JeffKoch said:
Also, Astronuc, the Reagan-era SDI laser concepts were plasma-based x-ray lasers, not chemical lasers, though this can't have anything to do with the poster's ideas either.
I know. One of my professors in grad school was involved with nuclear-pumped lasers, including X-imer (Excimer), and other SDI concepts. Interesting stuff.
My research interest was high power density systems capable both steady-state and transient power capability. It was dual-use technology, and I was interested in propulsion rather than weapons applications.
It can as long as the ions aren't fully stripped, meaning the ions have bound electrons that can in the right circumstances be in metastable states.
Certainly. In my original response, I was primarily thinking of solar plasma, as opposed optically-pumped gas (He, Ne, Ar, . . .) lasers.
I was hoping there would be a better description of the proposed "Giant Solar Laser".
mheslep said:
A bit of topic but this 'stripped' case is the one in which I am interested. I am well versed in the electron stimulation by quanta, but lack even the vocabulary to go googling for what happens when a photon hits a nucleus - ion w/ no electrons. I assume there must still be quantum energy states for nuclei? Are there there the equivalent absorption / emission processes? Id appreciate some pointers for where to begin, or even the appropriate terms.
Certainly poly-electronic atoms can be partially ionized, i.e. lose one or more electrons and still have bound electrons.
A proton is a hydrogen ion - there is only one electron. One could have H
2+. However, in general, hydrogen plasmas are largely protons, electrons and some concentration of neutrals. Li and on up can certainly have poly-electronic positive ions.