Jonathan_S wrote:I'd agree if you'd said the vector of the missile.cthia wrote:It is impossible to change the attitude of a missile traveling over 93% of light speed enough for something to be targetable. Especially when that something is more maneuverable.
But the attitude is just the direction it's pointing. It's no harder to change the attitude of a missile moving at .93c that it is to change one at rest.
Well, at least in the missiles reference frame. Time dealation would make it look somewhat more sluggish to an outside observer.
Still, if the target ship would see a missile at rest take, say, 5 seconds to rotate 90 degrees then I think it'd see it take about 7 seconds to make that same rotation at .93c.
The difference is that the higher your base velocity the less deflection you achieve for the same amount of lateral acceleration. The acceleration produces the same lateral velocity and so the same lateral deflection over any given interval. But that gives a far different "slope" when the base velocity is so much higher.
Agreed. I meant to change that to reflect the sentiment in my original post upstream. This post grew way too long, and the follow up was lost while editing. Editing snafus caused by my editor being jealous of my present company.
It would be impossible to change vectors. And every case of reacquiring would only be possible if a ship flew right in its wake. A point that also got left out of the replacement post.