Jonathan_S wrote:cthia wrote:As far as firing them, I would think they would be designed to be tube launched. We seem to agree the Honorverse will have a huge impact on our understanding of the design of dirty bombs. I don't think a design that will allow them to be tube launched will be a problem. And I don't think finding a manufacturer will be a big deal. The interest of science still exists. There may actually be a need for these type of weapons in the HV that escapes us. If used for science, then they aren't exclusively weapons.
I think the HV would be able to significantly decrease the required volume of such devices. "Fat Man" can go on a diet.
Why would it ever be any different, strategically, than when the US dirty bombed Japan? Under the same strategic situation of course. Regardless that it was the best we could do at the time. At any rate, the strategical and tactical considerations of succeeding in deploying dirty bombs against Japan may have existed early on in the HV regarding EEVs.
I am skeptical about the ability to target something as far away as some of the posited claims with a completely ballistic attack. It has already been touched on a few times, but consider the mechanics of properly shooting a rifle. Breathing techniques must be used to hit the target, as well as a slow as molasses squeeze of the trigger. Jerking the trigger while squeezing it can significantly throw off the bullet. As does breathing while pulling the trigger.
It should be the same for a warship. The firing mechanism itself could throw the projectile off quite a bit downrange. An arc second is far to much to cause a miss on a planet at those ranges. If a ship lurches when firing, that won't cut it. And, the actual targeting mechanism has to be state of the art. Cross hairs ain't gonna work from the ranges discussed. And every decimal place in those type of calculations has to be perfect. Which is why I imagine a behemoth of a computer will be needed to crunch the numbers, like the one I imagine the MA will develop. And a bit of time to "align" for success. Pardon the pun.
At any rate, I imagine there are many planets in the HV that are used for target practice.
P.S.
I am assuming the mass requirements you posited upstream of a projectile to hit the ground fits the capabilities of present day Earth's tech. I'm positing metals, materials, and processes that will enable a 5-lb projectile to hit paydirt. In conjunction with heat tiles that don't fall off? LOL
??? Fat Man (and Little Boy) weren't dirty bombs. They actually left relatively little nuclear fallout - that's why Nagasaki (and Hiroshima) weren't rendered uninhabitable. Even the day after each was nuked it were far less radioactive than the area around Fukushima power plant is today.
A good dirty bomb would basically be backing a warhead with the extracted fuel rods of a fission plant - lots of nasty decay chains happening with lethal levels of radioactivity. It's all radiation and nuclear boom - just enough conventional explosive to disperse the radioactive material and make it hard to clean up. (And I can think of no scientific reason for needing to bombard an area with lots of highly radioactive waste)
Also it isn't the number crunching that's hard for a long range ballistic hit - you don't need a supercomputer. Instead you'd already alluded to the actual problem - it's slop or non-measurable variables in the system - like the breathing or trigger pull in your rifle example; but extended to things like varying wind conditions after you pull the trigger.
It's relatively trivial to calculate the speed and angle needed to make a hit - but all the supercomputing power in the universe can't correct for, say, an unexpected change in the solar wind after release or a ship passing unexpectedly close enough to slightly perturb the projectile post-release (you also have issues with any slop or vibration in the launch/release system causing the KEW to not quite hit the calculated necessary vector. That's one reason current deep space probes have mid-course adjustments - it's not because NASA and the other space agencies can't calculate the exact path the probe needs to follow when all conditions are known - it's because a) all conditions aren't, and can't be, known and b) physical systems have some inherent level of variability in them meaning except by purest luck you can completely perfectly achieve the calculated vectors - and over that time of flight even miniscule deviations add up to major misses.
So you checked your position against the calculated perfect position as you fly along and based on how far you're off you calculate the necessary adjustments to make with your thrusters. (And because those adjustments can't be trusted to provide perfectly exactly the vector correction calculated you do that check and when necessary adjust, many times over the course of the flight. A KEW on a multi-month trajectory would, IMHO, need to do the same - regardless of how big a computer did the pre-launch calculations.
I don't think I made my points clear. First, I can't believe that in the HV spent fuel rods would be necessary if a modern dirty bomb is the objective. Simply dispersing radioactive material, made radioactive by being inserted into an active reactor for the sole purpose of dirty bomb production will do. These could be pellets or whatever. In effect, a dirty shrapnel or fragmentation bomb. In the HV these kinds of weapons can be made modern. With uninhabited moons made available for R&D, much is possible. Futuristic tech makes lots of things possible.
Because of the effect of futuristic tech, I was positing that even "Fat Man" could be made much smaller with the same yield. That remark was simply icing.
And of course modern man can't think of scientific ways to use dirty bombs, why would we give it any thought with the danger it represents to us. And the logistics headache of disposing of radioactive material. In a space based civilization, all of the current dangers to man (as a whole) is pretty much gone. We are free to seek scientific interests in the area. Oftentimes, scientific interests finds us.
But my point is that modern dirty bombs may be a perfect way of rendering an area uninhabitable, thus unusable. And it is a perfect way to accomplish it if there is a limited probability of actually succeeding in putting MORE than a single hit dead on planet. Like in Masada's case.
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Jonathan_S wrote:Also it isn't the number crunching that's hard for a long range ballistic hit - you don't need a supercomputer.
I am not so certain about that Jonathan. But I'll circle back around to that point. Or end up there.
At any rate, I was actually proposing the use of a supercomputer not just to hit the planet, but to hit specific targets on the planet; like Mount Royal Palace. Although I was proposing much shorter launch points.
Jonathan_S wrote:Instead you'd already alluded to the actual problem - it's slop or non-measurable variables in the system - like the breathing or trigger pull in your rifle example; but extended to things like varying wind conditions after you pull the trigger.
It's relatively trivial to calculate the speed and angle needed to make a hit
Agreed.
IF all of the variables are known to the precision needed it would be child's play. But all of the variables in the resolution needed wouldn't be known. In the HV only relative or general positions are known, for the most part. But in no way are iron-clad spatial positions to the degree of being usable in equations for ballistic strikes on a planet available from every possible position in the vastness of space. You would need to know the EXACT location of the planet at any time index to a significant number of decimal places from all known points in space. And these points in space need to be calculated to the EXACT number of decimal points. There is too much variation in the HV. But then, HV weapons are corrected in flight. Or after they come back online after the ballistic phase.
Jonathan_S wrote:- but all the supercomputing power in the universe can't correct for, say, an unexpected change in the solar wind after release or a ship passing unexpectedly close enough to slightly perturb the projectile post-release
Which is why I proposed the MA will dramatically eliminate the problem by getting much closer in for the shot. Just to ruffle ThinksMarkedly's feathers, the MA will be launching from a position close enough that some pervert will be looking down Beth's blouse. LOL
Jonathan_S wrote: (you also have issues with any slop or vibration in the launch/release system causing the KEW to not quite hit the calculated necessary vector.
Yep, akin to the aforementioned jerk of the trigger. I would think the MA would engineer a system that would solve that problem. Necessity is the mother of invention. A ship incorporating a huge stabilizing gyroscope might be possible. And, launching from such a large ship won't hurt.
Jonathan_S wrote:That's one reason current deep space probes have mid-course adjustments - it's not because NASA and the other space agencies can't calculate the exact path the probe needs to follow when all conditions are known - it's because a) all conditions aren't, and can't be, known and b) physical systems have some inherent level of variability in them meaning except by purest luck you can completely perfectly achieve the calculated vectors - and over that time of flight even miniscule deviations add up to major misses.
Certainly true with current tech, computers and data.
Jonathan_S wrote:So you checked your position against the calculated perfect position as you fly along and based on how far you're off you calculate the necessary adjustments to make with your thrusters. (And because those adjustments can't be trusted to provide perfectly exactly the vector correction calculated you do that check and when necessary adjust, many times over the course of the flight. A KEW on a multi-month trajectory would, IMHO, need to do the same - regardless of how big a computer did the pre-launch calculations.
I would think the ship itself would have to employ some sort of device to measure the exact position of the planet relative to itself to a significant number of decimal points from whatever point in space. Then the ship needs to be properly oriented towards the target. I think you are underestimating the difficulty of hitting even a huge planet from such enormous proposed distances using the relative positions known - even in the absence of solar winds and debris - in a totally ballistic strike.
P.S.
Rereading that post I agree it was too rushed and too assuming. If the US had used actual dirty bombs against Japan, I think the devastation and fallout would have affected us even more, in the long run.
Assuming, of course, that we actually COULD have produced a bonafide dirty bomb with our limited understanding of the technology - paired with our limited production techniques - at the time.
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