Scientists from the
University
of Michigan claim to have created the world's most powerful laser.
The Hercules device pumps out 20 billion trillion watts per square
centimetre, equivalent to taking all the light that falls on the Earth from the
Sun and focusing it to a point the size of a grain of sand.
"That is the instantaneous intensity we can produce," said Karl Krushelnick,
a physics and engineering professor at the University of Michigan.
"I do not know of another place in the universe that would have this
intensity of light. We believe this is a record."
The beam can stay on for just 30 femtoseconds, around 30 million billionths
of a second, but an innovative design means that the laser takes only 10 minutes
to recharge before being able to fire again. Traditional lasers would take over
an hour.
"We can get such high power by putting a moderate amount of energy into a
very, very short time period," said Victor Yanovsky, a research scientist in the
Department
of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Michigan.
"We are storing energy and releasing it in a microscopic fraction of a
second."
The titanium-sapphire laser took six years to build and takes up several
rooms at the university's
Center
for Ultrafast Optical Science. The team hopes that it can be used for
medical treatments and to harness fusion reactions.
A scientific paper on the research, entitled 'Ultra-high intensity 300-TW
laser at 0.1 Hz repetition rate', is available on the
OpticsInfoBase
website.
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