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Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Radium
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Posts: 369
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

Hi:

Is it theoretically-possible to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion
within the earth's troposphere using a laser? If so, what would be the
maximum wavelength [or minimum frequency] and minimum intensity of
laser light required for this? Also what would be the minimum
thickness of the laser beam necessary for this application?

The application of this nuclear fusion is not generation of power but
rather to produce a spectacular light show in the night sky -- using
the minimum light intensity, maximum wavelength, and minimum beam
thickness required.

I am guessing that the minimum wavelength required is too short for
the human eye to see. However, the effects of the laser-induced fusion
maybe visible.


Thanks,

Radium

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  #2  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
jimp@specsol.spam.sux.com
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Posts: 3,817
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

In sci.physics Radium wrote:
Hi:


Is it theoretically-possible to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion
within the earth's troposphere using a laser? If so, what would be the
maximum wavelength [or minimum frequency] and minimum intensity of
laser light required for this? Also what would be the minimum
thickness of the laser beam necessary for this application?


The application of this nuclear fusion is not generation of power but
rather to produce a spectacular light show in the night sky -- using
the minimum light intensity, maximum wavelength, and minimum beam
thickness required.


I am guessing that the minimum wavelength required is too short for
the human eye to see. However, the effects of the laser-induced fusion
maybe visible.


Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.

Or, you could use ordinary lasers directly like the laser light show
people do.

Oh, don't forget to notify the FAA you are going to do it or you go
to jail.

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #3  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Radium
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 369
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

On Jul 27, 5:55 pm, wrote:

Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.


Please don't joke. I am asking a serious question.

Or, you could use ordinary lasers directly like the laser light show
people do.


But the fusion-induced light will be much brighter and will cause a
lot more EMI/RFI. Right?

Oh, don't forget to notify the FAA you are going to do it or you go
to jail.


Okay but what if this laser is on a football field and pointed upward
during the show?

  #4  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Uncle Al
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Posts: 16,643
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth'stroposphere.

Radium wrote:

Hi:

Is it theoretically-possible to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion
within the earth's troposphere using a laser?

[snip crap]

Nucleonic concatenative confabulation is only stratospherically
possible given lasertronic hyperfigulated resitude. That means
trigonal mesh ****anium mist matriculated by diversity fields requires
Title Nein rectitude - and then only possible for odd-numbered days
except for February 29, and not in Arkansas.

Trolling idiot.

--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2
  #5  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Dan Bloomquist
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Posts: 736
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth'stroposphere.

Radium wrote:
On Jul 27, 5:55 pm, wrote:


Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.



Please don't joke. I am asking a serious question.


Not even likely.

  #6  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Eric Gisse
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Posts: 17,315
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

On Jul 27, 4:41 pm, Radium wrote:
Hi:

Is it theoretically-possible


The answer is always "no, and you are stupid for asking."

[snip crap]

  #7  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
Eric Gisse
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Posts: 17,315
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

On Jul 27, 4:59 pm, Radium wrote:
On Jul 27, 5:55 pm, wrote:

Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.


Please don't joke. I am asking a serious question.


No, you aren't. You are simply asking the latest in a series of
increasingly-stupid questions that betray the fact you have no
education in physics.

If you were serious, you would have learned something about laser or
fusion physics by now. Except you haven't, which means you are either
stupid or not serious.

[snip idiocy]

  #8  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
jimp@specsol.spam.sux.com
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,817
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

In sci.physics Radium wrote:
On Jul 27, 5:55 pm, wrote:


Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.


Please don't joke. I am asking a serious question.


I'm not joking.

Or, you could use ordinary lasers directly like the laser light show
people do.


But the fusion-induced light will be much brighter and will cause a
lot more EMI/RFI. Right?


Right, and violate a whole bunch of laws.

Oh, don't forget to notify the FAA you are going to do it or you go
to jail.


Okay but what if this laser is on a football field and pointed upward
during the show?


Shining a laser into the sky without notification is illegal, period.

If it is over a football field, why the hell would you want it in the
troposphere?

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #9  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
jimp@specsol.spam.sux.com
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,817
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

In sci.physics Eric Gisse wrote:
On Jul 27, 4:59 pm, Radium wrote:
On Jul 27, 5:55 pm, wrote:

Sure, all you need to do is build your lasers from unobtainium so they
don't vaporize when you turn them on and power them with a couple
of Galaxy class starship matter-antimatter reactors.


Please don't joke. I am asking a serious question.


No, you aren't. You are simply asking the latest in a series of
increasingly-stupid questions that betray the fact you have no
education in physics.


If you were serious, you would have learned something about laser or
fusion physics by now. Except you haven't, which means you are either
stupid or not serious.


You forgot the other alternative; mentally challenged, or as we used
to say, that boy ain't right.

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #10  
Old July 28th 07 posted to alt.lasers,sci.physics,sci.energy,alt.sci.physics.new-theories,sci.physics.particle
dezakin@usa.net
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 28
Default Using a laser to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion within Earth's troposphere.

On Jul 27, 5:41 pm, Radium wrote:
Hi:

Is it theoretically-possible to facilitate hydrogen-hydrogen fusion
within the earth's troposphere using a laser? If so, what would be the
maximum wavelength [or minimum frequency] and minimum intensity of
laser light required for this? Also what would be the minimum
thickness of the laser beam necessary for this application?


No. Are you a troll or did you not bother hitting wikipedia for
nuclear fusion.

Almost all hydrogen on earth is protium, with some small percentage
being deuterium... so you're trying to do p-p fusion which is weak
force mediated... you have to overcome columb repulsion at the exact
same time there is a weak mediated inverse beta decay to a neutron,
positron, and electron neutrino. Thats how the sun shines, and the
reason its so slow and hard to do is the reason its still shining
rather than burning up billions of years ago.

This ignores a little problem with nuclear fusion called confinement
or the Lawson criterion.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawson_criterion

The application of this nuclear fusion is not generation of power but
rather to produce a spectacular light show in the night sky -- using
the minimum light intensity, maximum wavelength, and minimum beam
thickness required.


Better luck just building H-bombs, deuterium-deuterium wet Ivy Mike
things or deuterium/tritium for something you can launch on a plane.



 




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