I could be wrong, but I don’t suspect that a laser powerful enough to physically destroy stuff at a distance is going to be meaningfully stopped by regular mirrors, because mirrors don’t reflect all the light pointed at them, and as soon as the mirror gets damaged enough to not properly reflect light in the spot the beam hits, it might as well not be there anyway.
Showroom7561@lemmy.ca 9 months ago
What if enemies just start adding mirrors to their planes, drones, etc?
CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social 9 months ago
TheChurn@kbin.social 9 months ago
A good mirror reflects more than 99% of incident light, effectively increasing the amount of power the laser needs to destroy the target by a factor of 100.
This isn't the real concern, however. Fog, dust, clouds, and rain are quite common on the damp and dusty sphere we live on, and they would all strongly attenuate the beam power and greatly reduce the effective range.
Jaytreeman@kbin.social 9 months ago
You're not wrong, but at that power level anything longer than a short pulse is going to vaporize the stuff in the way.
They probably take that into consideration and pulse the lazer before giving a more consistent shot.
Clearing out the path before shooting the shot.
Maybe they have a ring around the primary shot as well. Vaporizing the stuff that could get in the way of the primary attack.
These people are smart. It's easier to assume they've taken that into considerationMonument@lemmy.sdf.org 9 months ago
Off the cuff idea, but thermally ablative coatings that dissolve into light blocking smoke might buy drone operators time to evade - assuming their rotors don’t thin out the smoke screen too much.
Paddzr@lemmy.world 9 months ago
But is this the same type of light? We’re talking about pure heat damage, how do mirrors reflect heat?
Shadow@lemmy.ca 9 months ago
Lasers don’t send heat. Lasers send light energy that is absorbed by the surface and radiates it as heat.
If a mirror was 100% effective it would work, but the tiny bit that bits the backing of the mirror will melt it and then it’ll cascade.
Zorque@kbin.social 9 months ago
Wouldn't all those things also affect the mirrors ability to reflect?
aeronmelon@lemmy.world 9 months ago
2028: Chinese scientists have developed “supermirrors”.
sandevistan@lemm.ee 9 months ago
Well I’m basing this off what I’ve seen the Chinese get up to, they have these mounted on trucks so if there is some kind of effective counter like super smoke, idk, inclement weather conditions (lmao), they just don’t roll it out.
Also if these ever get mounted on fighter jets it might be wise to make them part of the automated drone fleets that are gonna be flying in locked formation like Blue Angels. Just don’t send out the laser drones unless necessary idk.
I’m just speculating
hglman@lemmy.ml 9 months ago
They become easy to spot.
mannycalavera@feddit.uk 9 months ago
tapshead.gif
cloudless@feddit.uk 9 months ago
Grab some popcorn and search YouTube for “mirror vs solar death ray.”
Spoiler: magnifying glass plus sunlight obliterate mirror within seconds.
Showroom7561@lemmy.ca 9 months ago
Yes, a small, stationery, “Walmart mirror” would be destroyed easily. Probably without using a death ray.
But military grade glass and cooling (i.e. heatsink) can do wonders.
I’m sure some creative anti-laser technology exists, or will exist, if these laser weapons become more common.
Even infrared reflecting paint + additional cooling might be an option.
Keep in ming that the “target” could have a weapon like this to fire back… No one wins.