Big Ideas Lab Laser Guide Star
Aug 12, 2025
Join Claire Max, an Emeritus professor of astronomy renowned for her groundbreaking work in adaptive optics, and Deanna Pennington, a senior scientist at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory with extensive laser system expertise. They dive deep into the revolutionary laser guide star technology that corrects atmospheric distortion for clearer stargazing. Discover how a concept turned into compact systems, and explore the fascinating journey from early experiments to groundbreaking black hole discoveries. Plus, learn about the broader implications for defense applications!
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Atmosphere Twinkles; Adaptive Optics Fixes It
- Atmospheric turbulence makes stars 'twinkle' and blurs astronomical images.
- Adaptive optics measures and corrects that blurring hundreds or thousands of times per second to recover sharp images.
Winning A Risky Funding Pitch
- Claire Max pitched laser guide star funding to a competitive committee and convinced Livermore to back the idea.
- Livermore took a risk and supported the project despite its audacity and her limited engineering background.
From Satellite Surveillance To Astronomy
- The laser guide star idea originated from a defense problem: imaging fast-moving Russian satellites.
- Claire Max realized stars are easier targets, repurposing the defense concept for astronomy.


