Purple is a non-spectral colour. It is created from a combination of waveforms. So I would imagine this would require using two materials to create the waveforms for the colour. However I would like to know if this has ever been done, or if anyone is working on it. I explicitly mean purple, as opposed to violet which has been made, nearing the ultraviolet wavelengths.
yes it can if a scientific science tis shots a purple laser to the sky
This is the best game of club penguin and the funnest. To beat it, remember this, the fast Red laser for red bots, the long range shooting yellow laser for yellow enemys, the strong purple laser for the purple enemy. Use this for units and bosses
Laser pointers are available in red, blue, green, yellow, and violet (purple). Green laser pointers are the most preferred of all the colors because they are the brightest, most visible, and can be seen the farthest distances.
The strength of a purple laser, which typically emits light in the range of 400 to 450 nanometers, can vary based on its power output, measured in milliwatts (mW). Common consumer purple lasers range from 1 mW to 5 mW, which are generally safe for use. However, higher-powered purple lasers, exceeding 5 mW, can pose risks and should be handled with caution. The perceived brightness and potential hazards also depend on the specific wavelength and power level.
I'm pretty sure He either shoots no laser beams or whatever color He wants. Even PURPLE!
The list of weapons that start with laser are: Laser axe Laser bow Laser chaingun Laser chainsaw Laser cannon Laser crossbow Laser daggers Laser gatling gun Laser knife Laser machete Laser machine gun Laser rapier Laser rocket launcher Laser scythe Laser shotgun Laser slingshot Laser sword Laser tommy gun Laser whip and countless others
Your tech blew a blood vessel. See a Doc. May need laser treatment if it's not gone in a week to 10 days.
DVD players use a red laser light and blue ray players use a purple-blue almost Ultra violet laser making it possible to store more data. Or to quote from a portion of the related link "The blue-violet laser's shorter wavelength makes it possible to store more information on a 12 cm CD/DVD-size disc."
laser
The old laser printers used He-Ne laser , and the modern laser printers use infrared laser .
assuming you are talking about a blue laser diode, yes it is blue. anything 447 and above is safe to be actual blue, the purple diodes are usually around 405 nm
Laser pointers and laser pens are basically the same thing. A laser pen is a laser pointer with a pen attached.