Theemile wrote:cthia wrote:But where are they placed? And why in orbit? Considering orbital mechanics, we know why orbits are used. Earth's gravity turns the satellite into a hybrid engine system. It saves on "gas." Energy isn't a problem for something that has a wedge like the forts, and I can't imagine a fort in geostationary orbit simply to protect Mount Royal and the Queen. So where in orbit would they be placed, low, medium, high? Why would an orbit even matter for a fort, which has a wedge?
You put things that don't need orbits into orbits so you can let them turn off their drives every once in awhile... and so that things in orbits that need orbits don't slam into them.
Besides Geosync orbit is still considered "knife fighting in a Recreational Vehicle's Coat Closet" range in the Honorverse. It's 1/3rd the range of the PDLCs!
so high orbit - very high....
We have several references to Havenite planets during Cutworm who deployed their pods to planetary poles for system-defense purposes, particularly the planets we got good looks at during Cutworms I and II such as Chantilly (Home of Admiral 'Sneaky' Bellefeuille and her Smoke & Mirrors defense trick)
So I would believe that any planetary "orbiting" fortress are in similar high polar 'orbits', where it's more static position than true orbits. 1-4 fortresses permanently at both planetary North, and South you have near 360° coverage around the clock, and rotating active-duty between them to enable their impellers to possibly account for drift.
And on that subject actually, depending on their altitude they could damn near minimize the drift to start. By parking in more of a solar orbit, just outside the planetary Sphere of Influence (SOI), the gravity from the planet in question is near negligible. They'd still close enough to act as a "close-in" fortress, but far enough away they can minimize how much gravity is going to cause them to truly orbit the planet and risk being caught on the wrong side and thereby unable to fire at invaders.
For Earth specifically, our SOI is approximately 0.929x10^6 km (929000 km); so if you left a fort to Earth's polar north at say approximately 0.935x10^6 km; then Earth would have very little gravity influence on it, and it could hold position with minimal engine input for years. But it's still (barely) within maximum graser range of anything trying to enter Earth orbit so any attackers must kill it as they approach regardless of direction; with another fort stationed to the Earth South preventing that approach angle.