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FrozenGate by Avery

My laser is a Microscope!!

Joined
Oct 24, 2008
Messages
1,057
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Well not exactly but due to the linear nature of coherent laser light you can project very detailed shadows of small items. Take off the lens and hold small items right in front of the laser and project the light at a wall or ceiling about 6 feet away.

The pic is of the spring from an Aixiz module projected 5 feet across my ceiling with my 300mW 22x 650nm laser. :)

-Ted
 

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another way to use laser as microscope - reflection. my avatar, and the images below,were made reflecting the laser off a frosted incandescent light bulb from ~20 feet away. the reflected spot then projects out 10 feet to wall. interference pattern modulated by surface (in these images glass light bulb). picture scale about 1 meter, representing the tiny (few mm^2) spot on the bulb where the beam hits.

interfere5.jpg


interfere3.jpg


interfere1.jpg
 
There was an instructable on how to mod a microscope to project whatever is under the microscope on the wall using a laser :D
 
Xplorer877 said:
Well not exactly but due to the linear nature of coherent laser light you can project very detailed shadows of small items. Take off the lens and hold small items right in front of the laser and project the light at a wall or ceiling about 6 feet away.

The pic is of the spring from an Aixiz module projected 5 feet across my ceiling with my 300mW 22x 650nm laser. :)

-Ted

Hey, excellent experiment!

The following was not my discovery, but if you shine a laser through a frosted incandescent light bulb, it shows a very detailed image of the filament on the other side - great for testing these old light bulbs without electricity or meter. ;)
 
Kage said:
[quote author=Xplorer877 link=1228372514/0#0 date=1228372513]Well not exactly but due to the linear nature of coherent laser light you can project very detailed shadows of small items. Take off the lens and hold small items right in front of the laser and project the light at a wall or ceiling about 6 feet away.

The pic is of the spring from an Aixiz module projected 5 feet across my ceiling with my 300mW 22x 650nm laser. :)

-Ted

Hey, excellent experiment!

The following was not my discovery, but if you shine a laser through a frosted incandescent light bulb, it shows a very detailed image of the filament on the other side - great for testing these old light bulbs without electricity or meter. ;)[/quote]

You can do the same ting with fluorescent bulbs, you can see the filament projected on the other side.
 





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