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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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Draken
Posts: 199
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Effective range of laser warhead is something like 20 thousands of kilometers? So what about placing few freighters full of Mistletoe drones and if arrays will detect any kind of unusual hyper jump we will send freighter will escort, it will lauch some drones. When drone will find its target it would send location of it to Central, if it will be around effective range of warhead it would activate that warhead, if not it would tail it until it will be inside effective range.
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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SWM
Posts: 5928
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You still have problems with the immensity of space, though a moving pattern of detectors does help a little. How big a volume do you need to enclose? A very good question. Let's suppose you only enclose a radius of 10 light-minutes. If the enemy is traveling at 0.5c, it will reach its target in 20 minutes. Let us further suppose that you want a minimum of 10 minutes warning of an incoming stealth ship. I can't imagine that you would want less than that. That means that you have to detect the enemy while it is more than 5 light-minutes from the target, i.e. less than 5 light-minutes from the englobing sphere. Let us suppose that the exhaust beam has a dispersion of 1 degree, and starts at 5 meters radius. 5 light-minutes away, the beam has a radius of 1,570,000 km. Each drone is moving, and essentially sweeping out a strip 3,000,000 km wide. Let us suppose that the drones are also traveling at 0.5 c. So in the 10 minutes that the enemy takes to get that far in, each drone sweeps out 2.8e13 square kilometers of the sphere. In actuality, we should divide that by 2, because the enemy isn't at 5 light-minutes from the sphere all that time; while it is closer to the sphere, the beam cuts a smaller intersection with the sphere. So, each drone can survey 1.4e13 square kilometers of the sphere in the 10 minutes we have to detect the enemy. How many drones does it take to detect the enemy, assuming we can manage to lay out a perfect search path with no overlap between drone search strips (which is technically impossible)? The sphere 10 light-minutes in radius has a surface area of 4e17 square kilometers. So you need almost 29,000 drones, operating continuously, every day, at 0.5c. 10 minutes warning is enough to start emergency procedures, but not really enough to evacuate. It is probably not enough time to localize and destroy the target. 10 minutes is probably the minimum you can call useful warning. If you want more than 10 minutes warning, you will need a larger sphere, with more drones. If you think the enemy might come in at a faster speed, like 0.8c, then you also need a larger sphere and more drones. --------------------------------------------
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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Draken
Posts: 199
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What about putting some ships in sheath at the most obvious of approach vectors, if arrays will pick something up, we announce alarm and when unidentified object is close to that ship it will attack it.
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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SWM
Posts: 5928
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How is your defensive ship going to tell when the unidentified object is close enough to attack? The entire point of this thread has been the difficulty in even locating the enemy ship. --------------------------------------------
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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SWM
Posts: 5928
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Unless there is some breakthrough in detecting a spider drive ship, the drone will have to use active scanners rather than passive. The enemy will know where every drone is and can maneuver away from it. The enemy would also be able to shoot a graser at a drone from a range of 400,000 km or more, long before the drone gets within range of its own laserhead. --------------------------------------------
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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n7axw
Posts: 5997
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Thanks for that very helpful post, SWM. 29,000 drones sounds like a lot. But it would probably be doable...although maintaining them could be a real poser. The other thought I had was focused a bit more on the stealth. I wonder about a sonar system based on ultra low frequency. The concept here would be that the stealth would be designed to defeat high tech methods but might be vulerable to something a bit more primitive. Manticore could experiment with its own stealth. Don When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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Vince
Posts: 1574
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![]() ![]() ![]() -------------------------------------------------------------
History does not repeat itself so much as it echoes. |
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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n7axw
Posts: 5997
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That's a fair comment. Sonar really wasn't the word I needed. Maybe radar works better... Don When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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SWM
Posts: 5928
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Of course, my analysis assumed a 1 degree dispersion for the exhaust beam. We have no textev on how narrow the beam is, so this is all just handwaving.
![]() The degree of dispersion would affect the number of drones linearly--that is, a 5 degree dispersion would reduce the number of necessary drones by a factor of 5. On the other hand, a 10 minute warning is pretty minimal. And we should allow for the fact that it is not possible to arrange the drone motion patterns to avoid overlap. And we probably want to allow for 0.8c approach velocities. But it's enough to get a feel for the numbers. --------------------------------------------
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Re: Non-CLAC hyper-help for LAC's | |
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SWM
Posts: 5928
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Manticore already uses radar and lidar for active detection measures. Testing on their own stealth wouldn't be very useful since the Alignment stealth uses a different technology. The Alignment tested their stealth, and weren't able to detect it any more than 1 light-second distance, and they supposedly knew what to look for. I don't remember whether that was tested using active or passive detectors; I assume active, but someone please correct me if I'm wrong. --------------------------------------------
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