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Microwaves are only good because we need to get through the atmosphere, and Rayleigh scattering off particles is proportional to the inverse 4th power of the wavelength.
In more digestible terms, we'd love to use higher energy photons, and send fewer of them, but much like the blue light from our sun, it would go everywhere. Worse, even. UV scatters so readily that it would be spread out everywhere and not at all being a nice "beam."
I mean... the sky is blue because white light from the sun hits the atmosphere and the blue gets spread all over the place more than the rest. Going even as short a wavelength as a blue laser would be bad for that reason.
You can't recover the energy from the plasma. It's problematic for many reasons. The big problem is there's nothing containing the plasma. It's hot and trying to rapidly expand. As it expands, the pressure drops, and at some point, it reaches equilibrium, except... there's nothing containing the plasma. It has momentum, it keeps expanding. Now it's too thin, and it collapses back. All the while the bonds broken that made it plasma are recombining outside the beam, and that emits X-rays, or worse, gamma radiation in all directions, which is real bad.
It's just ... all kinds of problematic. Kinda like you just decided to turn that part of the atmosphere into a constant explosion for fun, and while that is cool, it's not any kind of efficient way to transmit energy.
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