cthia wrote:The "Ya - Whatta Strike!" Begs to differ. But your mistake is when applying your notion to the real world. Scanning is accomplished with the limitations of technology. A full scan of the entire heavens is not possible as a matter of recourse. It is accomplished over time. Instruments have to be directed towards certain locations for a certain period of time. And, they have to be effected by humans with their human foibles, such as boredom and a lack of attention span. All the while not expecting something to be coming in on a completely random vector. Factoring in any other inherent limitations of the scanning system.
Those were stealthed ships, not rocks. They were also flying at very high speeds through the inner system and spent no more than a day or two there. And some of them were detected, just too late to make any difference.
Mind what I said: any rock that spends a month or more in the inner system will be detected. I gave a month exactly because of what you said: it takes time to scan the entire sky. This kind of passive detection is usually done by comparing two time-separated imaging of the same region of the sky and see if any blip moved. We are doing this now, with only Earth-based (ground or near orbit) right now. I can't believe any space-based civilisation wouldn't do the same, and use multiple imaging platforms further separated in space so parallax can be detected much quicker. Even Grayson, Masada, and Nuncio would have the systems. Systems like Manticore probably do this far, far more often. And given that they have thousands of platforms that are constantly, passively imaging everything, they can probably detect any rock moving through the inner system within a day.
This isn't affected by human foibles and apathy because it's a mostly automated system anyway. When an alarm rings -- which should happen at most once a year -- you send a ship to check it out or at the very least keep a closer look at it. This is why I said that the strike, if any, has to be quick enough that it wouldn't be caught by two time-separated scans of the same region. This completely rules out the 5-year timeline that was proposed before.
cthia wrote: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.
The closer you are, the less precision you need. But anyway, I agree with Jonathan: you don't need a supercomputer either way. The one you used to post here in the forum, whether a laptop, a desktop or a mobile phone, has more than enough computing power to make these calculations. The difficulty is not the calculation, it's the measurement of variables.
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.
I've argued before that in any system worth hitting anything, the navigation beacons and all the EM emissions will tell you exactly what you are with sufficient precision for a strike. The problem with those systems is that they are also chaotic enough with ships going every which direction every time, at random times, that you can't know all the factors downrange.
In other words, you can put yourself 50 AU from the planet and with significant enough precision the exact velocity and thus the time it would take to hit Mount Royal while Beth is having her supper. But you won't know what the projectile will take that time because it will be affected by forces outside of your control in its journey.
We can today launch a probe from Earth that will hit the Mars atmosphere at an exact angle and land within 100 m of where we wanted it to land, fly through the gap in Saturn's rings, or make a very close flyby of Pluto (at 40 AU!) with very minimal course adjustments.
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
The problem with that is that you don't need a slow-moving object to make that strike. If you can get to within 1 million km of the planet, you use regular KEWs. In fact, if your plan is to devastate anyway, fire missiles with wedges. At 50000 gravities, a missile crosses 1 million km in 63 seconds. That's enough to raise the walls around Mount Royal, but not to move a tug to interpose a wedge, especially if there are multiple objectives. So Mount Royal survives, but Landing is gone.
It is enough time for defensive ships or stations in near, medium, or high orbit to launch CMs, though. And whether the launching ship survives to tell the tale or not is a different story.
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.
I'm arguing (see above) that any system worth hitting provides such system-positioning system as a matter of courtesy to all the ships that come.