jackonaut Posted March 17, 2006 Posted March 17, 2006 is there a simple arrangement of mirrors that would be able to combine two individual beams of light into one single beam?
Daecon Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 I don't imagine why not. If you have two beams that converge on a single point, then have another mirror at that point to relect the convergent beams both along the same identcial path, as long as the mirror is properly angled?
jackonaut Posted March 18, 2006 Author Posted March 18, 2006 i've been trying to arrange this but have been having trouble finding a layout that allows for one final beam. i'm designing a project where the video from two laser video projectors can be combined into a single projection through the use of mirrors and reflections. any suggestions?
Bettina Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 i've been trying to arrange this but have been having trouble finding a layout that allows for one final beam. i'm designing a project where the video from two laser video projectors can be combined into a single projection through the use of mirrors and reflections. any suggestions? Hmmm....I don't know much about this but what if you arranged them like a reflector telescope. It think its what Transdecimal said. project the images onto two separate mirrors (mirror 1 and 2) which would reflect backwards onto mirror3, which would reflect out to your screen..... something like that. Proj1>>>>>>>>>>>> |Mirror 1 ...........<<<<<<<<< | |Mirror3 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> combined image ...........<<<<<<<<< | Proj2>>>>>>>>>>>> |Mirror 2 B
jackonaut Posted March 18, 2006 Author Posted March 18, 2006 i've thought about an arrangement like that but mirror 3 would reflect the light from mirrors 1 and 2 in different directions
Bettina Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 i've thought about an arrangement like that but mirror 3 would reflect the light from mirrors 1 and 2 in different directions Yeah, I forgot, you need mirror 3 to be concave. One cheap way would be to find a piece of material flexible enough to bend, like a sheet of aluminum that you can polish. B
jackonaut Posted March 18, 2006 Author Posted March 18, 2006 so a concave mirror would send both beams in the same direction?
Daecon Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 Ah, yes! Sorry I meant to say about about the shape of the mirror when I said about the angle, otherwise they would just bounce away at an angle equal to the one they hit the mirror at! Oops.
Klaynos Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 if two beams are incident on a concave mirror and pass throguh the focus point of that mirror they will both be reflected back perpendicular to each other...
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