Hutch wrote:Well, a couple more items got my brain (such as it is and what there is of it) thinking, so I'll add them here...
Mission of Honor, Chapter 23 wrote:And while all that was being arranged, her destroyers—all five of them—had accelerated off in pursuit of the nine hulked SDs. Five old-style destroyers could easily have found the boarding parties for search-and-rescue operations aboard nine superdreadnoughts. Whether or not her five Rolands were up to the task was another question.
Hutch wrote:I've never quite figured that out. Five of her most manpower-weak ships going to search SDs? Alone? What if they found 300-400 survivors on one of the hulks? Or some 'fight-to-the last' Sollie crew on a SD Graser targeted 1-2 of the Rolands?
I would have sent Scotty's Sag-C's with them; his advantage in acceleration combined with the fact that Crandall had made turnover and was decelerating means he could have caught up, and his 150 Marines per ship could have been a major help (and given the rescuers parity in the number of ships deployed). Therekov and Oversteegen, along with the LAC's, had more than enough firepower to overcome any action by the Sollies.
Bill Woods wrote:You're right — they should have sent one or more of the CLACs along, to dump the recovered Sollies on. Also, they're decelerating the hulk at a dangerously high rate — and needlessly so.
Mission of Honor, Chapter 24 wrote:The ship—or, rather, the battered hulk which had once been a ship—was under an apparent gravity of about 1.2 g. The wreckage had been rotated perpendicular to its line of flight, putting the decks and deckheads back where they ought to be, and Tristram was playing tugboat to slow what was left of the Babbage down. In many ways, Abigail would have preferred to remain in microgravity. It would have made getting about faster and simpler, not to mention avoiding the stress the deceleration was putting on damaged structural members. And she was well aware that the deceleration might actually be life-threatening for survivors under some circumstances. Unfortunately, the wreck's velocity of almost eighteen thousand kilometers per second had already carried it past Flax. It was now hurtling across the inner system at roughly six percent of light-speed, bound for a fatal encounter with the gas giant Everest in just under twenty hours. It was extraordinarily unlikely, given Tenth Fleet's limited manpower, that the SAR parties would be able to completely search ships as mangled and torn as Babbage and her consorts in that time. Which meant they had to be slowed down somehow.
Bill Woods wrote:It's an implausible coincidence that the ship's trajectory lines up with a second planet, but even if it does, just tug it sideways for a bit, so it misses. Really, why bother to decelerate it at all? Once all personnel and useful data are recovered, just let the hulk go flying off into deep space.
In order to generate a miss, where a projectile is on a trajectory with a
velocity that will impact a target, there exist two ways to change its
velocity so that it will miss the target.
A) You can change the directional component of the
velocity left/right/up/down so that the projectile will miss the target.
B) You can change the speed component of the
velocity by accelerating/decelerating so that the projectile will miss the target. This will only work for targets that are:
1) Moving relative to the projectile.
And
2)
NOT moving directly towards or away from the projectile.
Planets move as they orbit the local star while ships traveling to/from the local star's hyper limit are moving in/out system. This means that planets move laterally (left/right) from the point of view of a ship traveling (in from/out towards) the hyper limit of the local star.
I'm going to guess that the fastest, safest way to make SLN
Charles Babbage miss the gas giant Everest, combined with the need to clean up the debris of the battlefield, was to slow it down. This made
Charles Babbage cross Everest's orbit after the planet had moved laterally clear of the ship's trajectory.
Mission of Honor, Chapter 23 wrote:"That poses some obvious difficulties for my boarding parties—difficulties which might well provoke the sort of incident we've both just agreed should be avoided—and I've been giving some thought to ways those difficulties might be alleviated. By my staff's calculations, the combined small craft and escape pod capacity of your superdreadnoughts should suffice to remove approximately five thousand of your personnel from each ship."
Hutch wrote:Wait, what? You have a crew that, by textev, is over six thousand and you only have the capability to remove five? What do you do in an emergency, tell the crew "All hands abandon ship....except for you folks in Section twenty-seven through forty-one." Not a good thing for morale.
Bill Woods wrote:Heh.
That's the SLN for you.