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The phrase "a beam of something" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a focused stream of light or energy, often in a metaphorical sense as well.
Example: "As the sun set, a beam of light broke through the clouds, illuminating the landscape."
Alternatives: "a ray of something" or "a shaft of something".
Exact(1)
Through the haze there was occasionally a beam of something almost normative — pure amplifier feedback, or a drone processed through a ring modulator — but the general effect was a relentless hissing sludge.
Similar(57)
Nineteenth-century audiences gasped when a beam of light conjured an onrushing train into existence, and there was something even weirder about radio, which millions saw as a miracle that plucked sounds and voices out of the "ether".
It had a beam of light that projected from the roof and appeared, from where I was floating, to be a monument to something.
So might a beam of electrons.
ABC's Diane Sawyer called Lucimarian a beam of light.
The spell cast by a beam of light amazed her.
I would have to tie in to my harness and tie off on a beam or something sturdy.
Etymologically, a model is a representation, a pattern, an image of something, or a replica.
A determined six-inch yellow-green slug using my arm as a balance beam reminds me of something else I have learned in my research about play.
More suggestions(16)
a festival of something
a push of something
a victim of something
a lack of something
a lot of something
a closeup of something
a piece of something
a badge of something
a glass of something
a drink of something
a symptom of something
a reminder of something
a signifier of something
a representative of something
a bottle of something
a spark of something
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com