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Re: Laser guided Tesla Coil



Original poster: FIFTYGUY@xxxxxxx In a message dated 2/15/07 9:28:11 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:

>Yep, joules in nanosecond pulses or giga-watts can cause the air to
>"snap" ionize in front of some pulsed Nd-Yag lasers

My issue with the whole concept of using lasers to pre-ionize a path for an electrical discharge is:

    You can't ionize the entire channel at once.
Once the air is ionized, it is no longer optically transparent. If you ionize a spot of air near you, you can't ionize the spot of air in front of it because you can't "see" it. If you start by ionizing a spot of air closest to the target, then you'd have to ionize the spot just a little closer to you, then a spot a little closer, working your way back. For any "useful" distance, that's a lot of closely-spaced spots that have to be ionized. I have no idea, let's say the target is 100 meters away, and each "spot" becomes an ionized patch the volume of 1cc. That's 10,000 spots to ionize. The time scale would probably be what, 1/100th of a second before sufficient ion decay to make the spot useless (based on Tesla coil minimum effective BPS). So those 10,000 ionized spots would have to happen at 1 Mhz. The only way I could see this happening is to sweep a continuous beam(or beams) from a source offset relative to the line-of-sight (line-of-electrical discharge). The focusing would have to be precise, yet continuous.
    A pretty tall order?
And, as already pointed out, the energy required to ionize that path with a laser would better be spent on defeating the target directly with the laser! What kind of target can a lightning strike destroy that the super-high-powered laser (or a tank gun) can't?

-Phil LaBudde