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by InclinedPlane
6019 days ago
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Consider this: an unmanned missile can accelerate much faster than a manned spacecraft, so it can evade laser fire much more effectively as it approaches the enemy. At a critical distance it launches its payload: hundreds or thousands of tiny (e.g. 10 gram or so) fragments distributed in a grid (at a density of, say, 1/m^2 distributed over as much as a km^2 at the interception distance). These intercept the target at 10s, 100s, or 1000s of km/s. Such a weapon is hard to defend against, even with highly effective lasers, and is devastating to the target. |
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