You're assuming that you can even detect an enemy space ship.
Spaceships glow in the dark. If you want anything highpowered on them you have to shed MW of thermal energy, or fry the crew.
You're assuming that you can even detect an enemy space ship.
I wonder what power would be required to vaporize a tungsten rod of modern anti-tank sabot shell.Against such pellets, lasers would be useful as point defenses to vaporize stray ones and to force the opponent to flick enough pellets to overwhelm these defenses.
Spaceships glow in the dark. If you want anything highpowered on them you have to shed MW of thermal energy, or fry the crew.
No one on a trip to the moon or in the international space station has ever been fried.
NASA has never released any Earth-taken shot of a lunar orbiter circling the moon.
I don't recall ever seeing an Earth-taken shot of the international space station.
Moral of the story: Things in space are very hard to see.
Corollary: ...especially if you don't know where to look.
No one on a trip to the moon or in the international space station has ever been fried.
NASA has never released any Earth-taken shot of a lunar orbiter circling the moon.
I don't recall ever seeing an Earth-taken shot of the international space station.
Moral of the story: Things in space are very hard to see.
Corollary: ...especially if you don't know where to look.
I didn't know that. Thank you.The ISS can be seen with the naked eye. As for a shot:
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090116.html
Spoiler :
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I wonder if this was responsible for the pattern of orbits for Kuiper belt objects that people think are caused by a Planet X.I can't find the article now, but apparently a star came within 1 million miles of Earth 50,000 years ago. It passed through the Oort Cloud. Comets, etc. still show the evidence of its passing.
I wonder if any Neanderthals noticed.
Edit: Found it. Oops, 70,000 years ago.
http://earthsky.org/space/scholzs-star-disturbed-comets-in-prehistory
I still maintain it would be easy for a ship to hide in the vastness of space. Say, you want to go from Planet A to Planet B. You don't go from A to B because you'd be easy to spot.Instead, you go from A to Point C, do a mid-course correction, and proceed C to B. Point C can be anywhere, so there are an infinite number of possible trajectories.
I wonder if this was responsible for the pattern of orbits for Kuiper belt objects that people think are caused by a Planet X.
Heat radiation is no problem. The ship can vector the heat away from Planet B, using the ship itself to shield any sight of it.![]()
You mean to sublimate.I wonder what power would be required to vaporize a tungsten rod of modern anti-tank sabot shell.
Yeah, piece of cake.It is very easy to calculate.
Wouldn't it be absolutely creepy if Ben Bova turned out to be right? His Venus novel is the stuff of nightmares.Spectral readings of Venus's atmosphere have shown a periodic change similar to the way algael blooms affect the Earth oceans. This *may* be evidence that Venus atmosphere contains life.