tlb wrote:The first story to suggest throwing stones at a planet (that I am know about) was 1966's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress (the story that also popularized the phrase "There is no such thing as a free lunch"), where the Moon's inhabitants revolt against rule from Earth. So the idea predates the Honorverse by far.
It has been suggested that just throwing rocks would not be effective, since they could disintegrate in the atmosphere. So it is necessary to choose metallic objects to strike the surface.
Note that I was only mentioning this as an alternative to using a marginally traceable KEW.
Well the velocity of the rock also comes into question. My memory on TMiHM is a bit hazy, but iirc the velocity the Moon's original catapults lofted rocks was extremely low. They were literally using the Earth's own gravity to do the most of the work, the original magnetic catapult was just imparting enough velocity to get it out of the Moon's Sphere of Influence, and to 'land' the rocks in the ocean. The steel-coated Moon catapult rocks had to be large enough to carry Moon-grown wheat or as they did later in the book 3 full-grown adults which puts the minimum rock size at minimum as approximately the size of an Apollo command capsules if not larger. If smaller rocks can come in at high velocity and impact Earth's surface, then a larger but much slower rock specifically calculated to hit ocean and not land is easily going survive atmosphere and not explode.
After the Moon slaves/workers revolted, and built a few extra catapults off the books, they changed the landing zones from oceans to cities by altering the velocity they launch at by a small margin. But I'm fairly certain they were still primarily relying on Earth doing most of the heavy work of pulling the rocks in rather than the catapults impacting considerably higher velocities.
And the described technology of the time is still very much modern era... "invasion fleets" took multiple days to traverse from Earth to the Moon, just like our latest craft from SpaceX would take. The magnetic catapults would launch from the dark side of the Moon, and after the catapult powers down Earth literally couldn't even see the rocks until they were practically hitting atmosphere. At which time they were only minutes from impact due to having traveled with a measly acceleration of not much higher than 9 or 10 mps squared. You'd have enough time to evacuate a President, Premier or Prime Minister but everybody else is pretty much screwed.
About the only thing I remember being off, was the destruction effect of these rocks. Unless they were loaded with heavy metals, or stuff like uranium or liquid mercury, they had a rather high destructive effect for something coming in so slowly, relatively speaking. Maybe my memory is playing tricks but I recall them being somewhat more dangerous and a little closer to what Frontier Fleet using single KEWs to take out entire (small) towns, rather than something like say Terekhov using a KEW to kill Yucel with only a few blocks worth of damage.