As I understand this, to keep the line as thin as possible for as long a distance away as possible, you just start out with a low divergence collimated beam which is turned into a line using a cylindrical lens (or a laser line generator lens), that the low divergence properties of the collimated beam are not affected by the lens in the perpendicular plane opposite of the line and will be the same divergence in that plane.
In simple terms, what I want is the thickness of the line to remain as thin as possible for as far as possible, or to have as low divergence as I can get in regard to the thickness of the line as it travels forward. This will allow the line to remain as bright as possible to a distant observer, that's what I'm after, I want to use a line because you can't miss with one, just sweep it up and down in the direction you want to be seen and it will cross someones vision. I have a small rescue laser which is made for that purpose, but it just uses a simple cylinder lens and the thickness of the line gets pretty darn wide at a distance, I want to make one which keeps as much power as possible in the thin line so it is brighter (I think I beat that horse explaining the project far too much, but wanted to make sure I'm understood).
What do you think about this idea, I produce a thin line by using a laser line generator and then shoot that line into a cylindrical concave lens so that the line is expanded to make it thicker, isn't this the same as using a beam expander to reduce the divergence even further?
Thank you for your help guys, I guess I won't have to wait two weeks![]()


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