Chapter forty nine as new advances in laser science becomes created.
With a particle laser installed into a lock heed star fighter the first aircraft design. To be the first generation protector its SR 72. It can travel at mach six that's equal to 4500 Mph, as it can fly comfortably in lower orbit. Space cruising brings compact design of first generation particle laser system. As it is called the High-Repetition-Rate Advanced Petawatt Laser System (HAPLS). It will emit 100,000 times more power than all the power stations in the world HAPLS
is designed to ultimately generate a peak power greater than 1 petawatt (1015
or 1 quadrillion watts). Each pulse will deliver 30 joules of energy in less
than 30 femtoseconds (trillionths of a second or 0.00000000000003 seconds)—the
time it takes light to travel a fraction of the width of a human hair. The
laser system will deliver these pulses of light at 10 hertz (10 repetitions per
second).The Extreme Light Infrastructure (ELI) Beamlines project is an
EU-funded lab being developed with experts from around the world, including
Lawrence Livermore lab in the US, and being built in the Czech Republic. Due to
be switched on by 2017, it will emit a short laser burst with an intensity of
1023 watts per square centimeter. 'ELI will become the first international
laser research facility, much like a ‘CERN for laser research’, hosting some of
the world’s most powerful lasers enabling a new era of unique research
opportunities for users from all countries,' said Professor Wolfgang Sandner,
director general of the ELI-Delivery Consortium International Association
(AIBSL).

High-Repetition-Rate Advanced Petawatt Laser System (HAPLS), it will
emit 100,000 times more power than all the power stations in the world.
The
system combines technologies from across Europe and around the world. It relies
on a scheme referred to as 'double-chirped pulse amplification,' enabling high
signal to noise in the output pulses which will seed HAPLS. It will be the most
powerful laser ever created, and could give researchers incredible new insights
into how the cosmos was created. Called the High-Repetition-Rate Advanced
Petawatt Laser System (HAPLS), it will emit 100,000 times more power than all
the power stations in the world - for a tiny fraction of a second. It has even
been nicknamed the Death Star laser for its similarity to Darth Vader's laser
wielding base in Star Wars.The project has been nicknamed the 'death Star'
after the Star Wars craft that could blow up planets The 'death star' laser:
The
solid-state, short-pulse laser converts the energy from the pump laser to
30-joule, 30-femtosecond pulses for a peak power exceeding 1 petawatt. The
laser system measures just 4.6 meters wide and 17 meters long. 'HAPLS’s high
repetition rate will make possible new scientific discoveries,' said Livermore
physicist and HAPLS project manager Constantin Haefner. 'While scientists
have long performed experiments with powerful single-shot lasers, they have
never had an opportunity to repeat experiments at 10 times per second.' HAPLS
will deliver ultra short, high-energy laser pulses for generating secondary
sources of electromagnetic radiation (such as high-brightness x rays).
Accelerating charged particles (electrons,
protons, ions). The laser technology will enable many applications in
physics, medicine, biology, and materials science.High-Repetition-Rate Advanced
Petawatt Laser System (HAPLS), it will emit 100,000 times more power than all
the power stations in the world An early prototype of the system HAPLS will
consist of two interconnected Livermore-designed laser systems that, when set
up at ELI Beamlines, 


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