tlb wrote:In the battle of Sidemore, the ship that transitioned to call in the force waiting in hyper was noted as transitioning into hyper without alerting the Havenite force. Doesn't that mean that the sails cannot be active before the transition? I assume that they can be detected the same as a wedge. Or is that incorrect?
Not sure. The sails are 200 km in radius but we don't know whether they are visible in n-space like wedges are. We do know from every single WH transition that where we hear the ship captain's POV that the acceleration drops by half when the forward impellers transition to foresail. Since the sails are not generating force until they cross into the threshold of the WH, it's possible they are not detectable beyond very short range. From those WH transition descriptions, we hear how they dissipate energy after the transition, but not about energy before.
Even if they do produce a lot of energy, there's a big problem, which is time to detection: I presume sails are not detectable by FTL means, like wedges are. We know ships transitioning into a system are first detected by their wedges snapping on, before the energy of the transition is detected. Even if the ship was producing a pair of 125000 km² circles of radiation emission, from the distance Tourville's ships were, they would not get the lightspeed signal in time to make a difference to the course of battle. Also note sails are basically 2D constructs, even if they have a slant. So the ship could orient itself so the sails are in profile to the attacking force, diminishing the surface of emission.
The other possibility is that they are detectable by FTL means, in which case there has to be another mechanism that allows an intact ship to transition without sails, but flip them on in sufficient time before getting destroyed. If that idea of a hypergenerator bubble is correct and considering we know it takes time for the hypergenerator to transition the ship after it's turned on, it could be that there's sufficient time after the transition before the bubble dissipates to turn the sails on.
I don't think we know enough.