Sunday, September 09, 2007

Japan Applies to Host Next Bond Supervillain


By developing the first solar-powered, space-based death-ray laser:

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and Osaka University have been working together to develop a device which converts sunlight into laser-light with four times the efficiency of previous attempts. According to a report out of Tokyo, the team is working on Space-based solar power systems which can collect sunlight in space and convert it into laser light, which is then transmitted to Earth and used for electricity... or to power a massive Death-Ray. The project works by storing sunlight-based energy in plate made from a sintered powder of metals like chromium and neodymium. When weak laser light is shined onto the plate, the stored energy is transferred to the laser where its strength is amplified by a factor of four. In one test, a 0.5-watt laser was amplified to 180-watts by the plates. Scientists have thus far been able to garner 40-percent of the solar energy produced, and they hope to have a system ready for satellite mounting by the not-too-distant year 2030.

I'm relieved that the device would be powered by the sun, as opposed to some hydrocarbon-based energy source that would only exacerbate global warming.

This device would come in extremely hand for frying Halkan cities if they refuse to turn over the dilithium crystals.

Oh wow. Two kids=less sleep=lost coherence. And you pay the price.

Go read an intelligent blog.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"This device would come in extremely hand for frying Halkan cities if they refuse to turn over the dilithium crystals.

Oh wow. Two kids=less sleep=lost coherence. And you pay the price.

Go read an intelligent blog."



Take that Jebus!!!

Anonymous said...

Yes, and the Laser energy loss during retransmission will be

horrendous, unreliable, deadly, and costly.

This one is already in development. Microwaves versus Lasers

http://nlspropulsion.net/Documents/MPTS_June_2009_No_drawing.pdf