Is long distance visible light transmission possible?

In summary, it is possible to transmit visible light over long distances, but the signal would be weakened by diffraction and atmospheric turbulence. power transmission is not practical. The purpose of the transmission is to transmit light to photoreactor, to grow plants. If you only need the tunnel lights in bright conditions, to get a gradual transition of brightness for people driving vehicles etc, install solar panels to power the lights.
  • #1
ciurio
8
0
Is long distance "visible light" transmission possible?

Hi

Lets say i need to transmit a lot of visible light
from one place to another.

Is this possible to do on long (50~100 miles) distance?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2


What is the purpose of the transmission?

Data transmission? Possible, but radio frequencies might be better. With light, you need a direct line of sight*, and clouds, dust, temperature gradients and so on can absorb/deflect/scatter your signal.
Power transmission? I don't think that is practical.

*this requires some sort of mountain or high tower(s) for 50-100 miles.
 
  • #3


Thank you for answer.
mfb said:
What is the purpose of the transmission?
The purpose is to transmit light to photoreactor, to grow plants
 
  • #4


I don't think this is useful. Grow plants where the light is.
 
  • #5


mfb said:
I don't think this is useful. Grow plants where the light is.
Ok, TY for answer.
 
  • #6


So your collector is big and the target as well? Then it must be possible.

On smaller items diffraction at the concentrator would limit the distance, and atmospheric turbulence would as well (it makes data transmission impossible) but with BIG items on both sides this improves.

Look, Sunlight reflection on a single window is powerful at 1km range and it illuminates only a few metres across, so if the reflector and the target are 100m wide, 100km look possible.

Will you grow bananas in Alberta?
 
  • #7


As seen from earth, the sun has an angular diameter of ~0.5° or ~9mrad. Over a distance of 100km, this corresponds to a minimal (!) spot size of about 1km. It is possible to reduce the size, but this does not give an increased intensity. If your reflector has a diameter of ~100m, the final spot will have a diameter of ~1km and get an intensity of 1% of the solar flux - even if the reflector is in bright sunlight and orthogonal to it, and without any atmospheric losses, this corresponds to just ~10W/m.
A deflector with a diameter of ~1km could mimic a second sun, but even there we have atmospheric losses. And a mirror of that diameter is a serious engineering problem.
 
  • #8


I'd say that 20km distance, from one side of a valley to the next, is a better goal. Very few places offer a line of sight of 100km. So let's have a field of mirrors of 200m dimensions, and the field of vegetals as well, and the Sun's apparent diameter gets acceptable.

For diffraction to add only 40m spread at 20km, each individual mirror must be larger than 0.3mm so 1m-5m size is just fine for the individual mirrors.

At such a distance, but with far less area, a town in Bavaria (or Austria?) has done it. They had no Sunlight for the whole winter due to the moutains; mirrors on the opposite side were the remedy.

What I doubt is that a field of steered mirrors can be paid by the production of vegetals on the same area.
 
  • #9


Enthalpy said:
At such a distance, but with far less area, a town in Bavaria (or Austria?) has done it. They had no Sunlight for the whole winter due to the moutains; mirrors on the opposite side were the remedy.
Viganella in Italy. 100 000 € for 40m2 movable mirrors according to Wikipedia. The german version has more details about the mirrors. I can help translating if automatic tools don't work.
 
  • #10
I would like to transmit sunlight, not to grow bananas in Alberta, but to iluminate tunnels.

In a sunny day, we have to illuminate the entry and exit sectors ( 1/3 mile ) with 400w lamps installed every 5/10 meters with a huge electric power cost.

So, an efficient solution could be to collect sunligth from outside and transmit it into the tunnel, working as auto-regulation system.

Has anybody any idea or experience?
 
  • #11
No, visible light's intensity will weaken too fast. To reach the end of the tunnel you'd have to use a massive laser(and kill everyone).
 
  • #12
ARA said:
So, an efficient solution could be to collect sunligth from outside and transmit it into the tunnel, working as auto-regulation system.
If you only need the tunnel lights in bright conditions, to get a gradual transition of brightness for people driving vehicles etc, install solar panels to power the lights.
 
  • #13
Instead of illuminating the tunnel, why not darken the approaches?
You can more cheaply install some trellises or arches over the approaches, so the light to dark transition is made gradual, rather than abrupt.
 
  • #14
If you're concerned about energy costs, you could just switch to LED lighting. (off the main concept, but relevant to the actual problem) 400W equivalent bulbs aren't available at your local Home Depot, but it's certainly within practical limits.

Even with a LOT of concentrated light and a LOT of fiber optic cable, it's tough to make it work over the distances being described.
 

1. Can visible light travel through long distances?

Yes, visible light can travel through long distances. In fact, it is estimated that visible light from stars and galaxies travel billions of light years to reach our eyes.

2. How far can visible light travel before it becomes invisible?

The distance that visible light can travel before becoming invisible varies depending on factors such as the medium it is traveling through and the intensity of the light. However, on average, visible light can travel approximately 93 million miles (149.6 million kilometers) through space before it becomes too faint to be detected by the human eye.

3. Can visible light be transmitted through materials like glass or water for long distances?

Yes, visible light can be transmitted through materials like glass or water for long distances. This is why we are able to see objects through windows or when we go underwater.

4. Is there a limit to how far visible light can travel?

Technically, there is no limit to how far visible light can travel. However, as light travels through space, it can encounter obstacles such as dust, gas, and other particles which can cause it to scatter or be absorbed, making it difficult to detect. This is why we are unable to see objects that are billions of light years away.

5. How fast does visible light travel through long distances?

Visible light travels at a speed of approximately 186,282 miles per second (299,792 kilometers per second) through a vacuum, such as space. This is known as the speed of light and is the fastest speed at which anything can travel in the universe.

Similar threads

  • Electromagnetism
Replies
6
Views
536
Replies
22
Views
1K
Replies
13
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
14
Views
1K
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
Replies
2
Views
823
Replies
14
Views
3K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
21
Views
1K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
18
Views
1K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
1
Views
637
Back
Top