robert132 wrote:
Indeed they are. In the Honorverse those lasers, bomb-pumped or shipboard release enough energy that they don't just heat up a spot like today's do. The descriptions I've read say that the energy released striking a target is very similar to a kinetic strike, it doesn't "burn" or "melt" through the target, it smashes through it like a tank's penetrator round of sufficient size might.
Actually, current lasers in the multi-Megawatt class do impart kinetic effects. Light, after all, has momentum and when megawatts of energy are imparted in a fraction of a second, there are large amounts of kinetic energy imparted into the target. In a test of a multi-megawatt COIL in the 90s, an empty Titan II target missile body was dented by the test - The target area was a polished area of stainless steel reflecting a good portion of the laser. (Actually, reflecting the laser imparts the most energy via momentum - As Newton proved, all that momentum has to go somewhere, and to rebound at light speed just means it kicks off you that much harder)
In addition, absorbed energy has physical effects, as chemical bonds are abruptly sheared by the laser and solids are boiled into gases - Maxwell's laws of gas's behaviors have explosive potential when matter abruptly changes states. Really all a chemical explosion is is the
SUDDEN release of bound gases and the chemical energy of the bonds heating the gas, pressurizing it. A high powered laser will do the same thing to ANY solid - not just one with special unsteady bonds.
And all this is just in the Megawatt range - in the Honorverse, we're talking Penta- and Exa-watt weapons, delivering over a million or billion times the power we are capable of dealing in our largest laser installations today in insanely short periods of times. Yes, the effects will be explosive....