Your face is already so liberally plastered with your own stupidity, cupcake, that I almost resisted quoting the relevant passage in Degan's stead. Almost.erik_t wrote:No no no, friend. That's not how it works. I can't say "go look at astronautix, the answer is there, I'm not doing your fucking homework for you". You seem to think I'm a retarded child. Please, Degan, rub my face in my stupidity. It ought to be very easy.Pages two and three of this thread, actually. I'm not doing your fucking homework for you.
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I'd like to add to Degan's post the following way: most of the millitarily-critical satellites lie beyond the reach of Shep's Nike-Zeus and Thor ASAT systems (and way beyond the shuttle), and the ones that are in reach are multiply redundant 'constellations' anyway. You can't take those systems out without a fair amount of warning, or a large delay from you taking out the first satellite to taking out enough of the redundancy to make the constellation unusable. They are also acts of war, and your staging sites will be attacked instantly to keep you from attacking more.[url=http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?p=3004188#p3004188]previous post,[/url] Patrick Degan wrote:No, it is not, for reasons which should be all too obvious. Setting aside the expense and logistical effort required to get a manned spaceflight off the ground in the first place, astronauts going out for an EVA of any sort require at least 40 minutes preparation time to get into their spacesuits, then spend another four hours prebreathing as their suit pressures and life support gas mixtures are steadily adjusted. Physical stresses involved in performing even simple tasks, along with limitations upon movement simply to keep from spinning yourself out of control, and the heat and radiation hazards, limits the amount of time an astronaut can spend outside. He then must spend hours in decompression after the EVA in order to avoid the bends, not unlike having to readjust after a deep sea dive. For all this, you maybe will be able to sabotage one satellite in one mission-day. The next one will be in its own orbit hundreds of kilometres from your present position (and any vehicle more than 150km in altitude is one which your LEO space capsule will never reach). Computing that rate of advance, the crew will be lucky if they can actually put more than two satellites out of action before return Earthside is compelled by the endurance limitation of the spacecraft and crew.
It's not enough that an enemy be able to shoot down constellations of satellites. It must shoot them down fast enough to disable the constellations before the US and the other nations that parasatize off of them can respond. If it can't, then they will not bother. Everyone will know who did it.
And then dismantled it, and did not use the gun on any other spacecraft. This should tell you something.I didn't outline the threat of manned antisatellite missions. Shep did... well, the Soviets did. Hell, they were willing to use an entire station (Salyut 3) to do so... and did in fact test this system!
Also, the primary mission of the Salyut 3 was spying, not space combat. The damn thing had a Agat-1 photographic camera, which was kept pointing toward the earth by a half-million firings by its thrusters during its 15 days of manned operation. The gun mounted in case the US wanted to shoot it down.
While true that the Pegasus was not purpose built to destroy that satellite, it was purpose built to get near it. That mission requires certain guidance and tracking capabilities. The only way it differed from a kinetic-kill vehicle was its intended mission.You cannot declare this and therefore have it be so. A Pegasus launch has, in this real world of which you are so afraid, impacted another satellite. This system was not purpose-built for anti-satellite missions.