ThinksMarkedly wrote:I disagree. I do not think it's possible for an LD to get to within half a million km of one of the Big 5 planets. I'm assuming that under 300,000 km (1 light-second), the chances of it being detected grow exponentially. And any of the Big 25 planets has enough ships going about that the chance of one of them spotting the LD is too high. The Big 5 will also have scanning platforms deployed around the planet. It doesn't even take that many to create a shell a million km in radius and leaving no gap more than 30,000 km between them.
Probably. The
Ghost-class ship
Apparition was a bit nervous about a Sag-C passing within 2 light minutes. Being 160 times closer would raise that from moderate but actually unwarranted concern to what's likely a real problem. And even at that range the Captain was unconvinced his
Ghost could remain hidden if the Sag-C had deployed a flight of recon drones - such that they got multiple views, from widely divergent angles, of the bit of space he was trying to pretend to be.
The MAlign stealth system does a great job of echoing EM radiation out the far side of the ship to avoid occluding stars or creating radio/radar shadows. But it's not a perfect holographic system - it can't spoof multiple targets that have overlapping but divergent views of the ship.
We can probably comfortable assume that a Lenny Det, being described as significantly heavier than an SD(P) is at least 1.5 km long (compared to the Invictus at 1.39 km). At the 300,000 km range you mentioned that means (if I didn't screw up my math) that it covers a visable arc of over 1 arc second. That's a noticeable amount of sky to occlude when the background might include the planet, star, moons, stations, other ships and the EM traffic may include various radars, poorly directional radio transmissions, etc. Now we're not taking about something occasionally occluding a distant star.
Point of comparison the ISS seen directly overhead is only about 55 arc seconds - and its structure can readily be made out with a basic set of binoculars. (Of course it's brightly lit and not trying to hide) A warship's sensor probably wouldn't have too much trouble noticing discontinuities against the background just 55 times smaller. And that close in such a high traffic, and sensor heavy, area it'd be very hard for a spider ship to avoid getting between any military sensor and a large background object.
I find it far more likely that they'd hang way back and let their expendable torps maneuver in that close if they wanted to engage targets in planetary orbit. Way less risk for the giant, and seemingly quite vulnerable once located, stealth attack ships.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:I don't see what more they could do. I saw the suggestion above of using OWP to shoot debris, but I don't think that's effective. Especially against large pieces. The graser beam is needle width. Unless you time the shot perfectly against a tumbling piece of debris, the chances are that you're not even going to shoot through the thickest section. Either way, the beam is simply going to go through. The material will become plasma but it'll also shoot through longitudinally the beam hole. It will expand and cause some fractures, but that'll likely create more pieces of debris, which in turn can make matters worse.
And I'd expect any forts to be positioned in orbit further out that the stations so that they can protect them as well as the planet. If so debris from the stations would have the planet as backstop - making extra hard to do anythign about it (and ensuring the forts aren't in a good possition to interdict debris with their wedges or grab it with tractor beams.
So I wouldn't necessarily expect forts to be useful against Oyster Bay or it's aftermath. But if there were forts around Manticore I
would expect a mention that the MAlign didn't expend any of their limited weapons on such relatively tough targets -- and then that they watched helplessly as the debris rained down.
And if Sphinx had had them I'd have expected mention again during the Battle of Manticore - not just a mention that it's planetary defense pods were held back. Even just a passing mention like the pods were held back because they didn't want to risk return fire near the planet that the forts might not be able to stop.
Lack of mention during those 2 events implies to me that if there were forts previously they also got disbanded as obsolete and - unlike the junction forts - never got replaced by modern pod laying ones.