Jonathan_S wrote:My understanding is that ships can displace themselves quite a way from the geometric center of their own wedge. So grav sensors aren't good enough because they can only see the wedge, not the actual ship. (Plus I wonder how capable a grav sensor you could cram onto the fairly tiny nose of a missile)
If you blind the terminal targeting sensors it doesn't matter much if the missile still had some grav sensors.
Sure, ships can displace themselves inside the wedge. But the job of the missile is to deliver the laser heads and warhead to the the general vicinity of the ship, not to find the ship inside the wedge.
The missile deploys the laser heads and focusing elements multiple seconds out, so at say 500,000 km from the target ship the missile drive shuts down, blows the fairings off the laser heads, warhead and focusing elements and they deploy to attack as they scream by the target at 0.8C.
Since missile grav sensors plus the guidance from the launching ship seem perfectly capable of getting the missile to a trajectory where the payload will pass within 50,000 km of the target, I still don't see how the triple ripple works.
Grav sensors are shown in the laser head drawings, so yes, they have them. The laser heads are what need to find and target the ship inside the sidewalls. Comments by Bu9 suggest that the sidewall is effectively opaque to visible light from the outside and you don't usually have enough time to depend on an active sensor even if radar can penetrate the sidewall (you have something like 30 to 250 milliseconds to against a rolled ship to engage from the point where you can see it past the wedge), so you are pretty much going to have to depend on the grav sensors alone.
[I can certainly see times you would use other sensors, but not so much against active warships.]
Anyhow, given that, what you need to blind are the sensors in the laser heads. However these are inside the missile fairing and hence are not going to be affected by the triple ripple. So their optical, radar, lidar and thermal imaging will also be still working, along with the grav sensor.
Now if you do need some other sensor, then having the missile tubes firing out a set of gigaton yield bombs to go off outside the sidewalls at rapid intervals during the ~500 milliseconds when the laser heads should be in firing range (and looking right at the detonations) would seem likely to rather significantly reduce laser head accuracy.