The Prague Post - Romania centre explores world's most powerful laser

EUR -
AED 4.305347
AFN 79.559727
ALL 96.963528
AMD 446.498005
ANG 2.098197
AOA 1075.01721
ARS 1679.640926
AUD 1.761827
AWG 2.113106
AZN 1.996083
BAM 1.954049
BBD 2.351013
BDT 142.052712
BGN 1.955153
BHD 0.442
BIF 3483.423204
BMD 1.17232
BND 1.500175
BOB 8.065773
BRL 6.317744
BSD 1.167259
BTN 103.209078
BWP 15.642184
BYN 3.951393
BYR 22977.462745
BZD 2.347616
CAD 1.622584
CDF 3362.796186
CHF 0.933874
CLF 0.028443
CLP 1115.815875
CNY 8.345333
CNH 8.346335
COP 4570.873839
CRC 588.380303
CUC 1.17232
CUP 31.066467
CVE 110.165815
CZK 24.349893
DJF 207.865513
DKK 7.464557
DOP 74.39429
DZD 152.089692
EGP 56.532061
ERN 17.584793
ETB 167.601763
FJD 2.622715
FKP 0.864159
GBP 0.865131
GEL 3.153737
GGP 0.864159
GHS 14.240179
GIP 0.864159
GMD 83.815974
GNF 10124.057745
GTQ 8.941949
GYD 244.211171
HKD 9.123107
HNL 30.576992
HRK 7.530393
HTG 152.854988
HUF 391.698328
IDR 19216.6617
ILS 3.901433
IMP 0.864159
INR 103.55743
IQD 1529.155868
IRR 49325.344045
ISK 143.199042
JEP 0.864159
JMD 186.894922
JOD 0.831205
JPY 172.819835
KES 151.041355
KGS 102.519862
KHR 4678.867307
KMF 491.794784
KPW 1055.030237
KRW 1628.556981
KWD 0.35798
KYD 0.972745
KZT 629.306837
LAK 25310.751777
LBP 104528.290244
LKR 352.290336
LRD 214.197152
LSL 20.486056
LTL 3.461555
LVL 0.709124
LYD 6.316394
MAD 10.539856
MDL 19.394539
MGA 5195.41106
MKD 61.484906
MMK 2460.780139
MNT 4216.647854
MOP 9.365668
MRU 46.387028
MUR 53.316745
MVR 18.059571
MWK 2024.112167
MXN 21.668571
MYR 4.933704
MZN 74.909984
NAD 20.486492
NGN 1760.026758
NIO 42.952062
NOK 11.575448
NPR 165.13714
NZD 1.965417
OMR 0.450759
PAB 1.167254
PEN 4.06176
PGK 4.94763
PHP 66.941764
PKR 331.335915
PLN 4.254121
PYG 8361.578823
QAR 4.254769
RON 5.070752
RSD 117.159226
RUB 99.060583
RWF 1691.406035
SAR 4.398103
SBD 9.64089
SCR 17.658014
SDG 705.153148
SEK 10.929013
SGD 1.503119
SHP 0.921259
SLE 27.414712
SLL 24582.951959
SOS 667.110762
SRD 46.626078
STD 24264.647322
STN 24.478379
SVC 10.214022
SYP 15242.360774
SZL 20.476913
THB 37.126775
TJS 11.071432
TMT 4.103118
TND 3.406633
TOP 2.74569
TRY 48.498738
TTD 7.928031
TWD 35.460908
TZS 2883.906138
UAH 48.246186
UGX 4097.328535
USD 1.17232
UYU 46.717939
UZS 14428.071538
VES 184.677336
VND 30935.1677
VUV 140.001741
WST 3.114758
XAF 655.378126
XAG 0.027862
XAU 0.000321
XCD 3.168252
XCG 2.103751
XDR 0.81508
XOF 655.375333
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.910761
ZAR 20.387991
ZMK 10552.276585
ZMW 27.810317
ZWL 377.48641
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    15.19

    +3.03%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    24.38

    +0.33%

  • SCS

    0.2800

    17

    +1.65%

  • VOD

    0.2100

    11.86

    +1.77%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    71.07

    +0.55%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    81.1

    +0.36%

  • GSK

    0.9800

    41.48

    +2.36%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    57.31

    +1.83%

  • RELX

    1.2000

    46.33

    +2.59%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    62.54

    +0.7%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.39

    +0.21%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • BCC

    3.1400

    89.01

    +3.53%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    14.12

    +0.71%

  • BP

    -0.2900

    34.47

    -0.84%

Romania centre explores world's most powerful laser
Romania centre explores world's most powerful laser / Photo: Daniel MIHAILESCU - AFP

Romania centre explores world's most powerful laser

"Ready? Signal sent!"

Text size:

In the control room of a research centre in Romania, engineer Antonia Toma activates the world's most powerful laser, which promises revolutionary advances in everything from the health sector to space.

The laser at the centre, near the Romanian capital Bucharest, is operated by French company Thales, using Nobel prize-winning inventions.

France's Gerard Mourou and Donna Strickland of Canada won the 2018 Nobel Physics Prize for harnessing the power of lasers for advanced precision instruments in corrective eye surgery and in industry.

"The sharp beams of laser light have given us new opportunities for deepening our knowledge about the world and shaping it," said the Nobel Academy's citation.

At the centre, in front of a wall of screens displaying light beams, Toma checks a series of indicators before starting the countdown.

On the other side of the glass, long rows of red and black boxes house two laser systems.

"I will not lie. From time to time, things can get a little stressful," 29-year-old Toma told AFP during a recent on-site press visit.

"But it's also very joyful to work here. And we are very happy that we have results" as teams of international researchers come to the centre, she added.

- 'Incredible odyssey' -

Nobel prize winner Mourou confessed he was "very moved" by his "incredible odyssey" -- from the United States where he spent 30 years, to bringing this project to fruition in Europe.

It was born in the 2000s out of the European Union's Infrastructure ELI project.

"We start from a small luminous seed with very, very little energy, which will be amplified millions and millions of times," said Mourou, 79, trying to give a sense of the "huge step taken", the "phenomenal powers" achieved.

Scientists have always pushed to create more powerful lasers.

By the mid-1980s however, they had hit a wall, as they could not increase the power without destroying what was amplifying the beam.

That was when Mourou and his then-student Strickland invented a technique called Chirped-Pulse Amplification (CPA), which managed to boost power while keeping the intensity safe.

It works by stretching an ultra-short laser pulse in time, amplifying it, and squeezing it together again, creating the shortest and most intense laser pulses the world has ever seen.

Already it has been applied in corrective eye surgery, but it has also opened the way for scientists to continue pushing the boundaries of laser power.

"We will use these ultra-intense pulses to produce much more compact and less expensive particle accelerators" to destroy cancer cells, said Mourou.

- Age of the laser -

Other possible applications include treating nuclear waste by reducing the duration of its radioactivity, or cleaning up the debris accumulating out in space, he added.

For Mourou, just as the last century was that of the electron, the 21st century will be that of the laser.

The scale of the operation at the research centre is dizzying.

The system is capable of reaching a peak of 10 petawatts (10 to the power of 15 watts) for an ultra-short time, in the order of a femtosecond (one millionth of a billionth of a second).

It took "450 tons of equipment" -- carefully installed -- to get an "exceptional level of performance", said Franck Leibreich, laser solution managing director at Thales.

The high-tech building housing the centre cost 320 million euros ($350 million), mainly financed by the EU.

Thales bills it as the largest investment ever made in scientific research in Romania.

Meanwhile, countries including France, China and the United States are already advancing their own projects to manufacture even more powerful lasers.

G.Kucera--TPP