APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Comments and questions about the APOD on the main view screen.
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APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by APOD Robot » Fri May 18, 2018 4:07 am

Image Attack of the Laser Guide Stars

Explanation: Dodging powerful laser beams, a drone captured this stunning aerial view. The confrontation took place above the 8.2 meter diameter Very Large Telescopes of the Paranal Observatory on planet Earth. Firing during a test of the observatory's 4 Laser Guide Star Facility, the lasers are ultimately battling against the blurring effect of atmospheric turbulence by creating artificial guide stars. The guide stars are actually emission from laser excited sodium atoms at high altitudes within the telescopic field of view. Guide star image fluctuations are used in real-time to correct for atmospheric blurring by controlling a deformable mirror in the telescope's optical path. Known as adaptive optics, the technique can produce images at the diffraction limit of the telescope. That's the same sharpness you would get if the telescope were in space.

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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by alter-ego » Fri May 18, 2018 4:28 am

Video
A direct beam view at ~4:28.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by JohnD » Fri May 18, 2018 8:35 am

What are we seeing in the APOD and video? This observatory is high altitude, in a very dry desert. We can see the beams, so they are illuminating something. Dust!

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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by orin stepanek » Fri May 18, 2018 12:17 pm

That's the same sharpness you would get if the telescope were in space.
That's pretty darn good; I'd say :D 8-)
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Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 12:24 pm

Click to play embedded YouTube video.
.
That's the same sharpness you would get if the telescope were in space.
Plans are in the works to place this actual telescope
in space as part of the President's new "Space Force."

The Pew Pew Research Center :arrow:
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 1:53 pm

JohnD wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 8:35 am What are we seeing in the APOD and video? This observatory is high altitude, in a very dry desert. We can see the beams, so they are illuminating something. Dust!
Dust. Water vapor. Even oxygen and nitrogen. Rayleigh scattering off all these is strongly biased along the optical axis. Look almost along the beam of a laser pointer and the scatter will be much more evident than seeing it from the side.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 1:56 pm

orin stepanek wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 12:17 pm
That's the same sharpness you would get if the telescope were in space.
That's pretty darn good; I'd say :D 8-)
Yes, though the observation is a little misleading. This performance is only at longer wavelengths, and only in regions right around the artificial guide stars. If you want a sharp, wide field image, the little bitty Hubble mirror still outperforms any ground-based telescopes, regardless of their size or adaptive optics capabilities.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 2:18 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 1:53 pm
JohnD wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 8:35 am
What are we seeing in the APOD and video? This observatory is high altitude, in a very dry desert.
We can see the beams, so they are illuminating something. Dust!
Dust. Water vapor. Even oxygen and nitrogen. Rayleigh scattering off all these is strongly biased along the optical axis. Look almost along the beam of a laser pointer and the scatter will be much more evident than seeing it from the side.
It's a little hard to tell of hand just how strongly the scattering is biased along the optical axis due to the fact that the length of laser beam itself that one observes scales as the secant of the angle. However, to the extent that the scattering is strongly biased along the optical axis it is probably due mostly to aerosol Mie scattering. (The sodium dissolved in such aerosols may also be a factor.)
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 2:28 pm

neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 2:18 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 1:53 pm
JohnD wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 8:35 am
What are we seeing in the APOD and video? This observatory is high altitude, in a very dry desert.
We can see the beams, so they are illuminating something. Dust!
Dust. Water vapor. Even oxygen and nitrogen. Rayleigh scattering off all these is strongly biased along the optical axis. Look almost along the beam of a laser pointer and the scatter will be much more evident than seeing it from the side.
It's a little hard to tell of hand just how strongly the scattering is biased along the optical axis due to the fact that the length of laser beam itself that one observes scales as the secant of the angle. However, to the extent that the scattering is strongly biased along the optical axis it is probably due mostly to aerosol Mie scattering. (The sodium dissolved in such aerosols may also be a factor.)
At the location of this observatory, however, I'd expect Rayleigh scattering off of small particles to dominate Mie scattering off of larger ones. But we don't know what the actual conditions were at the time the image was made. And, of course, the image was made very close to the ground, where we're much more likely to find large particles (like John's dust).

Either way, though, a laser beam is usually quite evident when we're near its axis even where the air is very clean.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Bellerophon » Fri May 18, 2018 3:13 pm

My first thought was that the lasers could damage the drone. I found out they are powerful enough to do so (each beam delivers 22 watts), but the beam diameter is 30 cm, so they'd do no more harm than a reading light (not to say that the laser might not damage the drone's camera, though). https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/ ... str/4lgsf/

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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Askin Y » Fri May 18, 2018 4:03 pm

The smaller scopes have tracks for moving them around, why is that? And why 25 or 30 parking spaces for 3 scopes?

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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Misdirection » Fri May 18, 2018 4:07 pm

The "Discuss" link takes you to yesterday's * discussion.

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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 4:13 pm

Askin Y wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 4:03 pm
And why 25 or 30 parking spaces for 3 scopes?
The have shuttle buses to minimize headlight interference :?:
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by bystander » Fri May 18, 2018 4:13 pm

Askin Y wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 4:03 pm The smaller scopes have tracks for moving them around, why is that? And why 25 or 30 parking spaces for 3 scopes?

It's actually 4 scopes. Called auxiliary telescopes, they are part of the VLTI (Very Large Telescope Interferometer). They are repositioned according to observational requirements.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 4:21 pm

Bellerophon wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 3:13 pm
My first thought was that the lasers could damage the drone. I found out they are powerful enough to do so (each beam delivers 22 watts), but the beam diameter is 30 cm, so they'd do no more harm than a reading light (not to say that the laser might not damage the drone's camera, though). https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/ ... str/4lgsf/
https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/paranal-observatory/vlt/vlt-instr/4lgsf/ wrote:
<<All the operations at the 4LGSF will follow a protocol to avoid any risk to aircraft. The laser system is equipped with an automatic aircraft avoidance system that shuts down the lasers if an aircraft ventures too close to the beams.>>
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 4:25 pm

Bellerophon wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 3:13 pm My first thought was that the lasers could damage the drone. I found out they are powerful enough to do so (each beam delivers 22 watts), but the beam diameter is 30 cm, so they'd do no more harm than a reading light (not to say that the laser might not damage the drone's camera, though). https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/ ... str/4lgsf/
While it's certainly true that the energy density is far too low to damage the drone, don't let that 22 W value fool you. That's 22 watts of luminous power- an energy density of 0.03 J/cm2- a great deal more than you'd get from a 22 W incandescent bulb.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 5:44 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 4:25 pm
Bellerophon wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 3:13 pm
My first thought was that the lasers could damage the drone. I found out they are powerful enough to do so (each beam delivers 22 watts), but the beam diameter is 30 cm, so they'd do no more harm than a reading light (not to say that the laser might not damage the drone's camera, though). https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/ ... str/4lgsf/
While it's certainly true that the energy density is far too low to damage the drone, don't let that 22 W value fool you. That's 22 watts of luminous power- an energy density of 0.03 J/cm2 [0.03 (J/s)/cm2 = 0.03 W/cm2 = 300 W/m2]- a great deal more than you'd get from a 22 W incandescent bulb.
  • 300 W/m2 would feel kind of nice on one's skin;
    however, coming effectively from a point source
    staring at it would be much worse than staring at the Sun.

    [The visual equivalent, roughly, of a supernova about a light year away.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_irradiance wrote:
<<Average annual solar radiation arriving at the top of the Earth's atmosphere is roughly 1361 W/m2. The Sun's rays are attenuated as they pass through the atmosphere, leaving maximum normal surface irradiance at approximately 1000 W /m2 at sea level on a clear day. When 1361 W/m2 is arriving above the atmosphere (when the sun is at the zenith in a cloudless sky), global radiation on a horizontal surface at ground level is about 1120 W/m2 including radiation scattered or reemitted by atmosphere and surroundings.>>
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 6:13 pm

neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 5:44 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 4:25 pm
Bellerophon wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 3:13 pm
My first thought was that the lasers could damage the drone. I found out they are powerful enough to do so (each beam delivers 22 watts), but the beam diameter is 30 cm, so they'd do no more harm than a reading light (not to say that the laser might not damage the drone's camera, though). https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/ ... str/4lgsf/
While it's certainly true that the energy density is far too low to damage the drone, don't let that 22 W value fool you. That's 22 watts of luminous power- an energy density of 0.03 J/cm2 [0.03 (J/s)/cm2 = 0.03 W/cm2 = 300 W/m2]- a great deal more than you'd get from a 22 W incandescent bulb.
  • 300 W/m2 would feel kind of nice on one's skin;
    however, coming effectively from a point source
    staring at it would be much worse than staring at the Sun.
Given an eye pupil size of 2 mm (typical when viewing bright light), inserting your eye into a beam with a power density of 300 W/m2 means you're receiving 1 mW. The same as if you looked directly into the lowest power laser pointers. Staring at these is less dangerous than staring at the Sun.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 7:12 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 6:13 pm
neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 5:44 pm
  • 300 W/m2 would feel kind of nice on one's skin;
    however, coming effectively from a point source
    staring at it would be much worse than staring at the Sun.
Given an eye pupil size of 2 mm (typical when viewing bright light), inserting your eye into a beam with a power density of 300 W/m2 means you're receiving 1 mW. The same as if you looked directly into the lowest power laser pointers. Staring at these is less dangerous than staring at the Sun.
Well...one's eye pupil size may be only 2 mm on a bright sunny day but not at night... at least not at first.

And I would imagine that laser pointer spots are also larger than 2 mm.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_safety wrote:
Class II (Output power may be up to 1 mW): The blink reflex (glare aversion response to bright lights) of the human eye will prevent eye damage, unless the person deliberately stares into the beam for an extended period. Intentional suppression of the blink reflex could lead to eye injury. (Some laser pointers and measuring instruments are class 2.)

Class IIa: A region in the low-power end of Class II where the laser requires in excess of 1000 seconds of continuous viewing to produce a burn to the retina. Commercial laser scanners are in this subclass.
https://www.physics.utoronto.ca/~jharlow/teaching/lasers.html wrote:
Are Laser Pointers Dangerous to Pilots?
by Jason Harlow

My Experiment:

I took 3 different green laser pointers, all 5 mW, all of which were purchased for less than $50 each. I measured the spot size at 1, 10, 15, 40 and 97 m. I then plotted distance versus beam diameter and did a best-fit linear slope. I found a slope of 1.04 +/- 0.09 mm/m and a y-intercept of 1.4 +/- 0.5 mm. This means that, at the laser pointer itself, the beam diameter is about 1.5 mm. As it travels, the diameter increases by 1 mm for every 1 m away from the laser pointer.

At a distance of 5 m away from the laser, the beam diameter is 7 mm, which is a typical diameter of the dark-adapted pupil (Bradley JC, Bentley KC, Mughal AI, Bodhireddy H and Brown SM 2011, Journal of Refractive Surgery, v.27 issue.3, pg.202). This means that if you are within 5 m of the laser and it is shot directly into one of your dark-adapted pupils, all 5 mW of power will enter your eye, and then be focused onto your retina.

At a distance of 10 m, the beam diameter is 12 mm, and its area is 110 sq-mm. Since a 7 mm-diameter dark-adapted pupil has an area of 34 sq-mm, only 1.5 mW of power will enter your eye if this laser is shot directly in.

At 100 m, the beam is 10 cm in diameter with an area of 8700 sq-mm, which is 250 times bigger than your dark-adapted pupil. The maximum power which can enter your eye at this distance is 0.02 mW.

At a distance of 1 km, which would be typical for a low-flying aircraft, the maximum power which could enter a pilot's eye is 0.0002 mW, or 0.2 micro-Watts.

Note that Class 1 lasers have powers less than 0.024 mW, and they carry no warning label because they are incapable of causing eye damage. My little experiment indicates that a Class 3A laser-pointer (5 mW) becomes equivalent to a Class 1 laser at a distance of 90 m or farther.

As for actual retinal damage, it has been estimated that it would take 10 seconds of staring directly into a class 3A laser in order to damage your retina. But, in practice this is impossible to do because it feels very painful and you immediately look away.>>
Last edited by neufer on Fri May 18, 2018 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 7:19 pm

neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:12 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 6:13 pm
neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 5:44 pm
  • 300 W/m2 would feel kind of nice on one's skin;
    however, coming effectively from a point source
    staring at it would be much worse than staring at the Sun.
Given an eye pupil size of 2 mm (typical when viewing bright light), inserting your eye into a beam with a power density of 300 W/m2 means you're receiving 1 mW. The same as if you looked directly into the lowest power laser pointers. Staring at these is less dangerous than staring at the Sun.
Well...one's eye pupil size may be only 2 mm on a bright sunny day but not at night... at least not at first.

And I would imagine that laser pointer spots are also larger than 2 mm.
Yeah, but we're talking about staring into the beam. Even if you're exposed to the beam at night, and have a 5mm pupil, you're still only looking at 6 mW into the eye, which isn't going to do any instant damage. The pupil will close down in less than a second.

At close range, laser pointers have spot sizes on the order of 2 mm or slightly less.

Suffice to say, a 22 W visible light laser expanded to 30 cm diameter poses no real threat to vision, and isn't going to look brighter than the Sun.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 7:41 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:19 pm
Suffice to say, a 22 W visible light laser expanded to 30 cm diameter poses no real threat to vision, and isn't going to look brighter than the Sun.
Your own calculations put the total light entering the eye as roughly equivalent to a Sun stare.

However, the laser light will be focused down to a retina point corresponding to
about a half minute of arc (for 20/20 vision) rather than a half degree of arc for the Sun.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 7:47 pm

neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:41 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:19 pm
Suffice to say, a 22 W visible light laser expanded to 30 cm diameter poses no real threat to vision, and isn't going to look brighter than the Sun.
Your own calculations put the total light entering the eye as roughly equivalent to a Sun stare.

However, the laser light will be focused down to a retina point corresponding to
about a half minute of arc (for 20/20 vision) rather than a half degree of arc for the Sun.
The smaller spot will actually cause a less damage. But in either case, blood flow will carry away the heat. (In reality, the optics of the eye will probably not allow such a small focus for a point source light.)

Anyway, again, the point is that these lasers pose no safety risk to anybody passing through them from above.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by neufer » Fri May 18, 2018 9:19 pm

Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:47 pm
neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:41 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:19 pm
Suffice to say, a 22 W visible light laser expanded to 30 cm diameter poses no real threat to vision, and isn't going to look brighter than the Sun.
Your own calculations put the total light entering the eye as roughly equivalent to a Sun stare.

However, the laser light will be focused down to a retina point corresponding to
about a half minute of arc (for 20/20 vision) rather than a half degree of arc for the Sun.
The smaller spot will actually cause a less damage. But in either case, blood flow will carry away the heat.
(In reality, the optics of the eye will probably not allow such a small focus for a point source light.)

I was basing the small 30" focus on the optics of the eye.

If the same amount of light power is focused on a smaller spot then, of course, more damage is done. The advantage comes from both a greater ability to move out of the way of a laser beam and to divert one's gaze.
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:47 pm
Anyway, again, the point is that these lasers pose no safety risk to anybody passing through them from above.
Not everyone is smart enough to avert their gaze.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by Chris Peterson » Fri May 18, 2018 10:29 pm

neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 9:19 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:47 pm
neufer wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:41 pm
Your own calculations put the total light entering the eye as roughly equivalent to a Sun stare.

However, the laser light will be focused down to a retina point corresponding to
about a half minute of arc (for 20/20 vision) rather than a half degree of arc for the Sun.
The smaller spot will actually cause a less damage. But in either case, blood flow will carry away the heat.
(In reality, the optics of the eye will probably not allow such a small focus for a point source light.)

I was basing the small 30" focus on the optics of the eye.

If the same amount of light power is focused on a smaller spot then, of course, more damage is done. The advantage comes from both a greater ability to move out of the way of a laser beam and to divert one's gaze.
No. The amount of damage has to do with the number of retinal cells that are affected. So a smaller size may well lead to less damage. But in any case, you're not going to focus a point source to that small a spot. Do not confuse the theoretical resolution of the eye, which depends upon the MTF of the system, with the smallest point the eye can focus.
Chris Peterson wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 7:47 pm
Anyway, again, the point is that these lasers pose no safety risk to anybody passing through them from above.
Not everyone is smart enough to avert their gaze.
Since we're talking about something that requires many seconds of staring to result in damage, and which naturally triggers both a blink reflex and an aversion reflex, I don't think many smarts are required.
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Re: APOD: Attack of the Laser Guide Stars (2018 May 18)

Post by D Negvesky » Sat May 19, 2018 1:20 am

appears to be CG superimposed on photo background. Actual photos are in gallery and are even more impressive.