cthia wrote:Theemile, this is a very nice explanation. I think I am beginning to see a little light.
What threw me off is when Scotty snuck in an old fashioned nuke against the Peeps. ISTR that Honor was surprised that he was able to do so, since point defense would assign a much higher threat index to the nuke. The nuke could be readily identified because it was so much larger which made it stand out like a sore thumb.
Because it was so much larger, I thought the warhead of an old-fashioned nuke had a much higher yield than a regular missile in boom mode.
Your post enlightened me to an even higher yield from a smaller warhead because of the "grav pinch" design.
But I didn't think the nuclear explosion that pumps the laser heads was as large as an explosion in boom mode. I assumed that the laser heads didn't need or could even use such a large nuclear explosion. Which implies that even a boom mode nuke has a smaller yield than possible.
Does this imply that a pure nuclear missile could be made to yield an even larger explosion? As in a very fat "fat man." Of course, that would put tactical back at trying to sneak a much larger missile in.
Actually the nuke isn't bigger. Nor can the target ship distinguish at long range which missiles carry nukes and which carry laser heads.
In fact when Honor was under fire at Basilisk she could only suspect what kind of warheads the Peeps had on Sirius's missiles.
[quote"On Basilisk Station"] Unless she missed her guess about the warheads those missiles carried, she had to stop them at least twenty thousand kilometers short of her ship, and they looked frighteningly close.
But none of them were getting closer than a hundred thousand . . . yet.
[...]
Honor flinched as Cardones finally missed an incoming missile. It darted in to twenty-two thousand kilometers; then it vanished in a brilliant eyeblink, and she bit her lip as her worst fears were confirmed. Sirius was using laser warheads, turning each missile into a remotely targeted cluster of bomb-pumped x-ray lasers.[/quote]
The reason it's hard to get hits with contact nukes isn't that ship's can ID them and prioritize them. (Though once the missile doesn't explode at laser head range it's likely either a nuke, a jammer, or a decoy); and so a missile that's still there to shoot at might be a nuke and that will push it up the priority list over those final thousands of km. But mostly it's that the closer the missile gets the easier a target it is
And since the nuke has to close that extra 20, 30, or 50,000 km (depending on the generation of laser head) not only is it getting steadily easier to hit but it's also even more time in that point defense sweet spot zone.Short Victorious War: wrote:Because the chance of knocking a missile down increases geometrically in the last 50,000 or 60,000 kilometers of its run, as it steadies down on its final attack vector, direct hits against modern point defense are virtually unheard of.
And remember, when we're talking about single drive missiles their closing speeds are way lower; less than 0.17c; so we're talking about half a second or more to cover than final 20,000-ish km. Given the cyclic time on PDLCs that's a lot of extra shots they get on a nuke compared to a laser head.
As for warhead power
A laser head still mounts the most powerful nuke it can fit, because the more power it can direct into its lasing rods the more powerful the resulting lasers are. So with a multi-mode warhead like the CA/BC Mark 13 the RMN came up with in the late 1800s the nuclear explosion is going to be the same power whether the warhead is set for boom, burn, or lase mode.
However; with the same physical size of warhead you could make the nuke more powerful if you went with a pure boom design; simply because the extra grav generators you need to direct the blast for burn or lase, and the lasing rods themselves, take up space in the warhead. If you left them out you'd have that room available to instead squeeze in a more powerful nuke.
However the RMN generally views the flexibility to select the warhead mode on the fly, and potentially even after launch, as far more useful than having some slightly more powerful contact nukes; especially given how unlikely it is for a missile to get close enough to hit with the contact nuke.