By Andrew Liszewski The scale and complexity of massive particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider allows them to make amazing scientific discoveries, but not every researcher has $2.2 billion lying around to build and fund one of their own. And that’s exactly what scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are hoping to overcome with their BELLA or Berkeley Lab Laser Accelerator. In 2006 they showed that lasers could be used to accelerate electrons to very high energies in distances measured in centimeters instead of hundreds of meters using a technique described below: Project leader Wim Leemans has spent much of his nearly 18 years at Berkeley Lab building lasers and working with laser accelerators. Collaborating with Simon Hooker of the University of Oxford, he and members of his group achieved a major breakthrough in 2006 when they broke the world record for laser-wakefield acceleration, a technique in which particles are accelerated by waves in plasma generated by intense pulses of laser light. In the wake of the laser pulse, electrons surf the waves of the

Why not develop a laser that will cut the bond of H20 and give us a hydrogen economy?
ALL the energy of our society would be met.
Cars could run on it. Global warming would be treated, etc. I saw a picture in Science News of a human hair that had perfectly square notches cut in it by a laser that broke the molecular bonds. It was Buck Roger’s disintegration ray.
That would be the invention of the century.