ThinksMarkedly wrote:
Why are we dismissing the thousands of non-fighting ships in system and focusing on RMN war-fighting ships? True that most civilian ships can't be actually involved in the rescue part of search-and-rescue (lest there be two ships that now need rescuing), but they can help with the search part: find big chunks of wreckage that are still radiating heat from a distance and tag it. They can also transport the least severe cases from the wreckage to orbital and ground hospitals, allowing the hospital ships and those with sickbays and infirmaries to focus on those that need more urgent care.
The debris cloud itself can be dealt with after SAR is concluded. The tugs can go and collect or destroy any relevant pieces.
I doubt there are thousands of ships in system that are capable of helping in a matter of hours.
Every civilian ship that could get their wedge up would have run for the hyperlimit. So all the ready ships have bolted.
A lot of the ships in the system are shut down - cold and dark, since the reason they are in the system is that trade was shut down and they are trying to keep from going broke. Which means laying off the crew and shutting down everything. I have no idea how long it takes to bring a ship up from cold and dark, but I'd expect at least hours once you get a crew on board. Once you hire the crew...
There are lots of small craft, but most of them are local traffic running around the inhabited planets. They don't run off into deep space. So I doubt many of the crew are confident about running anything like this, when it requires operating at tens of thousands of km per hour light hours out from the Manticore. I have no idea how many have long-term life support capability when they mostly run 30 minute flights.
It's like trying to get a fleet of New York harbor ferries out to help a disaster in Bermuda. Can they do it in theory? Sure, but it's a big deal and lots of things can go fatally wrong.
Will they try? Sure, but it takes organization and support for them. They don't have the sensors of a military pinnance or assault shuttle, or the training.