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Thread: New Site Issue - Large Quotes

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
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    Default New Site Issue - Large Quotes

    Hi Spec,

    Just found a new site issue, quoting large amounts of text.

    In this post: http://www.photonlexicon.com/forums/...3882#post83882

    I've quoted text from the National Ignition Facility to explain how their laser works.

    When I try to put it in quote tags I get a message box saying "The message you've entered is too short. It must be at least 1 character long"!!!.

    I can cut and paste it without quotes, I just can't use the quote tags. I'm on Firefox 3.06.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    1,725

    Default

    NIF's 192 laser beams travel a long path, about 1,000 feet, from their birth at one of the two master oscillators to the center of the target chamber. As the beams move through NIF's amplifiers, their energy increases exponentially. From beginning to end, the beams' total energy grows from one-billionth of a joule to four million joules, a factor of more than a quadrillion – and it all happens in less than 25 billionths of a second.

    Each master oscillator generates a very small, low-energy laser pulse. The pulse may range from 100 trillionths to 25 billionths of a second long, and has a specific temporal shape as requested by NIF experimenters. The low-energy pulse is carried on optical fibers to 48 preamplifier modules for initial amplification and beam conditioning. In the preamplifiers the energy is increased by a factor of ten billion to a few joules. The 48 beams from the 48 preamplifiers are then split into four beams each for injection into the 192 main laser amplifier beamlines (see Injection Laser System).
    Each beam zooms through two systems of large glass amplifiers, first through the power amplifier and then into the main amplifier. In the main amplifier, a special optical switch called a plasma electrode Pockels cell (PEPC) traps the light, forcing it to travel back and forth four times through 11 sets of laser amplifier glass slabs before it can exit the main amplifier cavity. Without this optical switch, the NIF main laser building would have to be about 750 feet longer to achieve the same amplification.

    From the main amplifier, the beam makes a final pass through the power amplifier before speeding into the target chamber. As the pulse's energy is being amplified, a special deformable mirror and other devices (see NIF Optics) ensure that the beams are of high quality, uniformity and smoothness.
    NIF's large glass amplifiers are unique. Other large laser systems use a series of amplifiers of increasing size to raise the beam's energy. NIF's amplifiers are all the same size and use more than 3,000 one-meter-long slabs of special phosphate glass doped with neodymium atoms.

    A split second before the initial weak laser pulse begins life at the master oscillator, more than 7,500 two-meter-long flashlamps, powered by huge capacitors that store electricity (see Power Conditioning System), energize the neodymium atoms in the amplifier glass by bathing them in intense white light (see How Lasers Work). When the laser beams leave the preamplifiers, the amplifiers are already powered up and ready to receive them. After passing through all the amplifiers, each NIF laser beam has been amplified to about 20,000 joules of energy.

    A complex system of special mirrors in two ten-story steel structures known as "switchyards" rearrange the parallel, linear array of 192 laser beams into a spherical configuration so that the beams can be focused into the center of the target chamber. Among the stiffest structures ever built, the switchyard's towers are built to resist vibration and are firmly anchored to the inside of the building's four-foot-thick reinforced concrete walls. Each beam passes through a final optics assembly that converts the wavelength of the laser from infrared to ultraviolet and is focused through a final focus lens onto a target located at the chamber's center. Targets are located with a precision that is measured in fractions of the thickness of a sheet of paper. The ability to achieve such precise alignment has been demonstrated with the first four activated beams (see NIF Early Light) and with subsequent experimental tests as additional beams were brought online.
    Odd... Wrapped the entire block in the tag's and there was no problem.

    Can't really tell what happened originally but I will venture a guess and say that the [ quote ] TEXT [ / quote ] tag wasn't closed correctly and that led to the "too short" reply limit. The board here does not count the quoted text in the character count.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    5,704

    Default

    Strange I tried it several times. In fact I even pasted it into Word 1st, changed it into Times New Roman (in case it didn't like the font) then re-tried.

    Oh well, its working now. Must just have been an anomaly.

    Thanks Admin.

    NIF's 192 laser beams travel a long path, about 1,000 feet, from their birth at one of the two master oscillators to the center of the target chamber. As the beams move through NIF's amplifiers, their energy increases exponentially. From beginning to end, the beams' total energy grows from one-billionth of a joule to four million joules, a factor of more than a quadrillion – and it all happens in less than 25 billionths of a second.

    Each master oscillator generates a very small, low-energy laser pulse. The pulse may range from 100 trillionths to 25 billionths of a second long, and has a specific temporal shape as requested by NIF experimenters. The low-energy pulse is carried on optical fibers to 48 preamplifier modules for initial amplification and beam conditioning. In the preamplifiers the energy is increased by a factor of ten billion to a few joules. The 48 beams from the 48 preamplifiers are then split into four beams each for injection into the 192 main laser amplifier beamlines (see Injection Laser System).
    Each beam zooms through two systems of large glass amplifiers, first through the power amplifier and then into the main amplifier. In the main amplifier, a special optical switch called a plasma electrode Pockels cell (PEPC) traps the light, forcing it to travel back and forth four times through 11 sets of laser amplifier glass slabs before it can exit the main amplifier cavity. Without this optical switch, the NIF main laser building would have to be about 750 feet longer to achieve the same amplification.

    From the main amplifier, the beam makes a final pass through the power amplifier before speeding into the target chamber. As the pulse's energy is being amplified, a special deformable mirror and other devices (see NIF Optics) ensure that the beams are of high quality, uniformity and smoothness.
    NIF's large glass amplifiers are unique. Other large laser systems use a series of amplifiers of increasing size to raise the beam's energy. NIF's amplifiers are all the same size and use more than 3,000 one-meter-long slabs of special phosphate glass doped with neodymium atoms.

    A split second before the initial weak laser pulse begins life at the master oscillator, more than 7,500 two-meter-long flashlamps, powered by huge capacitors that store electricity (see Power Conditioning System), energize the neodymium atoms in the amplifier glass by bathing them in intense white light (see How Lasers Work). When the laser beams leave the preamplifiers, the amplifiers are already powered up and ready to receive them. After passing through all the amplifiers, each NIF laser beam has been amplified to about 20,000 joules of energy.

    A complex system of special mirrors in two ten-story steel structures known as "switchyards" rearrange the parallel, linear array of 192 laser beams into a spherical configuration so that the beams can be focused into the center of the target chamber. Among the stiffest structures ever built, the switchyard's towers are built to resist vibration and are firmly anchored to the inside of the building's four-foot-thick reinforced concrete walls. Each beam passes through a final optics assembly that converts the wavelength of the laser from infrared to ultraviolet and is focused through a final focus lens onto a target located at the chamber's center. Targets are located with a precision that is measured in fractions of the thickness of a sheet of paper. The ability to achieve such precise alignment has been demonstrated with the first four activated beams (see NIF Early Light) and with subsequent experimental tests as additional beams were brought online.

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