penny wrote:Take Thinksmarkedly, for instance. In his head, he immediately sees missiles driving hard at the junction and arriving in 14.8 seconds. After all, that's what their specs say they can do.
I did include some decision-making time loop in some of the calculations. Given a later calculation of an emergence lane-to-free-space distance of 10,000 km, the spider ship needs 90 seconds to clear the range. That gives a 45-second window to make a decision and 45 seconds for a missile from 1 million km away to arrive. Or 75 seconds to make a decision and a 15-second run for a 100,000 km away missile.
That's not counting the time to clear the Junction hyperlimit.
But what we should be discussing is what this ship is doing in the Junction region in the first place.
This is a total surprise… guys.
And? Yes, people get startled and won't know to do something... for a few seconds. Maybe they call the CO and need the CO to make a decision. That's what, one minute?
But this is the military. In peace time, they do two things: maintenance and drills. They will have drilled enemy emergences, either by singletons or a mass transit. They will have procedures that can be followed, even after being startled. And I think it's better to be safe than sorry, so fire the missiles while keeping your hand on the abort button.
This is the Manticoran Binary System. As far as traffic goes, it is the single most densest region of space. I know that is true, because none of you would let me forget about that fact in any of my threads. All of you were correct too. But you must not fail to carry the notion with you and apply it throughout your participation in the forum.
I think I am.
Thinksmarkedly, you said it yourself in the Wormhole Assault: MA Style thread. As far as traffic, the MBS is the most congested region of space. It is always bumper to bumper traffic like the I-5 in LA from 3 - 5 pm. Except in this case it is ALL OF THE TIME. All seven of the transit lanes are always full. All seven of the emergence lanes are always full. Am I the only one who can at least attempt to visualize the many things that may be happening in and around the junction on any given day; every single hour of every single day? The MBS is a cash cow that milks the MWJ for all it's worth; non-stop without fail. Time is money. Empty lanes mean lost revenue.
See other reply, but even if it were the case, "bumper to bumper" is a ship every few thousand km from each other.
Stop for a moment. Close your eyes. Can you visualize the melee?
No.
For instance, when an enemy comes across the hyper wall with blood in its eyes, all civilian and unnecessary traffic is diverted. The MWJ is shutdown to non naval vessels. A total surprise does not allow any time for that at all. In fact, a surprise enemy transit could spook all of the civilian vessels into creating mayhem themselves trying to flee the scene in an non orderly manner.
I don't agree. An enemy arriving from hyper is a far more dangerous threat to the ships and warehouses around the junction than one emerging piecemeal from the wormholes. For one thing, far more enemy ships can arrive at a moment in time than through the Junction.
But more importantly, I don't see a consequence of this. So what if all the civilians start fleeing in all directions from inside the Junction queues? The worst that can happen is that some lines of fire from the forts or missile shoals get occluded... but not all of them. And especially not immediately: freighters accelerating at 150 gravities take time to shift their vectors.
Also mind you, the civilians don't know that an enemy has arrived until Junction control tells them. So the Junction control and the defences can shoot the enemy first and then tell the civilians to veer off, with a vector that they should follow to stay out of the fighting. Yes, some of them will panic and not follow instructions, but the majority will follow. They don't want to be anywhere near the fighting.
Anyway, for goodness sakes, this is the MBS. The most fortified area of space known to man. It is defended by the most powerful and experienced navy in existence. They do not scare easily and they do not jump at shadows. No more than if someone came up behind an officer and startled him that his reaction should be to fire his weapon.
Agreed, which is why I don't think there's any way to force a transit without a message coming through from the other side that this is coming. The only situation I could find was a piggy-back: a spider-drive ship tags along a bulk freighter and transits with them (a two-ship mass transit).
So, no. There is no way the MWJ will be fired upon in 14.8 seconds with all of those innocent lives at stake! Heck, the first thoughts might be something like, “That idiot is still arranging transits without verification. Someone needs to have a nice long talk with him.”
Let's talk about what that enemy ship is going to do when they arrive.
Are they going to keep in stealth for some later opportunity, at a high value target? Then there's no immediacy in shooting it down either. The question then is only whether it was detected or not. If it wasn't detected, then it goes along its plan.
But I claim there's no way it can go undetected, not with multiple redundant sensor suites within 100,000 km of the emergence lanes. They may not be the latest GR hardware, but they would also not need to be portable drones in the first place. They sensor platforms don't need to be stealthy, so they can be bigger and run a bigger fusion reactor to scan their region. This is even assuming that the transit itself of such a big ship can be undetected, which we don't know at all about.
And a mass transit will definitely be noticed. I can't believe that 15 massive warships could suddenly transit into a system simultaneously and no one notice they've arrived.
So what happens when the enemy warship has transited? Let's assume this ship doesn't begin firing grasers as soon as it arrives. At a minimum, it will be challenged by Astro Control to identify themselves and provide an authentication code. I can't think of any way that they could provide valid authentication codes: there's no way they're going to match the ship profile that the sensor platforms will have seen. Unless the MAN is fielding Invictus-class knock-offs.
And what does a military do when a hostile ship suddenly appears without warning in their midst? They will fire at it. The hostile can't have any good intentions - if they had had, they'd have allowed an RMN crew to board it at the origin, not transit stealthily. This may not be an immediate reaction, but even a 2-minute decision loop is short enough. And it's long enough for the hostile ship to have responded - or failed to - any challenges coming from Astro Control and from the RMN.
The MBS will probably be held responsible for lost revenue, goods, technology, etc., due to irresponsible actions. A related real world incident is the ongoing lawsuits regarding a container ship that crashed into the landmark Francis Scott Key Bridge near the US city of Baltimore, causing most of it to collapse.
Force majeure applies. No insurance contract covers destruction in case of war.
In the Francis Scott Key Bridge case, neither the city of Baltimore, the State of Maryland or the US government are the ones needing to reimburse for lost revenue (though they will have to foot the bill for reconstructing the bridge). The operators of the ship that was deemed negligent are. I'd really like to see the Crown send the MAlign a bill.
I presume you're talking about the RMN being held liable for shooting in a situation that didn't call for it. You're saying the defenders would be reticent to start hostilities because of this.
Let's say it is the case. So what? The hostile ship is under the guns of and being tracked by the defenders. If the hostile ship is not shooting at anyone, then the military may wait to see what happens, while they tell civilians to veer away. If the civilians have, then there is little danger to them if hostilities do start.
And if the hostile starts shooting? Then the military fires. Even the lowliest officer holding watch will know to push the "retaliate" button without waiting for the admiral to wake up and get dressed. It's best to shoot at the hostile and eliminate the threat than to allow the hostile to destroy infrastructure, defences and civilians.
I maintain, LDs will have plenty of time to execute evasive maneuvers. And before someone says so, I don't think that any given vessel in the area would see the spider scurrying away. Civilian vessels won't be scanning the area. And I question the ability to see a spider with the naked eye. The smart paint was developed to prevent naked-eye detection.
No, they do not.
And evasive for what? What is their plan here? If they start firing, the defenders start firing too. See above.
No one is looking out a porthole either. The Junction has sensor platforms, if nothing else for ensuring smugglers aren't doing something nefarious. This is the single most motivating factor: taxation!