Can lasers create visible plasma channels in air?

  • Thread starter Thread starter kuartus4
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Lasers Plasma
AI Thread Summary
High-power lasers can potentially create visible plasma channels in air if the energy is sufficient to ionize the air along the beam's path. While lasers are generally non-ionizing, intense beams can heat the air enough to produce ionization, aided by small particles in the air. Historical research explored using high-intensity lasers for military applications, such as anti-missile systems, which demonstrated the feasibility of creating ionized channels. Additionally, laser breakdown phenomena indicate that focused high-power lasers can generate plasma sparks, with longer channels achievable through specific configurations. Overall, the visibility of laser beams in clear air is primarily due to scattering, but under certain conditions, they can indeed create visible plasma channels.
kuartus4
Messages
25
Reaction score
0
I have a question. In an electric arc, the electric current going through the air makes a visible plasma arc as so:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7a/Electric_arc.jpg

My question is this: Could a high power laser create a visible plasma channel through its path. I ask because laser beams are invisible in clear air, but what if it was powerful enough to ionize the air into plasma? Would there be some type of visible laser channel?
 
Science news on Phys.org
hi there

As far as I am aware ... Lasers are NON-ionising radiation, so no ionising could occurlets se ewhat others have to say :)

Dave
 
I believe they could IF the power absorbed by the channel of air is sufficiently high, as that would heat the air high enough to ionize it. I believe small particles present in the air may make this easier. But it's got to be a LOT of power in a small amount of time.
 
Back in the 1980's there was some research on laser-steered charged particle beams for anti-missile systems. The notion was to use high-intensity beams to ionize a channel for the beam by the means Drakkith described. I think the concept was dropped when it was realized that a high-intensity laser could be more easily constructed that was by itself sufficient to disrupt a ballistic missile. A prototype airborne anti-missile laser was built and successfully tested (see "Airborne Laser Laboratory", "Airborne Laser Testbed", "Boeing YAL-1"). This program was canceled by the Obama administration.
 
kuartus4 said:
Could a high power laser create a visible plasma channel through its path. I ask because laser beams are invisible in clear air, but what if it was powerful enough to ionize the air into plasma? Would there be some type of visible laser channel?

Powerfull laser beam of visible wavelength is visible in the air under day light. For example 532-nm laser beam with few millimeters in diameter can be visible at power of several watts. The main reason of its visibility is scattering on dust particles. But even in dust-free air there is some scattering as well.

Concerning plasma channels there is such phenomenon as laser breakdown of air. It takes place near focus of a focusing lens. There is an examle - . Here the laser spark is very short, but its length can be made much longer using powerful laser and long-focus lens. E.g. I'd observed about 2-m long lasers sparks with aid of 50-J, 10 ns lasers pulses.

Very long plasma channels can be produced using very-high-power fs lasers pulses. At this level of power self-focusing of the beam in air is obtained making the beam to be self-collimated. http://www.dmphotonics.com/fs_filamentation.htm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Thread 'A quartet of epi-illumination methods'
Well, it took almost 20 years (!!!), but I finally obtained a set of epi-phase microscope objectives (Zeiss). The principles of epi-phase contrast is nearly identical to transillumination phase contrast, but the phase ring is a 1/8 wave retarder rather than a 1/4 wave retarder (because with epi-illumination, the light passes through the ring twice). This method was popular only for a very short period of time before epi-DIC (differential interference contrast) became widely available. So...
I am currently undertaking a research internship where I am modelling the heating of silicon wafers with a 515 nm femtosecond laser. In order to increase the absorption of the laser into the oxide layer on top of the wafer it was suggested we use gold nanoparticles. I was tasked with modelling the optical properties of a 5nm gold nanoparticle, in particular the absorption cross section, using COMSOL Multiphysics. My model seems to be getting correct values for the absorption coefficient and...
Back
Top