Loren Pechtel wrote:Joat42 wrote:A sidewall is a gravitational stress-band, not a physical object that can be hit. Anything that intersects with the stress band is ripped apart to its constituent particles and accelerated away along the stress-band so there will be no explosion from a kinetic energy conversion.
An object traveling at relativistic speeds that hits a wedge or sidewall will overload a ship's system (nodes, generators etc) to the point of failure though, and at that point some parts of the object may survive long enough to pass through the stress-band but deflected in a direction determined by the bands orientation.
Actually, it doesn't matter if the sidewall deflects the missile. Deflect an ultrarelatavistic missile and it's energy is going to appear as some
very hot gamma rays--and they'll be heading on the path the missile was on. The target dies anyway.
It is not going to deflect that much kinetic energy. Again, Kitt and Goliath.
Ugh! Now I have the movie
Unstoppable stuck in my mind. "Gavin, your derailer is not going to work. There is entirely too much train traveling way too fast."
The train disintegrated the derailer. Bullets are deflected by bullet proof glass, unless the round can pierce the glass because it is an armor piercing round.
The ship's "derailer" will not work against a near-infinite mass armor piercing projectile. Even with an abundant supply of handwavium.