Integral, are you suggesting something that can really be done, or just coming up with hypotheticals with regard to timed pulses of two lasers? Why would there be an advantage to pulsing two lasers alternately rather than just one in higher pulses? My reason for asking is I'm just working on wrapping my mind around the idea of how pulsing a laser increases power (not even sure power is the right word).
I was just trained last week on using a 2-photon microscope (very cool toy!

). Of course the people doing the training are the ones who know how to work the software and know about microscopy in general, but don't really know the physics of how the thing works. The explanation was rather minimal. Anyway, what I got out of it is that it differs from a traditional confocal microscope because the lasers are pulsed, so somehow they can utilize a longer wavelength, which does less damage to the part of the tissue you're not focusing on, but increases the chances of 2 photons colliding in the area you're focusing on. Somehow 2 photons of a long wavelength colliding leads to a single shorter wavelength hitting the fluorophore and causing the emission that we then detect.
Anyway, if that sounds really screwy, it probably is because I didn't understand what the rep was saying completely, and I'm positive he didn't understand it any better. I just thought it was cool when I saw the software and realized I hadn't been mishearing the rep all through his presentation...the laser really is called a Mai Tai laser (if that means anything special to you)!

And if you're not careful with the power settings on this one, you get to watch a hole burn through the middle of your sample.
This is all a round about way of saying, if I understood just a smidge about how pulsing a laser affects its power (or anything else about it), I'd like that. Now that I was among the first group of users trained on this new toy, I'll be among those who will help do some of the training in the future. That means someone else is bound to ask me too, and I'd like to give them a better answer than I got.