• vivadanang@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I was wondering if we’d see pulsed lasers in anti-drone warfare… the power supply advantages aside, focusing on just the right point in time with the pulse seems hard.

    • Socsa
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      1 year ago

      The hard part is predicting atmospheric effects to get the focus right. It’s basically impossible without some form of just in time compensation. One idea I’ve seen is that you fire a physical projectile and use that to calibrate the focal point at arbitrary distance, almost like a laser tracer.

      • Dimand@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s not easy but you can correct the atmosphere. This is done with guide stars and adaptive optics.

        The bigger challenge is that for intense pulsed lasers, the standard laser profile causes them to self focus in air through nonlinear effects. To overcome this you need to make weird profiles like top hats that are much hard to get just right.

        This is a fundamentally physical limitation that is pretty tricky to overcome.

    • Antimoon51@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It might be hard, but with the processing power we can fit into microchips these days I’d say we fixed harder problems already. I mean, the controller needs at least two cameras or another methode of locating the target and estimating the distance, but I’d guess we could completely get rid of time of flight calculations as the light pulse would be instant for that matter.

      But again: I’m just guessing here