cthia wrote:Which is my point in the debris thread. Missiles routinely operate in a veritable minefield of debris.
tlb wrote:But they also have active particle shielding, which I think is like a repulsion beam directed straight ahead that deflects objects from contact with the missile body.
cthia wrote:It requires a lot of energy that a missile doesn't have access to to deflect an object traveling at a significant fraction of light, or if the missile is traveling at a significant fraction of light.
In fact, have you ever tried to alter the plane of a gyroscope? It's a hard pill to swallow that missiles can alter their vector even a little, once at speed. Let alone warships "crabbing away" from their original vector, once maximum militarily velocities are achieved.
tlb wrote:But we are told that can happen, aren't we? As for warships crabbing away, it is easy to just direct their acceleration in a different direction; the hard point is that it will take awhile before the velocity component perpendicular to the original velocity has an appreciable magnitude compared to that original magnitude.
Its simply another item to add to the archives of the hardest pills to swallow.