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Old 10-17-12, 10:35 PM   #61
Cybermat47
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Originally Posted by Sailor Steve View Post
No, for the same reason it makes no sound. The propeller has to push against something to work. No air, no water, no push.
Knew it was to good to be true.
Back to step 1!
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Old 10-18-12, 01:36 AM   #62
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Also, Stealth is even easier to obtain in space. If you can hide heat and radiation signatures youll be invisible, absolutely. the vastness of space is the ultimate assistance to what would be the submarines of the future.
But you can't hide your heat and radiation signature; the heat will (excepting any major discovery that can violate the Laws of Thermodynamics) have to go somewhere, and when it does, everyone can see you.

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Wouldn't that depend on your altitude and velocity? Communications satellites in a Clarke belt orbit can maintain a geostationary position over a part of the Earth without having to apply thrust so it's seems to me that if you reverse the direction of travel one could stay on one side of a planet (orbit-stationary?) without that much effort at all.
No, if you go into geostationary orbit in the other direction you're still going to make the trip all the way around the planet in 24 hours. The only difference is that the surface will rotate in the other direction from you.

There are only two ways I can think of where you can stay motionless relative to a planet: Either using a Solar Lagrange point, in which case you are way, way too far away from the planet hide behind it, or not actually being in orbit (that is, being above a planet with null horizontal velocity), meaning you have to constantly apply thrust to counter the gravity pulling you down. In either case, that still assumes you're at that position to begin with and the enemy isn't looking from multiple directions, otherwise you are toast.

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Here's one for the hard science dudes...it's probably easily proven wrong because I'm tired and was just about to get into bed when I thought of this...but couldn't we take a leaf from submarines and use a double hull?

The internal hull would radiate heat from the crew and power source, but the external hull (connected to the internal by non-conductive materials) would have a vacuum buffer between it and the internal hull, and since space is a good insulator, the heat radiated by the internal hull wouldn't reach the external hull which (in theory) would stay the same temperature as the vacuum around it.

Of course, that doesn't get rid of the problem with the heat generated by the drive system, but the radiant hull temperature problem might be solved.
Vacuum is a good insulator from convection, not from radiation, which is why you're using that method to get rid of heat in the first place. So the outer hull will absorb the radiation from the inner hull and will radiate it into outer space just the same.

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Also, since infrared is an electromagnetic radiation we can also bend that, like we can bend light, with metamaterials, heck, we can even bend gamma radiation now, but whether you'd be able to bend the exhaust radiation enough that it would become undetectable is another matter...

Hard science dudes, over to you, I'm off to bed now I've gotten this out of my head...if I'd have left it till tomorrow morning I'd have forgotten it...really must start leaving a notepad on my bedside table...
Wouldn't that only work if you have this metamaterial right between your exhaust and the target? I don't think that's very practical, even assuming it is possible. Of course, that will still only relocate the problem somewhere else...
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Old 10-18-12, 05:44 AM   #63
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Ah, of course, hence why we can pick up the radiation from pulsars, I didn't think of that. I had a hunch that there would be hard science reasons why it wouldn't work, hence why I brought you guys in.
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Old 10-18-12, 09:24 AM   #64
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No, if you go into geostationary orbit in the other direction you're still going to make the trip all the way around the planet in 24 hours. The only difference is that the surface will rotate in the other direction from you.
Exactly, the planet rotates and your position over a piece of it moves but your position on, say the side facing away from the sun, will not change. Hence to anyone looking from that direction they will not see a ship parked on the opposite side.
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Old 10-18-12, 10:37 AM   #65
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No, if you go into geostationary orbit in the other direction you're still going to make the trip all the way around the planet in 24 hours. The only difference is that the surface will rotate in the other direction from you.
There has to be another name for it, though. "Geostationary" literally means "staying in the same place above the planet".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geostationary_orbit

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Exactly, the planet rotates and your position over a piece of it moves but your position on, say the side facing away from the sun, will not change. Hence to anyone looking from that direction they will not see a ship parked on the opposite side.
That's incorrect. A geostationary orbit turns with the planet, thus experiencing the same day/night shift. Heading in the opposite direction at the same speed you will still orbit the Earth once every 24 hours, and experience the same shift.

To remain on the day or night side of the planet you would have to be standing still, not orbiting at all.
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Old 10-18-12, 10:58 AM   #66
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There has to be another name for it, though. "Geostationary" literally means "staying in the same place above the planet".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geostationary_orbit
'Retrograde geosynchronous orbit' is the most accurate description I can think of. I don't know if this sort of orbit has a proper name, or, indeed, if anybody actually uses it enough to justify one...
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Old 10-18-12, 11:12 AM   #67
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There has to be another name for it, though. "Geostationary" literally means "staying in the same place above the planet".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geostationary_orbit


That's incorrect. A geostationary orbit turns with the planet, thus experiencing the same day/night shift. Heading in the opposite direction at the same speed you will still orbit the Earth once every 24 hours, and experience the same shift.

To remain on the day or night side of the planet you would have to be standing still, not orbiting at all.
I see what you mean. So if I want to stay on the night side of a planet I guess all I have to do is counteract the pull of gravity. Since centrifugal force won't help as you point out then you'd have to maintain a constant thrust against it which would also be hidden by the planet.
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Old 10-18-12, 11:20 AM   #68
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Why would you want to be on the night side? So that the incredible heat of you spacecraft is even more obvious in the shadow of the planet?

A bunch of us (traveller rpg geeks who happened to be astonmers) did the math decades ago. A small spacecraft would be near "naked eye" magnitude in the IR at the distance of earth to moon. (a traveller scout ship for traveller geeks). That's just waste heat from keeping the inside a shirtsleeves environment, computers, life support, etc.
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Old 10-18-12, 11:44 AM   #69
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Why would you want to be on the night side? So that the incredible heat of you spacecraft is even more obvious in the shadow of the planet?

A bunch of us (traveller rpg geeks who happened to be astonmers) did the math decades ago. A small spacecraft would be near "naked eye" magnitude in the IR at the distance of earth to moon. (a traveller scout ship for traveller geeks). That's just waste heat from keeping the inside a shirtsleeves environment, computers, life support, etc.
I only said the night side to indicate that the craft would be hidden behind the planet from an observer located somewhere along a line running from the planet to the sun.

Bottom line I guess is how could a spacecraft keep the bulk of a planet or moon between them and an observer?
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Old 10-18-12, 11:53 AM   #70
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Originally Posted by Raptor1 View Post
'Retrograde geosynchronous orbit' is the most accurate description I can think of.
That's as good a name as any, I guess. It gets the point across.

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I don't know if this sort of orbit has a proper name, or, indeed, if anybody actually uses it enough to justify one...
Well, since the whole idea of a geosynchronous orbit is to stay in the same spot above the Earth, I'm not sure what would be the point of picking that exact altitude and speed to go in any other direction.
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Old 10-18-12, 12:04 PM   #71
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I see what you mean. So if I want to stay on the night side of a planet I guess all I have to do is counteract the pull of gravity. Since centrifugal force won't help as you point out then you'd have to maintain a constant thrust against it which would also be hidden by the planet.
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Bottom line I guess is how could a spacecraft keep the bulk of a planet or moon between them and an observer?
I would guess that far enough from the planet the amount of thrust required would be minimal. The biggest problem I can see is not staying in one place, but knowing what the guy you're hiding from is doing. You can't see him either, so you can't know exactly when he's going to pop into view, or even from which side.

It reminds me of a book I've just been reading on sailing ship combat. You can see the enemy coming hours before you're close enough to fight, and if you should go behind an island you can't tell what he's doing any more than he can tell what you're doing.

Captain Isaac Hull of USS Constution found a way to make that work for him while being chased by a British squadron in July 1812. After more than a day of towing the ships in a dead calm the wind picked up. As Constitution approached a light squall with a four-mile lead, Hull had his crew shorten sail as if preparing for a major storm. Seeing this from a distance, the British did the same. As soon as Constitution was on the other side of the squall, not able to see the enemy and knowing they couldn't see him, Hull put on full sail and ran away while the British ships were still on short sail, waiting for the "storm" to arrive.
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Old 10-18-12, 01:02 PM   #72
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Hiding behind a planet, or alternate ideas like radiating waste heat directionally require knowing what the enemy is doing so you can point away from them. Holding still above a planet makes you visible to everywhere on the planet as it rotates under you. Another spacecraft will be in orbit and will move to your side. If far away your craft must be in very low or it to be masked, might as well land.
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Old 10-18-12, 01:15 PM   #73
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Reading this thread, I have the idea that space battles are going to be more a game of cat and mouse than the battle for the Atlantic

And I can't get the final battle in Wrath of Khan out of my head
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Old 10-18-12, 02:10 PM   #74
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How could you come to that conclusion? There is no cat and mouse. All are easily visible to passive sensors. No hiding.
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Old 10-18-12, 02:12 PM   #75
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How could you come to that conclusion? There is no cat and mouse. All are easily visible to passive sensors. No hiding.
I would hazard to guess that anyone with the ability to travel between the stars will also know how to mask their heat signature.
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