Loren Pechtel wrote:kzt wrote:R^2 kills you. You have to know where it is to get enough energy back to find it. And the return is light speed, so at a light minute you low where it was a minute ago and you missiles will take x minutes to get there, so no, not going to work.
I wouldn't consider it an impossible tactic.
Yes, in a ship to ship engagement r^2 makes it utterly useless. However, consider the Mistletoe system. While it's not going to do any good here lets look at something along these lines:
Take an Apollo pod. Half the birds are simply big booms--no rods, no targeting systems. The other half of the pod is pure sensor, no boom, no targeting. The control missile has some software changes.
You realize there's an enemy ship hiding--you know it's approximate location but not good enough to actually put rods on target. The first pod you fire is this special pod, the rest of the missiles are a bit behind.
When the birds reach the area the booms start going off. The guys hiding are going to have a very hard time maintaining stealth against the sensor birds--and when their location is revealed the attack birds are not far behind, they don't have time to slip away.
Of course the probe missiles are sitting ducks--but if the defenders fire on them it's the same thing--they just revealed their location.
Although I thought it up I'm ambivalent if it's practical. The tech is all there - it just need to be put together with some software added to handle it.
I'm guessing that what the Demonic Duo will come up with is probably some kind of extremely sensitive gravatic arrays that can measure the distortion ships make on the fabric of space.