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Phaser energy loss at range
Posted: 2003-03-01 07:40pm
by Howedar
How accurately can the loss from phaser glowing be determined? Obviously, a phaser beam has a set amount of energy, and a glowing beam will detract from this. Now, I'm not expert at analyzing video footage and such. Would anyone be interested in calculating a rough energy loss from a phaser for a given distance? This would allow a fairly accurate limit on effective range to be estimated.
Posted: 2003-03-02 08:27pm
by Howedar
So nobody is interested?
Posted: 2003-03-02 08:32pm
by Master of Ossus
Howedar wrote:So nobody is interested?
I don't think there's any way to tell for certain. The power loss from visible light tends to be pretty minimal, but to tell for sure you would have to do some surprisingly complicated observations including but not limited to attempts to determine the wavelength of the light given off, as well as just the intensity. Frankly I find that far too complicated and expensive, given its fairly small potential value.
Posted: 2003-03-02 08:34pm
by Sr.mal
Any energy weapon that is luminecent, like a phaser beam or TL bolt, does not have infinite range because it does lose energy in the form of light. However, I do not know the rate at which the energy is lost so I'm sorry, but I cannot help you.
Posted: 2003-03-02 09:05pm
by Sea Skimmer
Sr.mal wrote:Any energy weapon that is luminecent, like a phaser beam or TL bolt, does not have infinite range because it does lose energy in the form of light. However, I do not know the rate at which the energy is lost so I'm sorry, but I cannot help you.
A lot of evidence suggest that turbolasers are invisible with a tracer. Many times in the movies we see explosions before the visible pulse reaches the target.
Posted: 2003-03-02 11:30pm
by Howedar
Master of Ossus wrote:Howedar wrote:So nobody is interested?
I don't think there's any way to tell for certain. The power loss from visible light tends to be pretty minimal, but to tell for sure you would have to do some surprisingly complicated observations including but not limited to attempts to determine the wavelength of the light given off, as well as just the intensity. Frankly I find that far too complicated and expensive, given its fairly small potential value.
I was afraid of that. Oh well.
Posted: 2003-03-03 12:08am
by Darth Wong
Any radiation not in the visible spectrum would be unaccounted for.
Posted: 2003-03-03 04:41pm
by Howedar
True. It would be a low-end estimate for energy lost.