Ah, but do you know that you don't know the things that you think you know that you don't, in point of fact, know?Lonestar wrote:Well, we have known unknowns.
Never mind. Rhetorical question, obviously.
Ah, but do you know that you don't know the things that you think you know that you don't, in point of fact, know?Lonestar wrote:Well, we have known unknowns.
Simon_Jester wrote:Ah, but do you know that you don't know the things that you think you know that you don't, in point of fact, know?
Always, always, always, write somewhere other than the reply box. I use notepad++ saving to a dropbox folder.Force Lord wrote:AAARGH! A misplaced button press ended up wiping out a story post I was working on. And I was close to finishing it, too...
Because it's going really fast? You don't need to be going faster every second to send atoms flying in everywhich direction from colliding with your giant ship going at relativistic velocities.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Why would radiation scatter off a relativistic target that wasn't accelerating?
Erm no. Only charged particles only radiate when they are accelerating.fgalkin wrote:Because it's going really fast? You don't need to be going faster every second to send atoms flying in everywhich direction from colliding with your giant ship going at relativistic velocities.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Why would radiation scatter off a relativistic target that wasn't accelerating?
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
For the same reasons raindrops scatter off a lump of concrete? See, the random interstellar particles aren't moving until they hit your ship, at which point they accelerate rather sharply.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Why would radiation scatter off a relativistic target that wasn't accelerating?
A typical flyby isn't within the system where cosmic rays are in abundance. A typical fly by would be skirting the edge of the system from the top. No Byzantine ship would approach the inner system because we have more problems to care about, like possible gravitational wave sensors.Simon_Jester wrote:For the same reasons raindrops scatter off a lump of concrete? See, the random interstellar particles aren't moving until they hit your ship, at which point they accelerate rather sharply.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Why would radiation scatter off a relativistic target that wasn't accelerating?
What's being detected here is, as Fima says, the equivalent of a wake: When you travel at speeds on the order of 0.1c or higher, every time you hit a random interstellar proton you're experiencing the equivalent of a cosmic ray impact in the 100 MeV range. That's apt to scatter a bit.
Or, more generally, Rule #4 of Things Not To Do So Your Cloaked Ship Won't Get Spotted... thou shalt not go too fast. Almost without exception, any form of stealth works better when you aren't smacking into things.
You misunderstand. Some poor innocent little hydrogen atom is just floating along, minding its own business, when an Imperial Navy stealth ship comes blazing along at 0.1c and smacks into it. From an outside frame of reference (such as MEH detection systems), this is a ~100 MeV event, which is apt to produce more than a little in the way of sidescatter and radiation that can be detected and tracked.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:A typical flyby isn't within the system where cosmic rays are in abundance. A typical fly by would be skirting the edge of the system from the top. No Byzantine ship would approach the inner system because we have more problems to care about, like possible gravitational wave sensors.
Nonsense. Cortez is a military MEHman. Tougher! Fitter!Beowulf wrote:I object! Grand Captain Cortez would only be able to eat a rare steak through a blender. The fatties don't have the capacity to eat solid food.
And the rare off event of running into a hydrogen atom and a detector in the right place and time is...?Simon_Jester wrote:You misunderstand. Some poor innocent little hydrogen atom is just floating along, minding its own business, when an Imperial Navy stealth ship comes blazing along at 0.1c and smacks into it. From an outside frame of reference (such as MEH detection systems), this is a ~100 MeV event, which is apt to produce more than a little in the way of sidescatter and radiation that can be detected and tracked.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:A typical flyby isn't within the system where cosmic rays are in abundance. A typical fly by would be skirting the edge of the system from the top. No Byzantine ship would approach the inner system because we have more problems to care about, like possible gravitational wave sensors.
You're not hitting cosmic rays, Fin. You're creating them.
Do you really want me to do the math?Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:And the rare off event of running into a hydrogen atom and a detector in the right place and time is...?
Neither is going deep in-system possible, since the enemy if competent enough can set up detection grids in-system which involve the emission of gravitational waves and placing the necessary detectors here and there to pick up stealth ships. Sure i shouldn't be going too fast, but the whole point is to be in and out within a small finite time and staying outside the system so I could make a quick Warp jump if necessary. And what's to stop me from coating the ship with a porous coating to absorb the incoming atoms and radiation?Simon_Jester wrote:Do you really want me to do the math?Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:And the rare off event of running into a hydrogen atom and a detector in the right place and time is...?
SpoilerSo no, if you really want to avoid being seen while passing near an inhabited star system, I wouldn't advise going too fast.
That from a fellow who spies in hyperspace? Riiiigggghhhhttt.Simon_Jester wrote:Well, our solution would be to jump in and just... you know... not fly around at relativistic speeds. That just makes things needlessly complicated. It's not as if you get better sensor pictures while moving around fast enough to significantly redshift everything you see on the screen.
On rereading it, it doesn't say that Cortez is actually eating the steak, only that he tastes the blood in his mouth. He might not be chewing it, just sucking the blood and juices out - like a vampire! They have vampire captains!Simon_Jester wrote:Nonsense. Cortez is a military MEHman. Tougher! Fitter!Beowulf wrote:I object! Grand Captain Cortez would only be able to eat a rare steak through a blender. The fatties don't have the capacity to eat solid food.
He is perfectly capable of chewing solid food and standing up without robotic assistance.
All I'm gonna say is that going really really fast gives the Lost and the MEH a viable detection method, one that easily explains the question "how was the ship spotted?" Maybe it called a little extra attention to itself by accidentally colliding with a bit of space gravel in a fluke accident that released the yield of a small nuclear bomb in a fluke no one could have predicted, and then the other people's cosmic ray trackers noticed something fishy. Who knows?Siege wrote:Less technobabble and more joint plotting please guys. And may I just say that while I agree that flying around at relativistic speed with a stealth ship is probably not the best of ideas, I'm also not convinced that the creation of detectable cosmic rays is inevitable when we've introduced at least a half dozen stealth technologies the Imperium could conceivably have applied to its spy ships in order to prevent detection this way.
Simon_Jester wrote:I like Mayabird's idea. Except who ever heard of a grossly obese vampire?
I don't really care for the hydrogen atoms bouncing off hulls and stuff, but with all the amount of stealth ship traffic in and around the MEH, and so on, leik I said it's not too far fetched for the MEH to see some sensor phantoms in their grids and blindly fire at these ghosts - like what the Iraqis did when the F-117s violated their airspace again and again and again.All I'm gonna say is that going really really fast gives the Lost and the MEH a viable detection method, one that easily explains the question "how was the ship spotted?" Maybe it called a little extra attention to itself by accidentally colliding with a bit of space gravel in a fluke accident that released the yield of a small nuclear bomb in a fluke no one could have predicted, and then the other people's cosmic ray trackers noticed something fishy. Who knows?
It can use modified Ferrario sports engines!Or maybe Byzantine recon doctrine is less interested in sitting around and lurking, and more interested in blazingly fast runs SR-71 style, with the ships not actually caring if someone knows they were there as long as the have enough stealth, and speed, to avoid being localized and shot down- relying on speed and long range sensor resolution to get good information, while keeping the enemy from spotting them in time to do anything about it, as with the failure of the MEH megacruiser to do anything about this Byzantine ship.