ThinksMarkedly wrote:A little more thought into this:
I don't think a torpedo can loiter or go ballistic at low velocities in the inner system and get close to targets this way. The spider activation is detectable and this was the concern in Oyster Bay.
Now that I'm looking more closely at the numbers for the Oyster Bay attack I'm impressed by how they seem to line up.
They've got two different prongs of the attack, the Cataphract pods which are necessarily coming in ballistically, and the g-torps which seemingly are accelerating for at least the final hour of their approach.
The four data points we have are at some unspecified point
Mission of Honor wrote:Now the Mesan attack came sweeping in out of the darkness. The incoming weapons had extraordinarily low radar signatures, and they were coming in at barely 60,000 KPS.
Then
Mission of Honor wrote:The torpedoes had begun accelerating well before they or any of the missile pods accompanying them reached the range at which any transmission from the communications platforms the Ghost-class scout ships had emplaced could have reached them
Mission of Honor wrote:The torpedoes [...] Special caps fitted to protect their sensors from particle erosion and micrometeorites during their long ballistic run in to attack range were blown free while onboard artificial intelligences considered the updated targeting information and concluded that none of it required significant modification of their pre-launch instructions. Their targets were rather large, after all, and they’d already known exactly where to find them.
and finally
Mission of Honor wrote:At the instant it fired, the torpedo which struck the control section was moving at the next best thing to 70,000 KPS
If we assume the "few hundred gravities" is 300g - then it'd take 3100 seconds (nearly 52 minutes) to accelerate from 60,000 KPS (0.2c) of their long ballistic approach to nearly 70,000 KPS (0.23c) - and they'd be a bit over 14 million km further down-range than they'd have been without that acceleration. (For a total of about 200 million km over that 52ish minutes)
That seems plenty far away to avoid having the drive start-up detected; a bit over a light-minute.
We also know the Cataphract pods also came in ballistically; behind "other, specialized pods which carried nothing but low-powered particle screens and the power supplies to maintain them for the ballistic run in-system to their targets" -- so they had a pretty long flight at pretty high speed to need that extra particle shielding. (And it wouldn't surprise me if they were moving at about the same velocity as the torps)
Unfortunately we just don't have enough details on the specific cataphracts used at OB to work out precisely how the time-on-target sledgehammer blow was pulled off
[1] -- meaning where the pods were relative to the torps prior to the latter's hour of acceleration. But I do suspect that they did NOT utilize the full 255 seconds of the missile's powered endurance -- that would have given automated defenses way too much warning time before the laser-heads and g-torps struck.
So, both halves of the attack had a long, fast, ballistic approach. The torps cleared their sensors and accelerated first, and at some point nearly an hour later the Cataphract pods must have started launching missiles.
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[1] The exact text we're given on the Cataphracts used at OB is "the pod-launched missiles of Oyster Bay were Cataphract-Cs, based on the capital-ship Trebucht, with much heavier and more powerful laserheads. The combined package had a powered range from rest of over sixteen million kilometers and a terminal velocity of better than .49 c."
The missiles used at Torch had, per the numbers Duckk provide way back when, a terminal velocity from rest of 0.24c and a powered range from rest of 16.57 million km.
Either the range of the OB Cataphracts is massively over sixteen million km; their drive endurance is way down to offset their vastly higher accel, or (unlike the range) the given terminal velocity is NOT from rest.
(It actually would work out pretty well if calculated with the base ballistic velocity of 60,000 KPS. But it's confusing, if not outright misleading, to switch from "from rest" to "in this engagement" in the middle of a sentence)[/size]