kzt wrote:Each device has a time slot and transmits during that slot. All the weapons listen to all all the commands and execute the ones that apply to them.
Same way it works on a wireless access point.
tlb wrote:But salvos might be separated by a distance that causes a data string from a missile to blend into another from a trailing group due to propagation delay - not something you need to worry about in normal communication. You might be able to limit this by restricting transmission to some closing distance from target, so only the leading salvo talks.
I will accept that it can be done, but it is outside my knowledge or ability.
Joat42 wrote:The distance between the signal sources do impose a problem, but it's mostly a computational problem.
I don't how much technical background you have, but
here is a technical paper describing the methodology used.
Thank you very much for the reference; some parts were too deep for me, but I think that I have the gist.
To the extent that I did understand that paper, it seemed to increase my uncertainty about FTL communication with Apollo. Two points stand out:
1. The paper emphasizes that a single frequency network has to be limited in size, otherwise you lose the required coordination (? my interpretation). In their example the Czech Republic was too big for one network to be viable.
2. Implementation required a synchronizing time signal, supplied in their example by GPS. Note that the timing signal is supplied external to the network. What would supply the timing in an FTL communication network? Seems to me that it must either an FTL signal or internal clocks on each member of the network.
I need to add that I expect there is a technology solution to this; but it might mean that what we consider high bandwidth for FTL communication would suffer in comparison to RF communication.