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In this question about Obi-Wan crossing all the laser gates during the duel with Darth Maul, there's this good screen shot of the laser gates:

Obi-Wan looking through the gates

Which raises a question I've wondered about over and over. What is the purpose of these gates? If they were for security, they would not be opening and closing regularly, allowing people to go through. Anything else that might be effected by the gates opening and closing (such as air circulation) could be controlled with physical doors and wouldn't pose the threat to life or safety that lasers would.

So what purpose do dangerous laser gates like this actually serve?

DavidW
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Tango
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    We all know the real reason. I am really curious if anyone has a in-universe reason. :-) – Zan Lynx Feb 28 '12 at 16:25
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    The answer can be found in Galaxy Quest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZODzdqVptUs – jfrankcarr Feb 29 '12 at 02:21
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    @ZanLynx: the real reason being that it can be made into a level in a computer game? – Reinstate Monica - Goodbye SE Feb 29 '12 at 13:30
  • I always thought Darth Maul used the force to switch it on and off in a bid to pick off the Jedi one at a time (and that Obi-Wan did not know where the switch was). – HNL Mar 27 '12 at 06:31
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    @HNL: That's a very interesting idea. There's nothing in G-level canon to contradict that. The Wookiepedia says differently, but that isn't always accurate and the tech details there could be made up -- yet another example of what I call a Lucasism: Something that looks cool and takes tons or explanation to justify. – Tango Mar 27 '12 at 14:14
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    @Tango: I think the Lucasism you stated is Lucas's implementation of the Rule of Drama. (Just my 0.02 Republic Credits.) – Codes with Hammer Jun 23 '14 at 15:59
  • It allowed the sharked to swim back and forth and keep healthy, of course. – Broklynite Dec 19 '15 at 10:14
  • Updated link for the Galaxy Quest reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqRdT8m1Suo – theferrit32 Oct 14 '22 at 19:02

4 Answers4

19

The script is not explicit on their purpose :

INT. THEED - POWER GENERATOR ELECRIC BEAM - HALLWAY
The SITH LORD, followed by QUI-GON, enters a long hallway filled with a series of deadly rays that go on and off in a pulsing pattern that shoots down the corridor every minute or so. DARTH MAUL makes it down several walls of deadly rays before they close. QUI-GON is one wall away from the DARK LORD. OBI-WAN is just starting into it and is five walls way from DARTH MAUL.

But, according to the Wookieepedia Qui-Gon Jinn article, it's a security system.

While his Padawan rushed to catch up, Jinn and Maul moved on, passing through an impenetrable laser shield security system to one of the cooling pits.


UPDATE :

I finally found a well buried article on Wookieepedia: Laser gate. It also explain the reason why they are cycling on and off.

Laser gates, also known as electron walls, were designed to protect high-security or dangerous areas by sealing them off with a wall of energy. Laser gates were installed in the Theed Generator Complex on Naboo. The barriers were strong enough to easily block a lightsaber strike and would vaporize any matter that touched them. These gates were crucial to the death of Qui-Gon Jinn at the hands of Darth Maul as the laser gates prevented Jinn's Padawan, Obi-Wan Kenobi, from coming to his aid against the Sith. However, the generators were unable to keep up the immense energy needed to power the gates, and so they would cycle on and off approximately every five minutes. Each gate remained open for only around ten seconds before cycling on again.

DavidW
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DavRob60
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    Hmmm.... Security system. Yep, that explains why it keeps opening and closing and why they were able to get through it! Makes as much sense as midichlorians! – Tango Feb 28 '12 at 20:46
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    Why keep 5+ of them?! Only 1 would do! And they wouldn't need to cycle! (They simply cannot be a security system. That must be propaganda.) – n611x007 Jun 26 '12 at 19:30
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    So... the gates that protected a generator for an entire city needed to cycle on and off because they needed too much power? Did they draw 90% of the generator's power output or what? :D Seems like the SW universe might want to reinvent the useful invention of "physical door"... – Luaan Sep 30 '14 at 07:58
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    passing through an impenetrable laser shield - ummm – kylieCatt Sep 24 '15 at 05:46
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    So, the power plant had walkways over deep pits without handrails, a security system anyone could walk through provided they weren't in a hurry, and deadly disintegration lasers specifically capable of stopping jedi in their tracks and which require so much power they they cause localised rolling brownouts. One question: Is this due to Naboo's or the Trade Federation's safety standards? – user867 Jan 25 '16 at 06:39
  • So you're telling me Padme thought the reactor shaft is a dangerous area that needs to be kept off-limits, and that she considered security gates that cannot be kept up for more than 5 minutes at a time to be adequate access control? He was the only man who could have kept Ani from falling to the dark side and killing her-Well...I guess that's karma for you. – thegreatjedi Jan 25 '16 at 08:31
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    Hmm. A whole lot of spent energy, probably expensive as hell, elaborate, awkward, contrived, and ultimately unable to perform their basic purpose. Sounds like the right kind of doors for the second SW trilogy. – Misha R Jan 25 '16 at 09:48
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    While the explanation seems reputable (thanks for the sources), it's still ridiculous. – The Unknown Dev Mar 12 '17 at 14:55
  • Looking at the link provided by @user59928, http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Plasma_Refinery_Complex I think it makes more sense that the "security" was to prevent dangerous energy from leaving the interiour area. security meaning safety, i guess. that makes more sense to me anyway. – xdhmoore Apr 09 '18 at 02:14
7

The "laser walls" are mentioned in the film's official novelisation:

The service corridor was armed with lasers against unauthorized intrusion. There would be a shutoff switch somewhere at both ends of the passage, but it was too late to look for it now.

The film's junior novelisation backs this up and offers a little extra info:

As he reached the door, a series of laser walls went up all along the hallway on the other side — deadly force fields designed to keep unauthorized people and droids out of the area. Obi-Wan peered down the corridor. There were four laser walls between him and Qui-Gon, and five between Obi-Wan and the Sith Lord.

DavidW
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Valorum
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4

I think the real reason may be hinted at in a DavRob60 quote from Wookieepedia. If they lead to a cooling pit, it could be one of two things.

  1. Prevent people from accidentally wandering into a pit of death. Although beams of death aren't much better.

  2. The fields may also interrupt venting and so periodically need to be opened in sequence in order to allow for proper venting.

Ashterothi
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    That's a good explanation of why they'd open periodically. – AncientSwordRage Feb 28 '12 at 18:08
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    But why do they need lasers to interrupt the venting instead of physical gates? – Tango Feb 28 '12 at 18:16
  • That sounds like a whole new question :D – Ashterothi Feb 28 '12 at 18:18
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    @Tango its a passive safety system. In the event of a power loss your vent opens. As opposed to a physical door which could become stuck. – Phil Hannent Nov 17 '14 at 08:39
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    I know we don't get a good look at the ceiling, but shouldn't the venting go upwards instead of through the gates horizontally and into the power generator room? Also if the gates weren't there, how does one accidentally wander down a 100ft hallway and fall into a hole? – The Unknown Dev Mar 12 '17 at 14:57
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This Wookieepedia article suggests that the laser gates were inspired by a Naboo legend about chaos.

DavidW
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    Welcome to the site! Maybe include a summary of the main point(s) you're making, rather than just provide a link. – RedCaio Jan 25 '16 at 06:36