A lot of the technical details on missile warheads and defenses come from "An Introduction to Modern Starship Armor Design" at the end of anthology In Fire Forged -- written as an in universe paper from 1906 PD.cthia wrote:Thanks again Vince! Marvelous textev.
I'm almost there. Again, thanks to the both of you. Jonathan. Vince. The hole remaining for me is this. Re: A coaster that has lost lock. Can it reacquire or acquire the ship that has aimlessly wandered onto its path? Even though its drive is down and it cannot go after the newly acquired ship, would it conceivably still have the ability to acquire another ship, such as the unfortunate idiot that has wandered onto its path? "Yea, keep on coming you idiot. I "see" you. I've reacquired, and you're the new target." Then of course it can detonate at its standoff range.
One other question born from the included textev. Maneuvering on attitude thrusters is simply a roll, right? Certainly thrusters cannot significantly change vector of missiles with such speed. But they can "roll" the missile toward its optimum blast front? Is what I'm getting. That correct?
BTW, where is all of this technical stuff found? Jaynes and HoS?
And do forgive my mixing up Brigham and Truman.
Vince pretty much covered your first question - all I'd add is that even if the missile wasn't programmed to self destruct at end of run the sensors you can cram onto a missile are pretty small, so they're said to be quite myopic. If a missile flew past it's target's formation it would seem, to me, that the odds of another target wandering into it's narrow field of view is very low. But if one did the missile could lock on and figure out if it was going to enter viable attack range.
As for your second question that's also basically my understanding. The attitude thrusters can roll the missile allowing to to change heading but making no significant adjustment to it's vector. (I assume the grav generators used to focus the nuke's blast at the lasing rods more or less focus it forward, away from the generators; so you'd have to point the nose of the missile roughly towards the target. Maybe within 20-45 degrees?