Well, somewhat localizes the ship, it might had dropped those pods a hour before and changed vector. If its willing to accept degraded fire control it could be over a tens of millions of km from the pod when launched. (Or you could potentially attempt to herd a target by launching a previously dropped pod with zero fire control, so absolutely nowhere near you, just to force them to react)dreamrider wrote:kzt wrote:I'd assume that the passive sensor suite on a LD is going to be pretty spectacular. Against that I suspect that the LD may well have a lot less trouble engaging LACs than you might think. I certainly would expect their missile pods are full of missiles with much longer engagement range against a LAC the the LACs effective graser range.
We shall see.
A counterpoint consideration is that FIRING the missiles at the LACs localizes the firing ship for the tac officers of the follow-up hyper warships that are looking for a missile target of their own. Or even for the Apollo clusters that were fired into the area with 'search and destroy' programming.
Or whatever David has already thought of...
dreamrider
The missile launching will be a unmissable gravimetric signal, but to localize the controlling ship you might be better off looking for fire control signals. Those pretty much need to be direct path from the transmitter to the missile, and probably can't be pencil beam lasers - too hard to keep connectivity with the missile maneuvering at that accel at those ranges. (Although it's possible that the Lenny Dets might use a deployable fire control relay - not entirely dissimilar to a Keyhole (I) - to obfuscate their location while still controlling the missile salvos.