny)
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Ill-tempered Sea Bass are a lot more environmentally friendly... get with the times.
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http://youtube.com/watch?v=CeMpdiDZ1iI [youtube.com]
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link to project page (Score:5, Informative)
with fotos and shematics, etc..
But... (Score:5, Funny)
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Of course that would not be "levitating" as much as it would be "rocketing off into space" at a fantastically high rate of speed.
That would be fine with me as I have wrote plenty of blogs on the impending apocalypse where the squirrels will make us all their slaves. Everybody says I'm nuts... but you just wait...
Time duration? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Time duration? (Score:4, Insightful)
You could say it, but it wouldn't be true.
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Re:Time duration? (Score:5, Informative)
A lot of ground breaking research is undertaken *utilising* the ability to deliver very short very high energy pulses - for doing that you can deliver a huge amount of energy in a very tiny amount of time - then observe what happens. Indeed a lot of the very high energy regions cannot be accessed with anything but ultrafast pulsed systems, as CW setups would just destroy themselves (and even using UF systems chirping "tricks" are used to reduce peak powers until the final moment to ensure the optics aren't burnt out).
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirped_pulse_amplification [wikipedia.org]
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I always got angry when I got lured into his blog by fancy summary, because there is never any substance to his fantastic tales.
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(nonsense either way)
the fools! (Score:2)
the Fools! the Fools! what could possibly go wrong? Actually I'm not so worried about a mini supernova as I am a mini black hole, because I don't see a mini supervova as possibly self sustaining (might take out a few scientists though - there's always plenty more), whilst a mini black whole near a large mass might last long enough to eat us all. Still, a better way to go then the grey goo.
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However, your right be concerned about the potential bouts of uncontrollable fusion/fission and thier scientist vaporizing shockwaves.
The mini black holes aren't a worry. It's when they become large enough to devour scientists, and thier space/time warping event horizons encroach on your personal boundaries, then you should worry.
Grey goo? Seriously, you're a huma
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And if it was self-sustaining, we could probably find a way to harness all that power to run my really big TV.
finally (Score:1)
http://blag.xkcd.com/2008/02/15/the-laser-elevator/ [xkcd.com]
let's lift some squirrels
Uses? (Score:3, Funny)
Lets get ready to cook some popcorn!
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For a tenth of a femtosecond... (Score:2, Funny)
But seriously,I have been electrocuted by 20,000V at significant current several times. But only for a few hundred nanoseconds at a time. Sparks plugs rock.
Wrong (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Nice, but... (Score:1)
Wrong about the Sun and petawatts (Score:5, Informative)
Our Sun puts out about 4 x 10^24 watts, continuously, for billions of years.
So this laser is only putting out about one four-billionth of the Sun, and only for a very split second.
It's also very misleading if they intended to compare brightness per unit area. Even a cheap laser pointer is brighter than the surface of the Sun.
not to be a pedant, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
And a cheap laser pointer can't be focused to that size.
But of course you're right. They're just going for the unwashed public wow factor.
Re:Wrong about the Sun and petawatts (Score:4, Funny)
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picosecond, not femtosecond (Score:2, Informative)
Sharks (Score:2)
Obvious mistake in TFA (Score:5, Informative)
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when I read the title (Score:1)
Soon to be a Dime a Dozen (Score:5, Informative)
why do they keep telling us about new ones? (Score:1)
New rule. You cannot call it "world's most powerful laser" until you understand the definition of power . I don't care if you ARE dumping jiggawats into it, if the time period is dividing it by a trillion to come up with the power which ends up somewhere around a AA battery, I don't need to hear about it.
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Power vs Energy (Score:2)
Billion-watt light bulb (Score:2)
http://www.mit.edu/~jcb/humor/billion-watt-light-bulb [mit.edu]
It's what they don't say (Score:3, Informative)
Roland the Plogger again (Score:5, Informative)
More Roland the Plogger blogspam, driving traffic to his useless ad-laden blog. To get around the block on links to his own site, he's now submitting links disguised via "tinyurl".
Slashdot covered this laser weeks ago.
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Slashdot editors! Wake up and quit posting this WALKING SACK OF PLAGERISM!
I hear Pacific Tech is right behind them (Score:4, Funny)
You, for one, should welcome (Score:2)
Fun statistic (Score:2)
I thought the summary said taser (Score:2)
Thought to myself...ouch.
Scribbles (Score:2)
Is there anything that explains it?
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Those are your words, not his.
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Re:So what? (Score:4, Funny)
True, what's the most this laser could do, cut the Earth in half? Pretty tame compared with the LHC recreating the Big Bang and destroying the universe as we know it.
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Yes, peta watts (10 ^ 15) for less than a femto (10 ^ -15) second)
A mere blip compared to other power uses. I don't think this research is particularly relevant to climate change, the OP was trying to start a flamewar.
How you think that power is generated? Nice clean nuclear? Hahahaha.
Probably natural gas. And carbon-neutral is a better way to describe nuclear than clean.
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OMG! Three to four orders higher!!!!!!!
Shit, what? We're talking about... what? Hundreds of watts? Thousands?
THE WORLD IS GOING TO END!!!!1!@
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Petawatt Lasers use, wait for this, petawatts of power. How you think that power is generated? Nice clean nuclear?
Power is "change in energy divided by time." So there are two reasons why power could be an enormous number -- 1, the change in energy could be huge, or 2, the time is incredibly short. In this case, it's the latter. Yes, the number comes out to be "petawatts." Yes, it's correct. No, that doesn't mean they need a nuclear reactor to produce the energy, as the actual amount of energy is really
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