Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/The NOVA laser

 
Inertial confinement fusion using lasers rapidly progressed in the late 1970's and early 1980's from being able to deliver only a few joules of laser energy to a fusion target to being able to deliver tens of kioljoules to a target. At this point, incredibly large scientific devices were needed to continue to advance findings in experimentation. Here, the view of 5 beams of the 10 beam LLNL NOVA laser are shown shortly after the laser's completion in 1984. Laser fusion at this time thus entered the realm of "big science".

This is an image of the massive NOVA laser at LLNL taken in 1984. It is used in the article on inertial confinement fusion. I remember this (rather historically important, I think) image being very widely published in the '80's popular scientific literature and then it seems like it virtually disappeared and can now only be found in very low quality images on the internet. So at work the other day, I scanned the image at very high resolution from the '84 LLNL annual laser program report, its grainy up close but the image is so big I think it is negligible when at normal size. Here's where I need some help, obviously the color is faded quite a bit and there is a seam running down the center where the pages meet. But the thing is, I do not see certain colors terribly well and can't really fix it myself. If someone could correct this in the image I would be extremely grateful!! For some idea of what the color SHOULD be like, I think the Roger Ressmeyer images [1] in the Corbis archives and this PDF [2] from LLNL are likely more accurate.