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I'll admit I dont know Baird and the Televisor stuff. (Beyond the
"father of TV "stuff) Lasers though are can be pulse width modulated (PWM) to pseudo change the spot intensity. In a air comms environment they are pulsed at some "carrier" frequency and data then sits on top of that. At the RX end they have a filter at the "carrier" frequency so you dont get noise etc from other light sources. Making a picture? Had a brief think about bending light but that physics is kind of missing in my brain! I think if you used a rotating mirror array on two axis in front of the beam you might get something acceptable, be a real cow to manufacture though. Syncing would be reasonably easy (assuming a standard TV picture signal) but I think the spot would be a bit large unless you wall projected it. Colour wouldnt work BTW as the (laser) spot will be one freq only. This means any filtering or coloured mirrors wont work. Those laser pointers sound like a nice cheap way to experiment with some short haul data comms as well. Bob Plod's Conscience wrote: My local garage is selling laser devices that project a straight line for just under a fiver. I wonder if these devices (with the lens removed so that they just produce a single spot) could be modulated to be the light source in a Baird Televisor? Also, I wonder what is the smallest such Televisor that has been produced? |
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