Benm
0
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2007
- Messages
- 7,896
- Points
- 113
I'm not really sure what to make of this device.
Video mentions a '1 micron' wavelength which could be 1064 nm more or less, but little else. Given the apparent output power and size of the handheld part i suspect the laser light is supplied by fiber.
What stikes me as most odd is how this is apparently useful for disassembly of parts from the nuclear industry: If you have something that has gotten radioactivly dangerouns by activation (like a metal piece that was in the core of a nuclear reactor) the last thing you'd want to do is to vaporize it.
Video mentions a '1 micron' wavelength which could be 1064 nm more or less, but little else. Given the apparent output power and size of the handheld part i suspect the laser light is supplied by fiber.
What stikes me as most odd is how this is apparently useful for disassembly of parts from the nuclear industry: If you have something that has gotten radioactivly dangerouns by activation (like a metal piece that was in the core of a nuclear reactor) the last thing you'd want to do is to vaporize it.