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originally posted by: Gargoyle91
a reply to: toysforadults
You can prove it to yourself - Lunar Laser Ranging experiment , The reflectors are there.
originally posted by: ErosA433
a reply to: Gargoyle91
Aye, actually they do that experiment occasionally for Astro demos at the Uni I am working for
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
I find the claim "You can prove it to yourself" somewhat dubious. We can watch the experiment performed on mythbusters where they point out that the laser being used is 100 billion times more powerful than your typical laser pointer some of us have. Is it realistic to expect anybody to get a laser 100 billion times more powerful to "prove it to themselves"? I'm not going to do it, but I can watch the mythbusters episode of it being done at the Apache point observatory, owned by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.
I'm guessing the apparent discrepancy is one person is talking average power whilst the other is talking peak power, and both sources agree the laser is only emitted in extremely short pulses, so because of this even very high peak power can be achieved without any extraordinary cooling requirements. If the 2.3 Watts is accurate, I expect it's NOT referring to peak power which is what mythbusters referred to.
originally posted by: MuonToGluon
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
I find the claim "You can prove it to yourself" somewhat dubious. We can watch the experiment performed on mythbusters where they point out that the laser being used is 100 billion times more powerful than your typical laser pointer some of us have. Is it realistic to expect anybody to get a laser 100 billion times more powerful to "prove it to themselves"? I'm not going to do it, but I can watch the mythbusters episode of it being done at the Apache point observatory, owned by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.
100s of Billions times more powerful?...How would one be cooling this planet destroying laser of mass destruction? O_O
About 2.3Watts for a laser, here's a cool short guide for the Lunar Range Experiment:
tmurphy.physics.ucsd.edu...