http://mods-n-hacks.wonderhowto.com/how-to/turn-laser-into-burning-laser-271594/
if this can be done to a pointer, how about other devices with and that use lasers
The story of Barbara Guillette in real time of Directed Energy attacks on innocent people the sustainability=depopulation,Agenda 30 pre-aging imposed murder /suicide, silent holocaust program using community based agents out of the Fusion centers. The silent standing army of directed energy weapons ready at a moments notice paid by tax payers money to carry out the assaults ..you're next.I am going public others have to be aware of what govt is really doing secretly to citizens.
Bibliographic Entry | Result (w/surrounding text) | Standardized Result |
---|---|---|
Miller, Rex. Electronics The Easy Way. Hauppauge, NY: Barron's Educational Series, 1988: 284-285. | "That X band radar for police use and for others in the experimental band is 10.525 gigahertz (GHz) or 10,525 MHz. They also use the K band (hand held unit) which is in the gigahertz range. Police radar operates on 24.15 GHz." | 10.525 GHz (X band) 24.15 GHz (K band) |
"Radar Applications by Frequency."Encyclopedia Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1997. | "X band (8 to 12 GHz). This is a band frequently used for shipboard civil marine radar, tracking radar, airborne weather avoidance radar, systems for detecting mortar and artillery projectiles, and police speed meters. | 8–12 GHz (X band) |
"Radar Wars: Upping the Ante." Car and Driver. 38, 4. (October 1992): 153. | "The granddaddy of systems is X band radar … X band operates on the narrow channel from 10.500 to 10.550 gigahertz (GHz) … K band appeared in the seventies and quickly became popular in its deadliest form: a hand held gun featuring an instant on switch. K band operates on a higher-frequency channel from 24.050 to 24.250 GHz … In 1989, photo radar appeared on the scene, and it was bad news for motorists--it operated on a frequency that was undetectable by existing radar detectors. The FCC set up a channel for photo-radar from 34.200 to 34.400 GHz, which lies within the wide Ka band … Which brings us to the Stalker, the latest wrinkle in hand-held radar guns. It operates on the Ka band anywhere from 34.200 to 35.200 GHz." | 10.500–10.550 GHz (X band) 24.050–24.250 GHz (K band) 34.200–34.400 GHz (photoradar) 34.200–35.200 GHz ("The Stalker") |
Markus, John. Modern Electronic Circuits Reference Manual. New York: McGraw Hill, 1980: 82. | "10.5 GHz RADAR DETECTOR- Picks up CW Doppler traffic signals in X band region at 10.525 GHz and alerts speeding driver with audio tone." | 10.5 GHz (X band) |
Hitzeroth, Deborah.Radar: The Silent Detector. Murray Hill, NJ: Lucent, 1990: 62-63. | "Police use two frequencies of radar, K band and X band. K band operates at a frequency of twenty four Gigahertz (one Gigahertz is equal to one billion Hertz). X band radar operates at a frequency of 10 Gigahertz." | 10 GHz (X band) 24 GHz (K band) |
Lotz, W. Gregory & Robert A. Rinsky.Occupational Exposure of Police Officers to Microwave Radiation From Traffic Radar Devices. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, June 1995. | "The early traffic radar devices were designed to operate at 10.525 gigahertz (GHz), in which electromagnetic energy wave oscillatesat a frequency of 10.525 billion cycles per second." | 10.525 GHz |
Service of Police Radars. Vizma, 1998. | "Working frequency of radiation at measurement of speed (10525 +-30 EHz [sic].)" | 10.525 GHz |
Another quality webpage by Glenn Elert | home | contact bent | chaos | eworld | facts | physics | |
|
Frequency Band Name | Frequency Range | Wavelength (Meters) | Application |
---|---|---|---|