SharkHunter wrote:--snipping--
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I'm talking about the ability to detect particles being affected by "stealthed spider ships under power and in motion", using tractor beams that then have to reach through heavily charged particles. Keep in mind, here from planet earth we are currently detecting planets at thousands of light years range by the deflection of light particles, using "pre-diaspora" technology supposedly 4000 years older than the Honorverse.
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[quote="SharkHunter"
I'd imagine that you could probably pick up a spider drive's effect on a maybe a km or larger diameter or so section of space filled with aurora borealis bright particles..
[astronomer hat]
I am an planetary scientist. My specialty was occultation studies, which is basically studying the shadow produced by a planet passing in front of a star.
Your counter-example of the detection of planets at thousands of light-years is irrelevant. Those observations required literally years of data. Your bombs will create a glowing plasma cloud for mere fractions of a second. The cloud will not be able to expand very far in that amount of time. Secondly, the surface brightness of the star is enormously greater than the effective surface brightness of the cloud you are positing.
How exactly do you think these tractor beams will detect these heavily charged particles? The tractors don't have any way of determining how many particles are in the beam, or how far away they are. There is no way for the tractor to detect any kind of wake or disturbance in the propogation of the particles. The only way to detect it is to actually have a detector in the shadow. In addition, you would only want to explode a single bomb at a time if you are trying to detect particles. Multiple explosions will mess everything up. Like 500 lights illuminating a room from different directions, there won't be any shadows. If you are blowing up 500 bombs, do you really think that each bomb can fill a volume equal to 25,000 Earths with a glowing aurora?[/quote] The planetary scientist bit just made me go "oh yeah, that's right! on how long the phenomenon had to be observed at what luminosity", so I am surrendering "the point".
My thought behind the "500 blasts" had been that the timing of multiple blasts at C, crossing that space would be (by nature and taking advantage of distance) imperfectly synchronized, and that would be what would cause at least an energizing effect on any particles in between to persist AFTER the blast(s) just long enough for a "tractor beams moving through the fluoresced field" to cause a sufficient enough disturbance enough that tuned sensors would then localize the "spiders in motion".
At worst it would screw with the stealth shielding computations quite a bit, having to figure out how to pass all of those explosion's "visual and energy sig info" on to the other side of the ship in a 'correct sequence', sort of like "500 Megaton lidar pulses" from every angle in a 3-5 second interval.