Loren Pechtel wrote:Remember, ships have grasers. The atmosphere will be basically opaque to them. A graser shot at a planet is going to make a big sky boom and little else--think Chelyabinsk.
cthia wrote:I was originally thinking about our own SDI program. But I think that uses microwaves.
Jonathan_S wrote:Also, IIRC, the SDI satellites were planned to engage the ICMCs as they exited the Earth's atmosphere; so no need to worry about the massive atmospheric attenuation that certain types of energy weapons experience.
Though SDI also toyed with lots of different concepts (this list from wiki): bomb pumped X-ray lasers, chemical lasers, neutral particle beams, railguns, and then later (when that all those techs proved too immature) the "brilliant pebbles" kinetic kill rockets.
So it's a little hard to keep track of what where along an incoming ICBM's trajectory each weapon concept would have first engaged it.
I suppose our own plans, originally, to use lasers influenced my notion. Although I did not know before now the plan was to wait for the missile to exit the atmosphere. Thanks for that info as well.
Also responsible for my notion was Russia's fear the weapon would be used for ground based targets. I suppose it could be utilized instead of missiles as sort of a plausible deniability type of scenario.
I suppose in the early days of the HV, or even now in some backwoods systems, beam weapons are used. Even if only because those weapons won't leave fragments of evidence that could be analyzed to determine who is responsible. Beam weapons also seem to supply a cruel weapon to use for those belligerents who would value cruelty beyond all else. Like pirates, who also may have a short supply of KEWS, if any at all at their disposal.