Its a great technology, eh ?
I was reading an interesting article the other day about the laser guide star side of it. They are now going to try to use the principle, to more accurately map the Earth's magnetic field.
Here's the article .. its worth a read, as they describe what they can do by modulating the laser around the sodium 589 nanometre line. This causes the atmospheric sodium layer electron spins to flip, which then effects the brightness with which they flouresce. From this, they can determine the strength of Earth's local magnetic field.
The part relevant to where you're coming from, would seem to be:
Quote:
In practice, a 20- to 50-watt laser small enough to load on a truck or boat tuned to the orange sodium line (589 nanometer wavelength) would shine polarized light into the 10 kilometer-thick sodium layer in the mesosphere, which is about 90 kilometers overhead. The frequency with which the laser light is modulated or pulsed would be shifted slightly around this wavelength to stimulate a spin flip.
The spot itself would be too faint to see with the naked eye, but the brightness change could easily be measured by a small telescope.
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All you need is a 20 to 50 watt laser !
Should be interesting to see what the regulators would have to say about amateurs running around with those on the 'backs of their trucks' !


Oh, well … at least its a baseline for the sort of laser you might need to do the laser guide star bit of it.

Cheers