InspectorTaylor
Aerospace
- Nov 13, 2008
- 6
I happened to see a show the other day on possible weapons of the future. I've seen a couple of shows in the past that were quite similar and each time they've brought up the possibility of controlling weather and using it as a weapon. As an offshoot of weather weapons, the always mention lightning and how controlling it would make for a spectacular weapon but so far there have been no practical theories on how to achieve control over where the bolt will go. Quite a few years ago I was thinking about that same concept and problem of control and a possible answer popped into my head as I was studying solid state lasers. The problem of control of the lightning bolts path is that in order to get the electricity to hit a specific target you would need to provide a conductive path from the electrical source to the intended target. Reading about lasers and their ability to ionize the air its traveling through I thought to myself, can a sufficiently ionized path through the air provide enough of a conductive path for the electricity to flow to a target? Would it be possible to make it flow in the intended direction and not back through the beam into the laser source, destroying the wrong end of the conductive path? Can an optical diode, in essence, be created allowing electrical flow in only one direction? One would think that a laser would be perfectly accurate and could provide astonishing ranges delivering near instantaneous destruction when coupled with the electrical potential equal to a bolt of lighting. It could theoretically be the most devastating weapon ever devised especially when used with today’s targeting systems, or at least that's what I always liked to imagine. What do you think? Is it possible? Can it be built?
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