A
laser is a device which emits a beam of
coherent light at a target. Controlling or containing the direction of light energy is also known as
synchronization. This concentration of energy in one direction gives it strong and sometimes powerful intensity. Lasers have different uses for military purposes, many of which strongly differ from what is seen in
Star Wars, but still follow the same concepts of concentrating energy and/or material within a limited magnetic range. Rhett Allai, associate professor of physics at
Southeastern Louisiana University, argues the energy bolts fail to fit the definition of
laser and explains that in many ways the laser cannons in
Star Wars actually
defy the rules of physics. However, a 1995 paper by Richard E. Russo from the National Laboratory in Berkeley, California, discusses the functions of lasers and mildly argues the
Star Wars depiction of lasers as accurate. Researchers at the Laser Centre of the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences, in partnership with the Faculty of Physics at the
University of Warsaw, published a video that seems to show a laser pulse in flight, as seen in the Star Wars films. To create this video, they filmed many laser pulses at slightly different times with an exposure time of less than one billionth of a second, then combined the still images into a film. The laser is so powerful and intense that it resulted in the air being
ionized. The interaction of the pulse with the plasma generates light of many different wavelengths, which appears white. A more recent and advanced development in 2017 involved students at
Macquarie University in Australia developed a method of multiplying laser power by the use of diamonds. This concept is similar to the fictional kyber crystals used in the
Star Wars universe to power up laser weapons from smaller scale weapons (e.g. blasters,
lightsabers) to super-scale intensity in the case of the
Death Star. The Death Star's laser power works in a similar method to this by concentrating multiple light beams into one spot from where they combine into a single beam. This beam has been described as more powerful than usual because it can be used for the purpose of destroying/damaging solid objects such as drones and debris that it was compared to the lasers used by the Death Star. In episode 236 of
MythBusters,
Adam Savage and
Jamie Hyneman set out to test whether a person could dodge a blaster bolt fired by a stormtrooper. Adam was able to determine, based on examining footage from the
Star Wars films, that the average speed of a blaster bolt was . After building a pneumatic cannon to mimic a blaster and setting up a replica starship passageway, the team tested the myth by firing projectiles at each other from a distance of 40 feet to see if they could be dodged. The myth was declared busted when neither participant proved capable of dodging the shots, explaining that the limitations of human
reaction time made it impossible to do so. == Influence ==