Well it would be a real shame to damage or destroy that filter but I have to know how strong a beam it takes to burn through it. I vote for stress test. +1
Noted. I am curious too. How strong a beam will it handle on the same spot for some time without the beam burning through? I honestly don't know. The plastic filter did poorly. It wasn't even held steady :)
@@brainiac75 I would hate to see such an expensive filter get destroyed. I think maybe you should test with an ordinary piece of glass painted black, and test that by shining the light through the non-painted side. If that cracks I think it's almost a given that your filter would break. Then you can decide whether you want to lose it or not.
@@brainiac75 Well i'm sure you already know the result, localised heating in glass has no good outcome like dissipating heat in a small volume of material always leads to a magic smoke or meltdown. Anyway i'm curious about high powered laser in cola should be interesting ;)
@@brainiac75 i am really curious about what material is put on the glass to assemble the varable ND-Filter. if it's graphite, i'd suggest that it won't be harmed for a looong time, while you up the power of the lasers :) PS: i do love to be lazy and not do research theoretical stuff, since there's giys like you out there, who make it possible to see the outcome of things (i can't afford) having an impact to things (i don't have access to) ❤️🍪
I have some that I paid very little on ebay for (special clip for a canon powershot that you can't remove the lens it just has two ridges sticking out the ends to put their converter ring on it, so regular DSL lenses can be added) I would opt for getting one of those (like 5 bucks and you probably get a UV filter, IR filter ect for different effects, that you could stress test them on, all in glass material rather than being plastic, knowing how far a cheap one will go, I would guess 10 to 25% higher energy before destruction for a very expensive one, as for flatness and lacking deformities I honestly have seen next to no difference in my cheap ones and the very expensive ones I have that a friend ran an electron microscope over to see how flat each was,
Love the thorough scientific approach! Great job on the video! Id both love to see and be terrified to see what kind of laser it takes to overwhelm that variable ND filter!
Thanks! I am just an amateur but try to account for all factors etc. in an experiment. Not always easy x) I am curious too about how much power a photography variable ND will handle. It is a nice and convenient solution and I would love if it can handle up to say 1500 mW at the same spot for a prolonged time. My gut feeling just is that it won't... I will need to experiment with it and share the results in a future video. Stay tuned :)
For the more younger people who still aren't sure how the mirrors not being 'first surface' mirrors, heres a quick point. Refraction is when light bends while passing through two transparent substances. For example, water is a lot more dense than air, so when a LASER's light passes through the water from the air, it bends slightly when looking at the beam. I honestly suggest looking it up, as well as Total Internal Reflection because its incredibly interesting.
cool experiment! A standard method to have a variable attenuation on a high power laser bundle is to use a polarizing beamsplitter. One polarization gets transmitted, the other is reflected at some angle. That reflected beam is caught by a beam blocker that can handle the heat/power. Now you can use a half wave plate in front of the beamsplitter to rotate the incoming polarization and thereby control the transmission/reflection ratio. The polarization of the transmitted beam through the beamsplitter does not change, only the power is affected. But of course cola is a much cheaper solution :)
How about making a 'cola wedge' that could be slid in and out based on how bright you want the Lazer to be. Or maybe a cola stair might be better if the beam is too wide
The idea of using Cola for this purpose is rather unusual but interesting. I wouldn't have thought of that. After watching Styropyro's video on the "IR Death Ray", the absorption of higher wavelength light was to be expected, as it is transparent, seen through an IR camera. And for the obvious part, it looks dark red to the naked eye. Also thanks for featuring my comment and others containing these creative ideas! It's always nice to see some community involvement.
To reduce the risk of damaging the nice glass polarizing filter when stress testing, try sending the laser through a convex lens to spread the laser across most of the lens's surface, and more lenses to narrow it afterward.
Looks like I need to test it, based on the feedback already. I do want to know it too. If it can handle my strongest lasers, it is an easy and compact solution. Thanks for watching!
You could build you own variable ND with two circular polarised filters available online for $20. They have threading so they can stack. However: Cheap ones may not be uniform. Probably won't be made of glass unlike the $100+ Variable NDs. Bonus: GoPro circ pol filters are roughly the right size to mount to the front of a laser pointer. But don't stack. I wonder if there's a small diameter stackable one out there so you could make it convenient and handheld!
In the lab we usually use a λ/2 waveplate and a polarising beam splitter cube. You could also just rotate the cube, which has the advantage that you don't need the expensive and wavelength dependent waveplate, but then of course the direction of the reflected beam will change too. These cubes aren't all that cheap though... Also, proper metalized mirrors aren't all that expensive. You can get thin 1inch protected aluminium, gold, and silver mirrors from Thorlabs for like 15€. Their thicker standard mirrors are around 30-40€. They also sell ok-ish mirror mounts for similar money, but I prefer the ones from RadientDyes.
I've fired a 100+ watt 808nm Dilas infrared laser through Coca-Cola before. It kind of burns and boils it pretty quickly. Lots of pops and bubbles. So it has power limitations. Maybe 40 watts or lower.
A comparison of different beverages would be interesting. For example how does Tonic work as a filter. (because it's fluorescent.) And also... come to think of it. doesn't sugar act as a polarizing filter? (I think it was Steve Mould who explained that using pasta.)
You should try to make cola based laser safety glasses... just two transparent boxes that you fill up with cola.... the wavelenght blocking range is roughly for blue and green lasers....
Very interesting video, I wouldn't of thought to use a liquid for attenuation but yeah you can dump some serious power into it and it's not going to care. I do think using dye is better for 2 reasons. It won't spoil and you can more evenly balance the color blocking effect. My other thought is you would be able to change the thickness of the filter vertically by changing depth. Maybe have one mirror under the container shooting the laser beam up and through a glass bottom. Some sort of syringe coupled to the container to change the fluid level and another mirror above the fluid to direct the beam forward ( relative to the input beam like a para scope ). It's a little bit of kit to set up but once done it's also easy to maintain. If your interested I am up to chat on a simple design people could replicate.
Have you seen StyroPyro's "invisible IR death ray laser" video?" He starts the video showing off his IR camera, and he pours a glass of cola, which looks like carbonated water thru and IR camera. Totally transparent, super neat stuff!
I haven't seen that video but a very strong IR laser will go through a lot of cola. I plan to test cola against my IR lasers in a future video (808 nm and 980 nm). Thanks for watching!
The cola filter actually isn't that much of a surprise if you think about it. Water is pretty good at taking away IR radiation and that red/brown color of coke assures there won't be any green or blue passage. Also the molecules being suspended in water are well cooled and so prevented from heating up and falling apart easily. To think of it... things are only the color they reflect or not absorb. So coke doesn't really come to mind right away, but upon further thought it's logical for it to be a good filter. Now try Pepsi and Dr. Pepper. :D
...Now I just have the mental image of in the future human space ships will have Coca-Cola anti-laser armor baffles with space battles consisting of ultraviolet lasers slashing into Coca-Cola armor and boiling it off.
years ago i pointed a laserpointer at my left eye, ever since then whenver im really tired and looking at a white-ish surface i can see something resembling what you see when you look at the dot a Laser creates, i assume that means my Retina got damaged?
i mean ... it might be hard to find but what if you managed to find 2 lasers with opposing polarities then somehow you could combined them and dime one or the other depending on the polarity you want and having them the same would effectively have them cancel each other out, oh though i suspect that there might still be some minor effective energy anyways because nothing is perfect.
Yeah, you don't want to cause damage. BUT... it would be good to know, as it would give us all an option. And we'd then know which to buy. Your loss would be our gain. (As well as entertaining.)
@@Cacowninja Probably. I consider myself an ancap, but I usually use the term voluntaryist. I find the words "voluntary association" are easier for ignoramuses to understand.
tho i dont think the cola would be ideal for ir, cuz cola is pretty much transparent to ir edit: you have mentioned that in the video, nice also styropyro showed in his ir laser blaster video how cola looks under ir and its pretty much transparent
@@brainiac75 Nice! I was just going to suggest that. Testing with other color lasers, and other color sodas to see if any soda blocked more IR than another.
Interesting thought. They are incredible flat. I wonder how high their reflectance is, but in this case we want low reflectance. Thanks for the suggestion - calls for some experimentation in a future video :D
@@vaelophisnyx9873 Well, the tint shouldn’t matter much as lasers are almost monochromatic, it just means it’ll attenuate some wavelengths more than others. So I’d say it could be a good idea then.
@@brainiac75 If I hold my platters up to the sun, some light is transmitted. Maybe you could use them to attenuate the beam by reflecting most of the light away and only take the transmitted light.
No doubt, that the temperature of the cola rises since it absorbs the energy of the laser beam. But even a 1 watt laser can only warn with 1 watt of energy, so unless the cola amount is small, I believe it will just radiate the heat to the room with little temperature rise in the cola. But sure is worth an attempt with a small/shallow amount of cola. And thanks for the great suggestion once again :D
@@brainiac75 It only takes 4.2J to raise 1ml of water by 1C. A 250mW laser would get there in ~20 seconds. I thought would be interesting to know what happens after ~20 minutes. I am thinking there would be a few degrees C difference on one side compared to the other.
I'm.. 50 a.n.d m.y. husband 54 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no dept's. Currently living smart and frugal with our money.serving and investing life style in the stock market made it possible for us this early even till now we earn weekly. Thanks to fire movement.
@@jaycejosiah2087 Fire means Financial Independence Retire Early. It's been a movement teaching people financial independence and how to retire debt free through solid investment and frugal lifestyle.
I bet you could water cool the glass ND filter to make it less susceptible to damage from powerful lasers. Just drop the filter into a flat-sided optically clear container full of water (or soda I guess lol), and then shine the beam through it all. I can’t imagine why the water would prevent the filter from doing its job, and it should carry away excess heat pretty effectively.
I think it would be interesting to try filling the cavity between the two filters with mineral oil or water or something else to conduct heat evenly across the whole filter. I think it would be enough to just spread the heat around, rather than going through all the effort of transporting it away.
Stress Test! Plus Dirac's 3 polarizer problem, introduce a third polarizer and due to quantum effects there is more light able to come thru! Very cool science im sure you'll love it!
I tried that in high school, my thought back then was light is affected by magnetic fields, so the middle filter had to be rotating the light my magnetism. Boy did I have a lot to learn.
Just use a less powerful laser to start with 😉 I doubt that kind of filter will stand up to the class 4 lasers I have. Usually use an expensive liquid that is cooled through a radiator for attenuation.
Friend, this effect is due to water. Water have a high absorbance. The visible spectrum is the only one that can penetrate some meters the water. For example, the red only penetrates a few milimeters and the blue or green some meters. The high absorbance of the cola is due to the water and the impurities and even the freen laser cannot penetrate.
i need a laser power meter... i found one for 300€ measures like 40µW to 40mW Sper Scientific 840011 got any ideas? i need max 10mW since i wanna stay between 0.1-5.0mW anyways for my toys also yes tress test nice/crappy filters, also check them against different colors
The cola filter is interesting. It makes sense that red laser passes through cola better than green. If you shine a bright light through cola it will look reddish to your eyes because red light shines through.
7:51 I think I know why there was still power, but even though you couldn't see the green light. Since they're like DPSS lasers, the coke is filtering out all the visible light, but ALMOST all of the infrared being emitted.
Thanks a lot for considering our suggestion to undervolt the board, Brian. To be honest, I suggested underclocking as a joke, didn't know it was possible, haha.
Hehe, as I remember it, it is a thinner cola, so will not work as strongly. Might be good for blue/violet lasers. Noted for future tests ;) Tak for kigget!
Nice, I sometimes use the optics lab in my university, but here we don't have a lot of equipment, when in need, I use some Chinese polarizing lenses. Nice one on the Coke, I may use it with quartz containers next Time.
It should be possible to get polarizing filters rated for laser use, but I'm not sure I want to know about the price ;) I did look for a glass container, but the one shown (a polystyrene display case for 'toy' models) was what I could find in a hurry. I will look for some quartz containers online for future use. Thanks for watching!
The filter is going to break with strong lasers, but I wonder what the failure mode will be. The plastic filter seemed to melt, and I don't think this is going to happen on the glass filters. Maybe a crack from the heat differential?
Curiosity and Humor: Comparing the old Mt. Dew with the newest Cannabis infused Mt. Dew?!!? Sundays are best for me. LOL. College Students testing Cola for the Cov-19 and it tested positive! Why? Thank You! Always interesting and welcomed.
You may be able to locate front surface mirrors inside discarded rear projection televisions. It's the type of a television with substantial depth to the cabinet, with the mirror about as large as a small table. I've rescued a number of them from the rubbish pickup. A bonus inside is three large diameter convex lenses.
so if we made some small containers (1 inch x 1inch width and the required tichness), filled and sealed with cola inside, leaving no bubbles, we would have a nice way to lower the lazer power.
The ND Filter method works up to 3-400 mw iam guessing. I tried it with a 100mw red and with a 1,6W blue. The focused down red obliterated the coating on it and blue with a regular beam focus did it after a few seconds. A full test would be nice since i dont wanna break mine even more :P
Engineering project : set your square box with 3 pumps, one sink, a coke source, a water source and an rPi. Ask the pi to always send a fixed total volume of liquid, with increasing proportion of coke. Once you have measured the absorption ratio for many dilutions, you can ask your pi a random absorption, reliably, repeatedly.
for lewering power i would decrease voltage, as it would incrase battery life, and it's kinda strange to output max power, straining the batteryn and apply a filter above. Kinda like a car going 100 Km/h and braking constantly to hit 50Km/h, decreasing gear and accelerationg not as much is more reliable
Brainiac's next experiments will be: "Making cola filled laser protection glasses" and "Can we stop the Death star's death laser by using a pool filled with cola?"
So a solution of chlorophyll b should be able to absorb 480nm and 650nm leaving the solution trasparent to green laser and filtering the red? I don't know about distortion tho.
Well it would be a real shame to damage or destroy that filter but I have to know how strong a beam it takes to burn through it. I vote for stress test. +1
Noted. I am curious too. How strong a beam will it handle on the same spot for some time without the beam burning through? I honestly don't know. The plastic filter did poorly. It wasn't even held steady :)
@@brainiac75 I would hate to see such an expensive filter get destroyed.
I think maybe you should test with an ordinary piece of glass painted black, and test that by shining the light through the non-painted side. If that cracks I think it's almost a given that your filter would break. Then you can decide whether you want to lose it or not.
@@brainiac75 Well i'm sure you already know the result, localised heating in glass has no good outcome like dissipating heat in a small volume of material always leads to a magic smoke or meltdown. Anyway i'm curious about high powered laser in cola should be interesting ;)
@@brainiac75 i am really curious about what material is put on the glass to assemble the varable ND-Filter. if it's graphite, i'd suggest that it won't be harmed for a looong time, while you up the power of the lasers :)
PS: i do love to be lazy and not do research theoretical stuff, since there's giys like you out there, who make it possible to see the outcome of things (i can't afford) having an impact to things (i don't have access to) ❤️🍪
I have some that I paid very little on ebay for (special clip for a canon powershot that you can't remove the lens it just has two ridges sticking out the ends to put their converter ring on it, so regular DSL lenses can be added) I would opt for getting one of those (like 5 bucks and you probably get a UV filter, IR filter ect for different effects, that you could stress test them on, all in glass material rather than being plastic, knowing how far a cheap one will go, I would guess 10 to 25% higher energy before destruction for a very expensive one, as for flatness and lacking deformities I honestly have seen next to no difference in my cheap ones and the very expensive ones I have that a friend ran an electron microscope over to see how flat each was,
> "Laser Dilda"
That's one letter away from being mauled by the UA-cam algorithms.
Love the thorough scientific approach! Great job on the video! Id both love to see and be terrified to see what kind of laser it takes to overwhelm that variable ND filter!
Thanks! I am just an amateur but try to account for all factors etc. in an experiment. Not always easy x) I am curious too about how much power a photography variable ND will handle. It is a nice and convenient solution and I would love if it can handle up to say 1500 mW at the same spot for a prolonged time. My gut feeling just is that it won't... I will need to experiment with it and share the results in a future video. Stay tuned :)
For the more younger people who still aren't sure how the mirrors not being 'first surface' mirrors, heres a quick point.
Refraction is when light bends while passing through two transparent substances. For example, water is a lot more dense than air, so when a LASER's light passes through the water from the air, it bends slightly when looking at the beam. I honestly suggest looking it up, as well as Total Internal Reflection because its incredibly interesting.
cool experiment! A standard method to have a variable attenuation on a high power laser bundle is to use a polarizing beamsplitter. One polarization gets transmitted, the other is reflected at some angle. That reflected beam is caught by a beam blocker that can handle the heat/power. Now you can use a half wave plate in front of the beamsplitter to rotate the incoming polarization and thereby control the transmission/reflection ratio. The polarization of the transmitted beam through the beamsplitter does not change, only the power is affected. But of course cola is a much cheaper solution :)
How about making a 'cola wedge' that could be slid in and out based on how bright you want the Lazer to be. Or maybe a cola stair might be better if the beam is too wide
Who knew cola could have a safety use?
Really cool video!
The idea of using Cola for this purpose is rather unusual but interesting. I wouldn't have thought of that. After watching Styropyro's video on the "IR Death Ray", the absorption of higher wavelength light was to be expected, as it is transparent, seen through an IR camera. And for the obvious part, it looks dark red to the naked eye.
Also thanks for featuring my comment and others containing these creative ideas! It's always nice to see some community involvement.
it is great to see you posting again you should try the hercules laser with the cola filter :)
To reduce the risk of damaging the nice glass polarizing filter when stress testing, try sending the laser through a convex lens to spread the laser across most of the lens's surface, and more lenses to narrow it afterward.
i vote for the stress-testing of the nd filter via laser light.
Looks like I need to test it, based on the feedback already. I do want to know it too. If it can handle my strongest lasers, it is an easy and compact solution. Thanks for watching!
@@brainiac75 50/50 chance at this point. thanks for replying!
You could build you own variable ND with two circular polarised filters available online for $20. They have threading so they can stack.
However: Cheap ones may not be uniform. Probably won't be made of glass unlike the $100+ Variable NDs.
Bonus: GoPro circ pol filters are roughly the right size to mount to the front of a laser pointer. But don't stack. I wonder if there's a small diameter stackable one out there so you could make it convenient and handheld!
Yesss! A new brainiac video :))
In the lab we usually use a λ/2 waveplate and a polarising beam splitter cube. You could also just rotate the cube, which has the advantage that you don't need the expensive and wavelength dependent waveplate, but then of course the direction of the reflected beam will change too. These cubes aren't all that cheap though...
Also, proper metalized mirrors aren't all that expensive. You can get thin 1inch protected aluminium, gold, and silver mirrors from Thorlabs for like 15€. Their thicker standard mirrors are around 30-40€. They also sell ok-ish mirror mounts for similar money, but I prefer the ones from RadientDyes.
I've fired a 100+ watt 808nm Dilas infrared laser through Coca-Cola before. It kind of burns and boils it pretty quickly. Lots of pops and bubbles. So it has power limitations. Maybe 40 watts or lower.
Now we just need to make Cola glasses. You can eat it if you get thirsty.
Crazy idea here
A comparison of different beverages would be interesting. For example how does Tonic work as a filter. (because it's fluorescent.)
And also... come to think of it. doesn't sugar act as a polarizing filter? (I think it was Steve Mould who explained that using pasta.)
You should try to make cola based laser safety glasses... just two transparent boxes that you fill up with cola.... the wavelenght blocking range is roughly for blue and green lasers....
Very interesting video, I wouldn't of thought to use a liquid for attenuation but yeah you can dump some serious power into it and it's not going to care. I do think using dye is better for 2 reasons. It won't spoil and you can more evenly balance the color blocking effect. My other thought is you would be able to change the thickness of the filter vertically by changing depth. Maybe have one mirror under the container shooting the laser beam up and through a glass bottom. Some sort of syringe coupled to the container to change the fluid level and another mirror above the fluid to direct the beam forward ( relative to the input beam like a para scope ). It's a little bit of kit to set up but once done it's also easy to maintain. If your interested I am up to chat on a simple design people could replicate.
Per Action Lab, doesn't the sugar in cola also act as a polarization filter?
Good old last name ending in "SEN". Quickest way to spot a Dane. 😁
More of a curse here in the US, though. Everyone always spells it "SON" Grrr. haha
Have you seen StyroPyro's "invisible IR death ray laser" video?"
He starts the video showing off his IR camera, and he pours a glass of cola, which looks like carbonated water thru and IR camera. Totally transparent, super neat stuff!
I haven't seen that video but a very strong IR laser will go through a lot of cola. I plan to test cola against my IR lasers in a future video (808 nm and 980 nm). Thanks for watching!
@@brainiac75 of course! You're one of my favorites channels 😁
The cola filter actually isn't that much of a surprise if you think about it. Water is pretty good at taking away IR radiation and that red/brown color of coke assures there won't be any green or blue passage. Also the molecules being suspended in water are well cooled and so prevented from heating up and falling apart easily. To think of it... things are only the color they reflect or not absorb. So coke doesn't really come to mind right away, but upon further thought it's logical for it to be a good filter. Now try Pepsi and Dr. Pepper. :D
An advantage of cola filter is you can drink it afterwards - except that it is now flat..
I'd like to see the ND filter tested
Mmmmmm cola foam.
The lens stress test sounds awesome btw… sorry for your budget.
You can also use butter
Nice video!
Very good video
Styropyro once demostrated that Coke is almost transparent to Infrared.
You got to do MT DEW code red with Red laser and reg with Green laser
Coca-Cola right now: *stonks*
Why not use two polarized cheap filters?
...Now I just have the mental image of in the future human space ships will have Coca-Cola anti-laser armor baffles with space battles consisting of ultraviolet lasers slashing into Coca-Cola armor and boiling it off.
So when I was flying for the Empire all I had to do was put my TIE fighter in a giant bottle of Coke??
please test the cola further!
years ago i pointed a laserpointer at my left eye, ever since then whenver im really tired and looking at a white-ish surface i can see something resembling what you see when you look at the dot a Laser creates, i assume that means my Retina got damaged?
i mean ... it might be hard to find but what if you managed to find 2 lasers with opposing polarities then somehow you could combined them and dime one or the other depending on the polarity you want and having them the same would effectively have them cancel each other out, oh though i suspect that there might still be some minor effective energy anyways because nothing is perfect.
do you think the glass will pop or just melt solid through?
What's with all the eye-dears in this video?
Yeah, you don't want to cause damage. BUT... it would be good to know, as it would give us all an option.
And we'd then know which to buy.
Your loss would be our gain.
(As well as entertaining.)
What happens if the laser beam has a larger power source?
Wouldn't anything dark and slightly semi-transparent do that? What about coffee?
Would thermal paste work on the power supply?
hello guys today I will show you my new coca glasses
Maybe just use the caramel coloring with water instead of cola.
lmao who doesnt want to see you annihilate that polarize with lasers?
I keep subscribing and then find out later that I've been unsubscribed. What's going on?
Nice 420 likes and 0 dislikes
It would be interesting to see you test different colored sodas in a future episode. Blue, Red, and Green Mountain Dew for example.
Kool Aid!
at that point, you might aswell just use dye
@@FreshBeatles Koolaid would be cheaper...lol
Did we meet before on a lot of ancap videos?
@@Cacowninja Probably. I consider myself an ancap, but I usually use the term voluntaryist. I find the words "voluntary association" are easier for ignoramuses to understand.
tho i dont think the cola would be ideal for ir, cuz cola is pretty much transparent to ir
edit: you have mentioned that in the video, nice
also styropyro showed in his ir laser blaster video how cola looks under ir and its pretty much transparent
Yep, it does let some infrared through. I will test it with infrared lasers and other colors in a future video, so stay tuned and thanks for watching!
@@brainiac75 Nice! I was just going to suggest that. Testing with other color lasers, and other color sodas to see if any soda blocked more IR than another.
I think the bigger problem with cola is that it spontaneously disappears!
I agree on stress-testing the ND filter. I'm curious myself, since for how expensive you claimed it to be, it better withstand some harsh conditions.
who will win
an expensive variable ND
or
*a glass-full amount of cola*
"Cola laser filter"
Sounds funny, but it really works
Test to see if the raw E150(d) colouring (that most dark soft drinks are coloured with) will attenuate the laser beam and how much is required.
"Mmm, cola foam"
*COCACOLA ESPUMA-*
Impressive video, this is why i watch so much science videos
Hard drive platters from a broken hard drive may make a cheep and effective front surface mirror .
Interesting thought. They are incredible flat. I wonder how high their reflectance is, but in this case we want low reflectance. Thanks for the suggestion - calls for some experimentation in a future video :D
@@brainiac75 they're not too dissimilar to house mirrors, only ~80%. The bigger issue is a soft brown tint they have in the visible spectrum
@@brainiac75 very low reflectance, I'd say 90-80%. Good idea.
@@vaelophisnyx9873 Well, the tint shouldn’t matter much as lasers are almost monochromatic, it just means it’ll attenuate some wavelengths more than others. So I’d say it could be a good idea then.
@@brainiac75 If I hold my platters up to the sun, some light is transmitted. Maybe you could use them to attenuate the beam by reflecting most of the light away and only take the transmitted light.
you missed out on saying "i'll pour the flat cola on a flat container for maximum flatness"
I'm glad he didn't say that.
If you plan to use your highest powered lasers in the next cola experiment, can you also measure if the cola temperature changes?
No doubt, that the temperature of the cola rises since it absorbs the energy of the laser beam. But even a 1 watt laser can only warn with 1 watt of energy, so unless the cola amount is small, I believe it will just radiate the heat to the room with little temperature rise in the cola. But sure is worth an attempt with a small/shallow amount of cola. And thanks for the great suggestion once again :D
@@brainiac75 It only takes 4.2J to raise 1ml of water by 1C.
A 250mW laser would get there in ~20 seconds.
I thought would be interesting to know what happens after ~20 minutes.
I am thinking there would be a few degrees C difference on one side compared to the other.
Happy to see that my idea worked :)
It's interesting to see how much the beam split
I'm.. 50 a.n.d m.y. husband 54 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no dept's. Currently living smart and frugal with our money.serving and investing life style in the stock market made it possible for us this early even till now we earn weekly. Thanks to fire movement.
Great job with your husband! I bet you are living your best life right now.
I'm a young dad, I'm really glad to hear your story it inspires me.
What is fire movement please.?
@@jaycejosiah2087 Fire means Financial Independence Retire Early.
It's been a movement teaching people financial independence and how to retire debt free through solid investment and frugal lifestyle.
@@harleylewiston8255 Thanks for replying I will read more about fire movement.
Hey, seltzer is popular in Germany and around there. Is there any difference between that and water?
how one man foiled the governments entire Laser weapon system using bravery and a bottle of his favorite beverage
ah.. 2 of my favorite things. MacGyver approved. Lasers and Coca Cola.
I bet you could water cool the glass ND filter to make it less susceptible to damage from powerful lasers. Just drop the filter into a flat-sided optically clear container full of water (or soda I guess lol), and then shine the beam through it all. I can’t imagine why the water would prevent the filter from doing its job, and it should carry away excess heat pretty effectively.
I think it would be interesting to try filling the cavity between the two filters with mineral oil or water or something else to conduct heat evenly across the whole filter. I think it would be enough to just spread the heat around, rather than going through all the effort of transporting it away.
Stress Test! Plus Dirac's 3 polarizer problem, introduce a third polarizer and due to quantum effects there is more light able to come thru! Very cool science im sure you'll love it!
I tried that in high school, my thought back then was light is affected by magnetic fields, so the middle filter had to be rotating the light my magnetism. Boy did I have a lot to learn.
use sugar 2:3 will do the same! thanks
Interesting. I do plan to test sugar-free cola to see what difference it makes ;) Thanks for watching!
6:46 That is an A+ Out Of Context Moment
Just use a less powerful laser to start with 😉 I doubt that kind of filter will stand up to the class 4 lasers I have. Usually use an expensive liquid that is cooled through a radiator for attenuation.
Friend, this effect is due to water. Water have a high absorbance. The visible spectrum is the only one that can penetrate some meters the water. For example, the red only penetrates a few milimeters and the blue or green some meters. The high absorbance of the cola is due to the water and the impurities and even the freen laser cannot penetrate.
Finally a way to determine which is better Coca-Cola or Pepsi
Dr. Pepper...
Cola is good for so many things ! (except for drinking)
i need a laser power meter...
i found one for 300€ measures like 40µW to 40mW
Sper Scientific 840011
got any ideas?
i need max 10mW since i wanna stay between 0.1-5.0mW anyways for my toys
also yes tress test nice/crappy filters, also check them against different colors
also try coke with your strongest laser... can you make it boil?
The cola filter is interesting.
It makes sense that red laser passes through cola better than green. If you shine a bright light through cola it will look reddish to your eyes because red light shines through.
I haven't seen this video until now and i am disappointed in myself
Nice.
Cola viewed with an IR camera is clear.
Now we need to see what effect Mountain Dew has!
7:51 I think I know why there was still power, but even though you couldn't see the green light. Since they're like DPSS lasers, the coke is filtering out all the visible light, but ALMOST all of the infrared being emitted.
Another use for cola. Awesome. Clean toilet, clean jewelry, desinfect cuts. 😂
Thanks a lot for considering our suggestion to undervolt the board, Brian. To be honest, I suggested underclocking as a joke, didn't know it was possible, haha.
I have noticed it once while playing with IP cameras with infrared illuminators, cola looks like water;)
6:24 - No Hancock (Sport) Cola this time 😁
Hehe, as I remember it, it is a thinner cola, so will not work as strongly. Might be good for blue/violet lasers. Noted for future tests ;) Tak for kigget!
Nice, I sometimes use the optics lab in my university, but here we don't have a lot of equipment, when in need, I use some Chinese polarizing lenses. Nice one on the Coke, I may use it with quartz containers next Time.
It should be possible to get polarizing filters rated for laser use, but I'm not sure I want to know about the price ;) I did look for a glass container, but the one shown (a polystyrene display case for 'toy' models) was what I could find in a hurry. I will look for some quartz containers online for future use. Thanks for watching!
This is the opposite of styropyro
The filter is going to break with strong lasers, but I wonder what the failure mode will be. The plastic filter seemed to melt, and I don't think this is going to happen on the glass filters. Maybe a crack from the heat differential?
Curiosity and Humor: Comparing the old Mt. Dew with the newest Cannabis infused Mt. Dew?!!?
Sundays are best for me. LOL.
College Students testing Cola for the Cov-19 and it tested positive! Why?
Thank You! Always interesting and welcomed.
Brainiac75: Attenuates lasers with random stuff.
Styropyro: Watches and makes Coca-Cola and ND filter glasses.
You may be able to locate front surface mirrors inside discarded rear projection televisions. It's the type of a television with substantial depth to the cabinet, with the mirror about as large as a small table. I've rescued a number of them from the rubbish pickup. A bonus inside is three large diameter convex lenses.
so if we made some small containers (1 inch x 1inch width and the required tichness), filled and sealed with cola inside, leaving no bubbles, we would have a nice way to lower the lazer power.
The ND Filter method works up to 3-400 mw iam guessing. I tried it with a 100mw red and with a 1,6W blue. The focused down red obliterated the coating on it and blue with a regular beam focus did it after a few seconds. A full test would be nice since i dont wanna break mine even more :P
Mmmmm, fizzy filter
Engineering project : set your square box with 3 pumps, one sink, a coke source, a water source and an rPi. Ask the pi to always send a fixed total volume of liquid, with increasing proportion of coke. Once you have measured the absorption ratio for many dilutions, you can ask your pi a random absorption, reliably, repeatedly.
Does my comment get pin? :D
Well, I will give you a heart and like, but a pin requires way more :D Thanks for watching!
Lol
for lewering power i would decrease voltage, as it would incrase battery life, and it's kinda strange to output max power, straining the batteryn and apply a filter above. Kinda like a car going 100 Km/h and braking constantly to hit 50Km/h, decreasing gear and accelerationg not as much is more reliable
Now try with some other common household stuff:
Coffee
Tea
Maple syrup
Water (for infrared laser maybe?)
Though I usually like your videos, the clickbait worked, and I clicked faster than normal
Brainiac's next experiments will be:
"Making cola filled laser protection glasses" and "Can we stop the Death star's death laser by using a pool filled with cola?"
So a solution of chlorophyll b should be able to absorb 480nm and 650nm leaving the solution trasparent to green laser and filtering the red? I don't know about distortion tho.