ThinksMarkedly wrote:And I bet you that grasers can be detected by the effect they have on the solar wind and interplanetary dust in their paths. Especially if there were multiple beams, and even more so if those were in multiple directions. Firing grasers thus means that any ship outside of energy range has now a VERY good locus for its missiles.
Loren Pechtel wrote:This. No matter how stealthy the LD is I don't believe a shipkiller graser shot can be hidden. So long as anything with eyes (including recon drones) is about the beam will be identified. Fire multiple beams and you have an origin. Given the resolution we have seen to date I think they have plenty of accuracy to ensure return fire hits the origin--the only escape would be if they can zig enough before the beams arrive. Note that the low power and lack of a wedge greatly limit the ability of a LD to zig.
People need to be careful, because there are two different types of grasers being talked about at this point in the thread: ship borne grasers and the graser on the torpedoes. Yes, in a dirty environment the graser beam should be visible; but that is only important if the graser is ship borne, because then the ionized path points to the ship. If it a graser torpedo, then you will know the source no matter what the environment, because at the end of the 3 second firing sequence the torpedo will spectacularly self-destruct. Moreover, if you could not detect the movement of the torpedoes, then you will have no clue for the location of the launch. Even if you can see the beam during the 3 seconds it is in existence; you will not have a clue for the launch, because the torpedo can twist and turn.