Yes but is would be very hard. I wouldnt be to worried
a small laser, or a laser pointer
laser light is produced by solar reacting pannels that are transfered into capsules that contain magna light that turn into a small red flash of light.
Examples are: A laser is a small light that puts atoms to their highest energy power.
You don't need laser light. Normal light will do, for many microbes. You DO need a microscope, since they are way too small to be seen with the naked eye.
Laser sight is a small visible-light or infra-red laser used to enhance the targeting of weapon systems. It can for example be mounted parallel to the barrel of a handgun or rifle.
LASER is Light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. As far as I have understood, Solid State laser is a macroscopic form of diode laser. Thus a small semiconductor diode is similar to a solid state laser except for the mechanism of lasing and size.
No. Unless the LED is specifically a laser, you can not make it focus like a laser by putting it in a housing. A laser produces coherent light, which is why it acts like a beam. A normal LED is not coherent, and you can not make it so. Although you can not make a collimated incoherent light beam able to travel similar distances as a collimated laser beam, you can collimate incoherent light into a beam which would travel some distance with a small amount of divergence.
usually dust of some kind, occasionally water vapor, reflecting the laser light. I am assuming, of course, the part of the beam outside the excitation tube.
Laser has certain unique properties, namely, mono-chromatic, coherence and directionality, compared to ordinary sources of light. The most important property of laser light is that it can be precisely collimated into a parallel beam.
The linear momentum of light is very small to begin with. There's no reason that it should increase with time, regardless of the source.
No. A laser is a bean of light that propagates in one direction with little spread and generate light only over a very small range of wavelengths. The rays of sunlight are parallel only because of our great distance from the sun. Sunlight can be focused to a point using mirrors or lenses, but will spread out beyond that point, rather than as a coherent beam light a laser. Additionally, sunlight consists of the entire spectrum of light.
Well... Most LEDs, Light Emitting Diodes, have a very narrow wavelength span, so they'd fit part of your question. However, they're not always that intense. So you're probably asking about a LASER.