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Actually, 355nm is not an ionizing wavelength so it won't damage DNA.
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You keep telling yourself that :digital_blue said:Actually, 355nm is not an ionizing wavelength so it won't damage DNA.
Alsone said:An intense pulse of UV could contain enough energy to cause cell damage even over such a short period of time as its the tissue penetration and energy transferred to the cells that does the damage not the duration.
Even less. At max. rep. rate I calculated 150mW average, but 3KW peak.Alsone said:Average power might be 420mw.
digital_blue said:Actually, 355nm is not an ionizing wavelength so it won't damage DNA.
Cyparagon said:[quote author=Alsone link=1236568266/0#14 date=1236593447]An intense pulse of UV could contain enough energy to cause cell damage even over such a short period of time as its the tissue penetration and energy transferred to the cells that does the damage not the duration.
Even less. At max. rep. rate I calculated 150mW average, but 3KW peak. [/quote]Cyparagon said:[quote author=Alsone link=1236568266/0#14 date=1236593447]Average power might be 420mw.
digital_blue said:Actually, 355nm is not an ionizing wavelength so it won't damage DNA.
[/quote]Cyparagon said:From wikipedia:
While "black lights" do produce light in the UV range, their spectrum is confined to the longwave UVA region. Unlike UVB and UVC, which are responsible for the direct DNA damage that leads to skin cancer, black light is limited to lower energy, longer waves and does not cause sunburn. However, UVA is capable of causing damage to collagen fibers and destroying vitamin A in skin.
laserfreak3d said:hivwhy not make a pulse source for it with a ne555
Does coherence really play a part here? :-/ Coherent or incoherent, the same power over the same area would probably have the same effects.but a sunbed has no where near the level of [highlight]coherent[/highlight] light that a laser has.
digital_blue said:I believe it has something to do with certain wavelengths carrying different levels of energy. Coherency simply means that all the light is "in phase"...
digital_blue said:I'm not sure a 555 could provide the 3-4kHz I'm planning to drive this thing at. Besides, I already have a function generator and a few opamps lying around.
Curiously_Coherent said:Not sure about the cancer risk but I have personally "sunburned" my skin quite badly with a 26W SW UV lamp that I photograph fluorescent minerals with. I've always used UV goggles because the risk of cataracts is very high with UVA, but now I wear black sleeves & gloves and slather any exposed flesh in SPF40 sunscreen rated for UVB and UVA protection. (Ombrelle is the most effective) My light source uses germicidal quartz UV fluorescent bulbs. They are normally used in water sterilization equipment and air ducts because they KILL things like bacteria. Living things do not fare well under UVA light in general, so it couldn't hurt to be careful and take precautions.
GooeyGus said:Screw 355... Take the summing crystal out and you get a really strong pulsed green!