Sentences with phrase «shining laser beams»

The environmentalist group, which has been dubbed by some a «terrorist organization,» has been known to resort to militant tactics before in order to disrupt Japanese whaling vessels, such as lobbing stink - bombs and shining laser beams, but acid may be the most dangerous tool in their arsenal.
To do so they made the atoms in the sample vibrate by shining a laser beam through a small hole in the photodetector, which was placed right on top of the sample.
You know, if you shine a laser beam across a sunlit room, it gets to where it's going because the photons from the laser and sun do not interact with one another.
Again, this language helps to protect individuals who shine a laser beam at an unoccupied aircraft.

Not exact matches

It is The Nature of Love (2010) where Oord shines most brightly in aiming a laser beam at the power of divine love.
When they shone a multi-wavelength laser beam at the open end of this waveguide, a trapped rainbow formed inside.
The laser shines on a sample of the material under study; light scatters off the sample and creates a two - dimensional pattern of interference between the laser beam and the scattered light — a hologram — which a video camera records.
Designed to test the brain «sability to process visual information, the machine works by shining asplit laser beam into a subject's eye.
In taking the next step, Eugene Polzik and his colleagues at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen shined a strong laser beam onto a cloud of room - temperature cesium atoms whose spins were all pointing in the same direction and fluctuating according to their given quantum state.
To make the laser shine, energy has to be supplied by means of a pump beam.
Whereas Sagnac shone light into his experiment from an external source, the C - II's ring itself generated laser beams, its cavities filled with a lasing medium of neon and helium gas.
Those proteins let him turn a set of cells on or off just by shining the right kind of laser beam at the cells.
When you shine natural light on the developed film from the same direction as the original laser beams, all those mirrors reflect light at precisely the same angles at which it originally bounced off the object.
With stimulated emission depletion microscopy, a second laser shines a doughnut - shaped beam of light that turns off the excited molecules in the halo.
After shining a weaker «probe beam» into the crystal, the team turned off both lasers.
This is the case in Stupp's polymer, so a beam of infrared laser light (with wavelength 1068 nanometres) shone through it will emerge in the green part of the spectrum with a wavelength of 534 nanometres.
When co-author Zhaoming Zhu, Gauthier's postdoctoral research associate, encoded information onto one of these beams, the data could be imprinted on these newly created phonons and retained for 12 billionths of a second, long enough to be transferred back to light again by shining a third laser through the fiber.
A laser beam shines under the beads, causing them to align themselves into a flat surface.
When they shone a multi-wavelength laser beam at the open end of the gilded waveguide, a trapped rainbow formed inside.
A laser beam shines down each arm from the crux of the «L,» and mirrors at the ends of these arms reflect the light back.
The tyndal effect is what happens when you shine a laser - beam through your solution.
Laser chaser toys can be good fun for both you and your cat, but take care not to shine the beam in your cat's eyes.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z