Can those keychain lazers damage your eyes?

I think they are called Diode lazers. If they can seriously damage your eyes they why are they available to small children? My son came home from a rodeo this weekend with one. He’s 12 years old. Of course fireworks could damage your eyes too but not in such a covert way.

I was just wondering how much exposer it would take before eye damage occurred?

In many areas it’s illegal for minors to posses laser pointers.

In Wisconsin it’s a crime to point a laser beam at a police officer.

From what I’ve read, constant exposure to one can harm the eye, but for how long one must be exposed I do not know.

Lasers! Of course that’s the proper spelling. The one my son had said Lazer Ray. A brand name that stuck in my head apparently.

From http://www.princeton.edu/~ehs/laserpointer.html

But still, better not risk it anyways.

This question has come up on the Board before. My recollection, from undergrad physics lab, was that exposure to a 1/4 mW HeNe laser was roughly equivalent to staring at the sun. Someone posted a link to a site that showed that the exposure is on the order of 100 times greater than staring at the sun. I crunched the numbers and couldn’t find a mistake, so I guess m recollection is off. A red diode laser “pointer” is roughly the same wavelength and output power.

Your eye will respond to bright light by closing down your iris rapidly and closing the lid. I’ve heard stories that forty years ago people aligned lasers by looking down the barrel as they tinkered with the mirrors, relying on this self-protection to kick in. (Kids, DO NOT try this at home!) It doesn’t always work. Some folk who work with high-energy lasers end up with zapped spots on their retinas. I doubt if you could seriously injure yoursel or someone else with a laser pointed withot working t it, but don’t go looking down he barrel or pointing it at anyone else. Save those things for actually pointing at things you’e lecturing about, or for playing with cats (don’t shine it in the cat’ eyes, either). And if you shine it at a movie screen – even if the movie is Signs – you deserve a punch n the nose.

Well, yes, it’s rude, of course, but it’s not really dangerous, is it? I mean, it’s only metaphorically a silver screen, right?

Heh.

Anyway, aha, the eye haxard presented by the laser is going to be a function of several factors. Here are some of them.