Public Lecture—LCLS: Ultrafast Science
Lecture Date: Tuesday, June 28, 2005. Everyone knows that lasers can be bright. From Goldfinger to Star Wars, intense lasers carry a "death ray" reputation in popular culture. But what is intense light, anyway? How can you even make or direct something that will blast to smithereens any material that it encounters? And how can something as ephemeral as a ray of light turn into an irresistible force? Is there an ultimate intensity, a brightest light? We'll answer these questions, and more. Lecturer: Philip Bucksbaum, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
Видео Public Lecture—LCLS: Ultrafast Science канала SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Видео Public Lecture—LCLS: Ultrafast Science канала SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
15 января 2011 г. 1:12:02
00:55:04
Другие видео канала
Public Lecture | Gravitational WavesUrsula Keller - Ultrafast pulsed lasersFermilab ships first LCLS-II cryomodule to SLACHave you ever seen an atom?Lec 1 | MIT 3.091SC Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, Fall 2010LCLS-II: The Next Leap for X-ray ScienceThis Powerful X-Ray Laser Can See the Invisible WorldPublic Lecture | Diana Gamzina "How Science Unlocks Copper's Hidden Powers"Ultrafast Microscopy: Imaging Light with Photoelectrons on the Nano-Femto ScaleRubin Observatory Camera Assembly TimeLapseLecture 01 Introduction to Computer VisionPlasma Wakefield Acceleration with Positrons: How it WorksStanford Seminar - Data Analytics at the Exascale for Free Electron Lasers ProjectOpticaI Imaging of Ultrafast Magnetization DynamicsBattery Dynamics / Fast-charging / Major DiscoveryVera C. Rubin Observatory LSST CameraSLAC Virtual Public ToursSome new thoughts on the hierarchy problem (Nima Arkani-Hamed)Public Lecture | Making Waves in a Superconductor