ThinksMarkedly wrote:cthia wrote:So, no, correlating the data from multiple sensors that are at non equidistant locations of a moving object trying to detect minimal emissions is a bust. If you are totally unaware of the objects existence in the first place and you depend on this method, you might as well go ahead and preorder your casket.
You do realise we can do this now, right? We have a telescope on this planet that has the effective aperture the size of the planet and is composed of multiple sensors that are all moving relative to each other because the planet is rotating and they're imaging an object that is moving relative to our planet. Putting the information back together is just a matter of software and maths and we can do that.
Yes, the image of the supermassive blackhole at M87 is very blurry. But it's also over 50 million light-years away.
In any case, my problem is still the effectiveness of the stealth in a warhead. As I said, unless it's as inert as a rock, it will have quite a lot of betraying emissions. In the HV, warheads either have plasma capacitors (which means they're pretty hot) or they have a reactor that is running. We've never seen a shut down reactor being restarted and how long that takes, but I would expect that it both takes long and a lot of power. So there is no inert warhead; at beast, there are stealth warheads that are trying to sink their heat inside, which probably makes them big.
The other problem is manoeuvring. A rock is flying ballistically, so it can't get to 1 km of a moving object for this level of stealth to matter. The MAlign graser torpedoes needed to get to within 1 million km and they were also shooting at "fixed" targets in both Oyster Bay and in Fabius. A stealth warhead that is trying to get to within thousands of km will need to manoeuvre, which I guess means compressed, cold jet thrusters.
The redeeming factor here is that all the techniques for detection haven't been needed in the last thousand years so no navy has experience with them. And getting experience is kinda costly...
Anyway, why are we discussing getting to within 1 km when beam weapons can hit from a million km away?
You're still not understanding the problem. It is a piece of cake to keep multiple sensors pointed at a single target in the heavens whose coordinates and movements can be entered into and tracked by software. My cheap telescope can do that. Cheap telescopes could do that for years. Enter a celestial object and the time and date and the object will automatically be tracked for you. Movement from afar (very far) of an enormous object isn't that difficult to pinpoint in relation to yourself. A speeding train is easy to keep track of with your eyes from afar. When it passes right by you it is difficult to focus on a single point.
You are proposing that several different sensors can focus on a single unknown very small moving object whose movement is quite fast in relation to your location. And, you are proposing that multiple sensors can enhance an image from zero. Adding zero to itself and you still get zero.
"SENSOR ONE, what did you get?"
"Nothing."
"SENSOR TWO what did you get?
"Nothing."
"THREE?"
"Nothing."
"Well, let's add 'em up anyway."
Seeing a supermassive black hole against the backdrop of an entire galaxy should be child's play vs detecting a grain of emissions from an unknown leaking reactor at an undisclosed location moving on unknown paths. Emissions which are too far away to be detected anyway.
Do you think the readings of several Geiger Counters could detect radiation if you correlate their data,
if each of them is out of range of the radioactive source?
Correlating data only works when you get a hit. You've got to have something to work with. It is better to take multiple snapshots then correlate the data from a single sensor which is close enough to pick up a reading. Which is what we do manually with a Geiger Counter. We swing the GC until we get a click. Then we swing it back and forth until we localize that single click. But you have got to get that single click first. You can't count on several other GCs which are too far away from the source to be of use.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:Anyway, why are we discussing getting to within 1 km when beam weapons can hit from a million km away?
Because I'm positing that 1 kilometer is the detection range of a single sensor trying to detect a leaking reactor. Jonathan was more optimistic with his tens of kilometers. One kilometer (and only if sensors are tuned and directed). And I agree when considering the range of beam weapons, which is why I said at that range the exercise is moot.
Passive
parallel detectors can't operate in
series to increase their detection range.