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Comment by _tom_

4 years ago

Could you use a laser at a frequency that the cornea is opaque to?

Then you injure the cornea. That's why they use UV lasers for laser surgery, because the cornea absorbs it.

Edit: I recently had a small corneal erosion from my eye drying out over night (eyelid was pulled open by sleeping in a weird posture) and I had 30% vision for 2 days on that eye. The cornea contributes about 40% (iirc could be more) to the total refractive power in the eye. If you have a UV-spot that melts moskitos dancing around on that for half a second...

  • What about an infrared laser? Something where a microburst would melt delicate insect wings, but a direct hit on a human eye would just warm it up a tiny bit. Possible?

    • You basically can't make laser pulses safe and melt things at the same time, because by nature of having the energy in a short pulse created heat doesn't have time to distribute, so it doesn't matter if you hit a tiny thing or a tiny spot on a larger object, the damage done locally is the same.

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