Jonathan_S wrote:Lord Skimper wrote:I still don't see how a missile can hit anything. Missile wedge is too big, missile travels too fast, wedge gaps are too small and the missiles are only in firing arc for a fraction of a second. The ship is moving, To fire up a wedge gap the missile has to turn without flying into the ship wedge. The size of the missile wedge means it can't get enough missiles within the firing range to burn through the sidewalls....
Um, a wedge stretched no more than 150 km out from the side of a ship. A laserhead detonates at 30,000 - 50,000 km out from the side of a ship.
Do you see how it works now?
Or watch this:
https://youtu.be/byq68MjOlJUThe video is a bit simplified, as it was one of my first videos, and I don't know how to do a lot of the things that were needed to show a better attack sequence.
Let's see if I can explain it in a way you can understand.
1. Missile launch
2. Powered flight sequence towards target (for DDM and MDM missiles, there may or may not be a coast phase between drive (wedge) initiation)
3. At a certain amount of time before detonation, the wedge shuts down to allow attitude adjustment of the entire missile - this is to point the nose of the missile more or less in the direction of the target. If the missile is coming in from the side of the target, but trying for a throat or kilt shot, this means the missile is now travelling sideways. If attempting to burn through the sidewalls, then very little adjustment is required.
4. Protective shrouds ejected
5. Laserhead release
6. Laserheads, using built in RCS, move forward approximately 150 meters, while also attempting final, more precise, targeting.
7. Warhead (still back on the missile) detonation (between 30,000 and 50,000 km from target). Grav lenses built into the missile behind the warhead focus as much X-Ray energy from the warhead detonation as possible forward towards the laserheads.
8. X-Ray wavefront reaches the laserheads milliseconds before the blast, and the X-Ray energy is focussed onto the lasing rod using a Wolter Mirror-style reflector.
9. Lasing rod releases it's energy at the target.
10. Laserheads destroyed by nuclear warhead blast front.
Steps 3-6 occur over just a few seconds. Steps 7-10 take just a few milliseconds or less (I'll let someone else do the exact math, if they feel it's necessary).
IOW, the missile gets nowhere near the target, unless you're talking about the old "boom" and "burn" missiles. In that case, a missile wedge is only about 5 km on a side, and just a couple km above and below the missile.
A sidewall is 10km from the side of a ship, which means the gap is 20 km wide, and around 40-60 km high for a throat shot (depending on the target), and maybe 20-30km for the kilt (I don't recall the specifics, but I think I gave distances and sizes of wedges in another thread).
Keep in mind, back in the boom and burn days, accelerations were much lower than in the era of the laserhead. Yes, it's difficult to precisely target something at the current accels, but that's what fire control computers are for, or, in the case of Apollo, the control missile with ITS fire control computers.
In any case, the computers make sure that the maneuvers occurring in the last few seconds allow for relative motion of the target and the missile, just like a duck hunter (no offense Duckk
) leading a flying duck, or how the targeting computers on an M-61 battle tank can stay on a moving target even while moving over rough ground itself.