tlb wrote:cthia wrote:Something I always meant to ask. I remembered it while watching the movie The Challenger Disaster.
MDMs have three stages. What happens to each stage as it burns out? Does it remain with the missile or separate like our current rockets. Does a burned out stage have any use? Seems like detaching the burnt stage would offer a smaller target to point defense, since the extra mass isn't going to be used to ram. It might even allow a bit more performance from the remaining missile.
That's how solid rocket boosters work anyways. Of course, I've never heard of them being detached. And I suppose geometry and the wedge might prevent that.
As I understand it, that is the way that the Cataphract works; but in the MDM the drive elements are stacked together with baffles in between. There is the single micro-fusion reactor that supplies power to each in turn, so nothing detaches.
We've never seen a diagram of the 3 Drive missiles, but David gave us a good look at the Mk 16 DDM at the back of SftS.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vTgKDlsdG8tWlIbHWKgKT28RRLWFKrnk/view?usp=sharing
The Nodes on the back (left side of the image) do not fall off, but continue with the missile after they burn out.
The shuttle boosters are not a great analogy, they are at their essence just a segmented pipe filled with burnable goo - but you thought that (like an MDM) they arn't staged in flight like a traditional rocket is correct, where as tlb said, the Catphract does come apart in stages.