Impressive laser, can it light stuff on fire though? hehe
I never knew that an x-ray laser was even possible. There are gamma ray "lasers" that exist in nature when hyper-nova's go off, at either end of the the axis, its like a deadly "beam". Normally X-rays are very hard to focus as they are that energetic. They go through pretty much everything except a thick block of lead.
@forwardbias You're thinking of polar jets, and that's formed at the poles of an accretion disk that surrounds an object like a black hole. Polar jets are particle beams, not lasers.
I dont see why not as the nucleus contains a lot more mass than the orbiting electrons and has a positive charge it will be affected less by the force and will want to remain stationary more than the electron
@TheLonelyImmortal yes. it happens quite often. Since you watched a video online, I assume you are familiar with the concept of "electricity". The flow is generated by a magnet rotating around a wire- in laymans turns, being pulled away by a magnet.
@richardw2121 Actually in a TV (CRT) the electrons are "boiled" off the atoms by thermionic emission, the tungsten cathode is heated, and then the electrons are accelerated by an electric field held between the Whenelt plate and the anode plate by the difference in voltage between the two elements. The magnetic field is used to focus and deflect the electron beam, but at this point the electrons are already free from the atoms, in the vacuum between the electron gun and the screen.
5:20 looks like weed lol
KillerRadar 4 months ago 3
Shoot missles with this.
moneyquickeasy 10 months ago
Impressive laser, can it light stuff on fire though? hehe
I never knew that an x-ray laser was even possible. There are gamma ray "lasers" that exist in nature when hyper-nova's go off, at either end of the the axis, its like a deadly "beam". Normally X-rays are very hard to focus as they are that energetic. They go through pretty much everything except a thick block of lead.
forwardbias 11 months ago
@forwardbias You're thinking of polar jets, and that's formed at the poles of an accretion disk that surrounds an object like a black hole. Polar jets are particle beams, not lasers.
EnigmaHood 2 months ago
Basically folks.........
Electrons are subject to electromagnetic forces......(how a crt monitor works)
Electrons are also subject to the forces (and energies) of photons.....
E=Hf.............. look it up people
richardw2121 1 year ago
english please
pokefam101 1 year ago
So magnets can pull electrons?
TheLonelyImmortal 1 year ago
@TheLonelyImmortal yep thats how a typical tv works
richardw2121 1 year ago
@richardw2121 Could a magnet pull an electron away from an atom?
TheLonelyImmortal 1 year ago
@TheLonelyImmortal
I dont see why not as the nucleus contains a lot more mass than the orbiting electrons and has a positive charge it will be affected less by the force and will want to remain stationary more than the electron
richardw2121 1 year ago
@TheLonelyImmortal yes. it happens quite often. Since you watched a video online, I assume you are familiar with the concept of "electricity". The flow is generated by a magnet rotating around a wire- in laymans turns, being pulled away by a magnet.
zoooooooooaa 1 year ago
@richardw2121 Actually in a TV (CRT) the electrons are "boiled" off the atoms by thermionic emission, the tungsten cathode is heated, and then the electrons are accelerated by an electric field held between the Whenelt plate and the anode plate by the difference in voltage between the two elements. The magnetic field is used to focus and deflect the electron beam, but at this point the electrons are already free from the atoms, in the vacuum between the electron gun and the screen.
puddingpimp 9 months ago
I didn't know electrons could be stimulated to give off X-rays.... Very interesting. :)
tall32guy 1 year ago
do they give tours?
that would be awesome!
defect530 2 years ago
@defect530 haha it would!
EFRENURENAG 1 year ago