26-05-2025
Terrifying ‘spy' laser that can read text smaller than a grain of rice from a mile away unveiled by China
The target must be illuminated with lasers, so it may not be suitable for surveillance scenarios where stealth is required
SUPER VISION Terrifying 'spy' laser that can read text smaller than a grain of rice from a mile away unveiled by China
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
SCIENTISTS in China claim they have developed a laser that can read millimetre-sized text from nearly a mile away.
That's smaller than a grain of rice.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
2
Observing fine details from long distances with telescopes and high-power lenses brings its challenges
Credit: L.-C. Liu et al.
2
The laser system reconstructing 1mm-sized letters (right) located far away
Credit: L.-C. Liu et al.
The researchers say the new laser-based system can pick up small details from 1.36km away (0.85miles) that standard telescopes and binoculars would miss.
A typical telescope-based system at the same distance would only capture shapes around 42milimetres in size, researchers wrote in their study, published in the journal Physical Review Letters.
That is far too large to make out small writing.
Observing fine details from long distances with telescopes and high-power lenses brings its challenges.
Current long-distance reading systems require precise alignment of lasers and telescopes, making it tricky to pick out small features.
Distortion from the air can blur and scatter light over long distances, which can warp the view.
However, researchers took a new approach by on the way light hits a surface, rather than focusing on the image itself.
This method is called active intensity interferometry.
'Through outdoor experiments, we have successfully imaged millimeter-scale targets located at 1.36km away," the study authors wrote. "Achieving a resolution enhancement by about 14 times over the diffraction limit of a single telescope."
China & Russia will use drones 'the size of insects' to spy on UK & commit untraceable murders, ex-Google futurist warns
The researchers believe this method is 'promising for high-resolution optical imaging and sensing'.
Although, it also has a few limitations to overcome - for example, it needs a clear line of sight to the object.
The target must be illuminated with lasers, so it may not be suitable for surveillance scenarios where stealth is required.
Instead, the laser could be used by archaeologists to examine ancient carvings on cliffs without climbing them, and help environmental researchers monitor distant wildlife habitats.
The team has plans to improve the control of the laser, so they are easier to direct.
The researchers may also install artificial intelligence (AI), which could help reconstruct images more accurately.