I read laser beams get wider, like a few feet wide by the time they hit the moon, Is that a manufacturing limit, or just something about the physics of laser light? Is a perfect laser beam that doesn’t get wider possible?

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I read laser beams get wider, like a few feet wide by the time they hit the moon, Is that a manufacturing limit, or just something about the physics of laser light? Is a perfect laser beam that doesn’t get wider possible?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

This is why you should never aim laser at airplanes or helicopters, that tiny dot becomes a wall of blinding light by the time it reaches the airplane enveloping the entire cockpit.

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article7291921.ece/ALTERNATES/s810/Laser-strike-on-a-plane-near-Heathrow.jpg

Anonymous 0 Comments

This video does not directly answer the question, but it will help you understand why the laserbeam becomes less coherent: https://youtu.be/p7bzE1E5PMY

Anonymous 0 Comments

A perfect laser will diverge at an angle determined by just the wavelength of light and its aperture, the initial diameter of the beam. The angle is twice the wavelength divided by pi divided by the aperture. So a 10mm green laser will be at least 12km wide by the time it reaches the moon.