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Questions tagged [laser]

Questions regarding devices which emit focused beams of electromagnetic energy.

7 votes
2 answers
157 views

Would a laser seismometer work from lunar orbit?

Lasers today have become extremely sensible, they can detect sub-millimeter movements of a surface from a distance. Could this feature be exploited to create a lunar seismometer working from a probe ...
FluidCode's user avatar
  • 191
15 votes
2 answers
2k views

How do the interferometers on the drag-free satellite LISA receive power without altering their geodesic trajectory?

LISA is a proposed space probe designed to measure gravitational waves. It aims to measure gravitational waves directly by using laser interferometry. It uses a drag-free satellite design to protect ...
Woody's user avatar
  • 22.9k
5 votes
1 answer
318 views

Deep Space Optical Communications (DSOC) - from what distance could a flashlight be detected by a space-based telescope

Flight laser transmitter - for Psyche mission has Mass 29 kg (100 W). It also requires pointing up to 3 degrees of the Sun (towards the receiver telescope). My question is about really small probes (...
TheMatrix Equation-balance's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
253 views

Has anyone in space beyond LEO seen or has anything photographed a non-pointer laser from Earth?

The two current answers to Has anyone in space seen or photographed a simple laser pointer from Earth? both describe small, low power lasers from Earth aimed towards the ISS in LEO. Here I'd like to ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
3 votes
1 answer
131 views

Precise Orbit Determination (POD) vs GNSS accuracy; seeking references

Precise orbit determination provides performances that are not currently achievable with GNSS systems. I cannot find information of the reason for this. I imagine different possibilities: Use of ...
AUP's user avatar
  • 51
2 votes
1 answer
139 views

Transmit power for low/high wavelength [closed]

I am reading the book: Kaushal, H., Jain, V.K. and Kar, S., 2017. Free space optical communication. New Delhi: Springer India. I have asked before about a reason of choice of wavelength for beacon ...
Noel Miller's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
503 views

What are the reasons for the specific operating wavelengths chosen for laser communication?

I am reading the book: Kaushal, H., Jain, V.K. and Kar, S., 2017, Free space optical communication, New Delhi: Springer India. The operating wavelengths for beacon and data transmission were discussed....
Noel Miller's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
149 views

Beacon (PAT) in optical free space communication [closed]

Nanosatellite Optical Downlink Experiment (NODE) mission has 3 "signal":downlink, beacon uplink and RF. According to a description of the mission, the high-rate downlink and beacon uplink ...
Anna Koroleva's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
248 views

Frequency/Spectrum regulation document for laser communication

For RF we have the frequency allocation table, where the RF spectrum is regulated. Optical has big bandwidth, there is a lot of frequency space. How do we regulate optical spectrum? I didnt find any ...
Adil.Kolenko's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
478 views

Receiver and transmitter in RF/optic satellite communication: distance vs data rate v2

The first version of this question is here. I have read the article "Optical communications work best over relatively short distances in space." by Toyoshima, M., Leeb, W., Kunimori, H. and ...
Adil.Kolenko's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
676 views

Have "space lasers" really been used to temporarily blind US satellites?

In CNN's video An exclusive look into how Space Force is defending America they talk with Gen. John W. Raymond, Chief of Space Operations, US Space Force. After about ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
3 votes
1 answer
241 views

Small probes to Alpha Centauri powered by light sails with a journey time of 20 years

This news item states that scientists have potentially devised a way to send a number of small probes to Alpha Centauri at quarter the speed of light. The journey would take 20 years and each small ...
Fred's user avatar
  • 13.1k
2 votes
1 answer
84 views

Did Perseverance get an experimental optical communications terminal?

The video Donald Cornwell plenary talk: NASA's Optical Communications Program: 2015 and Beyond was presented at SPIE Photonics West 2015. It's a great talk and worth the time. Near the end at about <...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
3 votes
1 answer
104 views

How did LADEE and LDRC measure it's distance from Lunar orbit to Earth to 1 centimeter accuracy using optical communications?

The video Donald Cornwell plenary talk: NASA's Optical Communications Program: 2015 and Beyond was presented at SPIE Photonics West 2015. It's a great talk and worth the time. LADEE had [the Laser ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
5 votes
2 answers
213 views

Using lasers to reach the Karman line

I've just seen this Anton Petrov video: New Type of Laser Levitation Could Help Us Explore the Mesosphere. It's about this new form of levitation that uses lasers to heat up the air underneath a craft,...
R. Hall's user avatar
  • 822
2 votes
1 answer
188 views

When they shoot lasers at the Moon for ranging, what is the shape of the beam?

Laser ranging of the Moon is usually done with a Q-switched pulsed laser fed into a big (1 or 2 meter diameter) telescope as a collimator in order to get a tight beam all the way to the Moon in hopes ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
30 votes
1 answer
7k views

Why don't lasers last long in space?

A news article reports that OSIRIS-REx was equipped with two lasers for the spacecraft to shoot off the rock and study the echo to facilitate its landing and sampling maneuver. ... Most lasers don't ...
Camille Goudeseune's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
82 views

How could METI laser pulses be "brighter than the Sun"?

This Astronomy online course page The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence contains the following, about half-way down: However, in recent years, human engineers have learned how to make flashes ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
2 votes
1 answer
270 views

Does Falcon 9's first stage use laser, radar or vision to assist landing? [duplicate]

Does Falcon 9's first stage use only GPS when it makes its vertical precision landing, or is it assisted also by radar or laser ranging or computer vision? If not, why not?
LocalFluff's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
445 views

How many (presumably friendly) lasers are being shot at us from space? (pew! pew!)

Example: at first they could not decide which of the green laser-shooting satellites was responsible! Too many to choose from? See Science Alert's February 9, 2023, Ominous Green Lasers Shot Over ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
1 vote
1 answer
156 views

Would an incandescent light bulb be more efficient than a laser for photon propulsion?

In an incandescent light bulb pretty much almost all of the input power is radiated as photons. While perhaps 10% of the power is useful for human vision and the rest are longer wavelengths, it's all ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
8 votes
1 answer
2k views

Do the latest Starlink satellites use inter-satellite laser communications?

Do the latest (as of Jan 30, 2020) Starlink satellites use inter-satellite laser communications? I can't find any info about that!
Guilherme Bechtinger's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
66 views

Is it recorded and/or documented when and where Curiosity's ChemCam's laser has zapped on Mars?

The article with the title "NASA Rover's Images Show Laser Flash on Martian Rock" tells us that the ChemCam's laser had zapped more than 600 rock and soil targets on Mars since Curiosity landed in ...
Cornelis's user avatar
  • 7,535
2 votes
1 answer
278 views

What exactly is a "Next Generation Lunar Reflector"? Difference in design and performance?

Space.com's 50 Years After Apollo, India Is Carrying a NASA Laser Reflector to the Moon (And It's Only the Start) is a little confusing because it talks about three retroreflectors: - Apollo era ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
1 vote
1 answer
184 views

Why does LRO's laser altimeter telescopes use lenses instead of mirrors?

From Space.com's NASA's Piggyback Experiment on Israeli Moon Lander Could Aid Future Lunar Touchdowns shows an image of the laser altimeter on the LRO. It looks like the "transmit" and "...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
9 votes
1 answer
471 views

Why is the Aeolus space laser losing power so quickly?

The BBC News article Aeolus: Wind-mapping space laser is losing power says that Europe's Aeolus satellite was launched last year to gather data to improve weather forecasts, and its observations have ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
3 votes
0 answers
103 views

Laser powered LEO launch system

Latest research on beam powered propulsion seem to focus on the microwave spectrum as it is easy to catch by the orbital vehicle. However I argue it could be way cheaper to use a solar powered laser ...
Simon Talbot's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
52 views

Was any data actually transmitted between OSCD and ISARA in the recent CubeSat lasercom test?

Two CubeSats (the OCSD and ISARA CubeSats) recently demonstrated technology for on-orbit sat-sat laser communications. All the information I have been able to find doesn't indicate if the test ...
Knudsen Number's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
161 views

How to get an initial setting of the range gate for a Lunar Laser Ranging using a new Retro Reflector for the first time?

From an answer to this question They were searching by aiming their laser at the moon and looking for reflections. But the system is set to only detect photons in a very narrow range of ...
Uwe's user avatar
  • 49.2k
1 vote
0 answers
79 views

Could outer system probes detect lasers shone at them from earth (orbit)?

Does the Voyager spacecraft have instruments capable of detecting laser light if shone at them? New Horizons certainly does. Any other probes? Is there any laser capable of accuracy and power enough ...
Alonda's user avatar
  • 499
14 votes
5 answers
4k views

Could we use a narrow paradigm, say laser, to get info faster from New Horizons? (With a moon base.)

There was just a question (actually, on Astronomy) about why the data rate from New Horizons is low. Of course, even with the most directional radio antennas, the spread is enormous. I guess ...
Fattie's user avatar
  • 1,611
0 votes
1 answer
117 views

Achieving relativistic speeds with the use of lasers

Basic data about our spacecraft: Basically, were using a laser as an engine. Mass: 1000 tons. Electrical power for the laser: 10 GW. Efficiency of the laser(s) : 50%. So first I calculated the ...
gss's user avatar
  • 9
4 votes
1 answer
215 views

Could a laser ablation-based propulsion system really accelerate an object to 0.001 c?

Comments below this answer suggest that a laser ablation-based propulsion system, where the laser is separate from the object to be accelerated, could accelerate an object to about $\frac{1}{1000}$ of ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
40 votes
3 answers
14k views

Is pinging the Moon with a laser as shown on "The Big Bang Theory" possible?

In an episode of season 3 of The Big Bang Theory, the cast sends a laser pulse to the Moon. This seems to be a real thing: What Neil & Buzz left on the Moon (2004). My questions are: Could ...
Dmytro Khmara's user avatar
8 votes
3 answers
513 views

How would a laser "shoot down" space junk?

This question links to an article describing a ground-based laser designed for shooting down orbiting space debris: "The scientists intend to use the massive soon-to-be-built telescope at the Altay ...
gandalf3's user avatar
  • 181
4 votes
1 answer
110 views

Feasible to use lasers / concentrated light to power solar cells in our solar system?

I was watching a video on Youtube which criticized Elon Musk's idea to use solar power to power the space craft at long distances from the sun such as Saturn. That got me thinking whether it would be ...
Jonatan's user avatar
  • 201
7 votes
1 answer
259 views

Laser communication for interplanetary probes - aiming is impossible without beacon?

Laser communications are considered very promising for interplanetary probes because of potentially much higher data rates. I found that laser communication at large distances (over 3 a.u. ~ 450 ...
Heopps's user avatar
  • 9,061
5 votes
1 answer
474 views

Attitude requirements for inter-satellite laser communication

Previous questions have address the beam divergence angles and the expected signal attenuation for laser communication between spacecraft. However, I was wondering what is a typical receiver aperture ...
ChrisR's user avatar
  • 6,250
11 votes
3 answers
602 views

Is it possible to extend high speed data transmission with lasers to the distance Earth to Mars?

Data transmission using an optical laser between ground station and a GEO satellite may offer very high data rates, up to 1.8 GBit/s for instance. But what about a transmission from Earth to Mars ...
Uwe's user avatar
  • 49.2k
1 vote
0 answers
108 views

Could the moons of Jupiter or Saturn be heated to human-friendly temperatures?

I always loved the part in 2001 where Jupiter becomes as star. Has anyone ever suggested placing power generating stations high in the atmosphere of gas giants, and beaming the energy to colonies on ...
Stonecraft's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
212 views

Would laser and beamed energy anti satellite weapons cause much space debris?

Laser and other beamed energy weapons, in orbit or from Earth, could potentially make their targets malfunction from overheating and perhaps even partial melting. Would this be a way of space warfare ...
LocalFluff's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
226 views

Why would "Breakthrough Starshot" need photon thrusters?

Found here (italics added, bold in source): Nanocrafts are gram-scale robotic spacecrafts comprising two main parts: StarChip: Moore’s law has allowed a dramatic decrease in the size of ...
user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is it possible for small satellites to orbit in MEO or GEO?

I am researching satellite technology, and in particular I am looking at the rise and implications of smallsat technology. As far as I know, there are currently no satellites beyond LEO that would be ...
Unistuttgartaerospace's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
347 views

A laser can propel a spacecraft to 20% of light speed, time shorter on spacecraft?

So I recently learned about a project about using lasers on Earth to propel a spacecraft to 20% of light speed for interstellar traveling. So this brings an interesting question, how much shorter ...
XTImpossible's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
775 views

Breakthrough Starshot's 100 Gigawatt laser array - what's the current thinking how this might work?

In the article Breakthrough Starshot tricks out massive telescope for planet hunting there is casual mention of a "phased array of lasers in the 100GW range" that will propel a gram scale spacecraft ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
4 votes
1 answer
451 views

Deorbit LEO debris with a higher orbit laser?

A couple of days ago I asked Can a laser be used to clear the launch path of a rocket? turns out this is not a good plan but the answer by Hobbes suggests the idea of clearing debris with a laser is ...
James Jenkins's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
270 views

Can a laser be used to clear the launch path of a rocket?

Military grade lasers shooting down incoming missiles have been in the news since Ronald Reagan was the US president. The problems, as I recall are mostly about diffusion in atmosphere. The Kessler ...
James Jenkins's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
330 views

How accurate can near earth asteroids be tracked?

To get more statistical significance for the suspected flyby-anomaly (or to refute it), it would be desirable to track as many hyperbolic earth flybys to within 1mm/s as we can get. Can we track ...
Andreas's user avatar
  • 1,395
3 votes
2 answers
753 views

Characteristics of the inter-satellite optical link

I'm currently diving into this topic and as I understand from the brief search there are two main types of inter-satellite link: radio and optical. As I can see, one of the main distinction of optical ...
Glinka's user avatar
  • 153
11 votes
1 answer
2k views

How does QUESS, China's quantum communications satellite experiment, relay entangled signals?

China launched the Quantum Experiments at Space Scale (QUESS) on the satellite called MOZI or Micius today, which will be used for quantum communications between China and Europe. Popular Science ...
called2voyage's user avatar
  • 23.8k

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