Definitely. With one important assumption... The Utronic detection equipment does not work when earth-based. >Surely to have provided comprehensive coverage there would have to have been >at least one more SID in complementary earth orbit? >Nick First Example: Even if SID were to be in an orbit opposing the moon, (same obit, opposite side of earth, Earth-Moon L3), for the most deep-space coverage Moonbase would have to be on the far side of the moon (which it is not) and there would still be a large wedge between the Earth and Moon that would be invisible to both. It would be bad tactics anyway to be blind to such a critical corridor and it is also very poor tactics to not be able to have Moonbase and SID able to cover each other. There would also be communications problems requiring 2 relay satellites probably in wide figure 8's of the Earth-Moon L2 Lagrangian point (crummy location and vulnerable to alien attack) or a small constellation of relay satellites in close lunar orbit so that Moonbase could communicate with everything else. Really, one SID and even a far-side Moonbase is impractical, you'd never get Henderson to spring for the extra commo sats anyway. (BTW: Orbits of L1,2&3 are a figure 8 shape.) Information: An explanation of Lagrangian points is here: [http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/m_mm/ob_techorbit1.html] The example shown is for Earth-Sun Lagrangian points but they exist for Earth-Moon too and work the same way for many other heavy orbiting bodies. All of the Lagrangian points I refer to are Earth-Moon because all of the Earth-Sun points are simply too far away to be defendable. Interceptors couldn't cover anything that far away from what we have seen. Second Try: With Moonbase on the Earth-side of the moon, even with SID on the opposite side of Earth (Earth-Moon L3) for maximum coverage, a blind spot is behind the Moon and into deep space... a huge hole in detection. More practical from a hardware point of view maybe but also more vulnerable. All of SID's messages would also have to be relayed through earth or a synchronized, earth-polar-orbiting satellite and Moonbase and SID wouldn't be able to cover each other. So this is also unworkable. Last Attempt with one SID: Seems to me that the very best coverage of all with only one SID is to have SID in a very high polar orbit at an angle normal to the position of The Moon, and Moonbase on the Earth-side (an orbit that precesses at the same rate as the Moon's orbit around Earth). That way, from Moonbase's point of view, SID is always in view and seeming to circle the Earth. There is a constantly revolving blind cone behind the moon but at least it moves. This arrangement provides the very best coverage without having 2 SIDs as well as eliminating all of the communications relay problems. The aliens could still slide up to the back side of the Moon if they knew the orbit of SID and predicted where the blind spot was going to be, then flew a corkscrew course to stay within the moving blind spot. So this is the best with one SID but clearly inadequate. Sorry Gen. H. you're gonna have to spring for another SID. :) So: With 2 SIDs it really is easy, you could easily park one each at Earth-Moon L4 and L5 and they would have near-complete coverage of each other's blind spots as well as being able to be seen by earth and Moonbase. Earth, Moonbase and 2 SIDs in this configuration would all be able to communicate with each other without the need for relays either. L4 and L5 are stable points unlike L1,2&3 which require constant station-keeping, what is put at L4 or L5 stays there. With this configuration, there would only be two tiny blind spots near the surface of the far sides of the Earth and Moon and no blind spots at all away from Earth or Moon. Bada-Bing. :) Now, if the Utronic equipment WERE to function from Earth: Then three Earth-based stations (to cover for Earth's rotation), Moonbase and a single SID at Earth-Moon L4 or L5 could indeed provide complete coverage. Earth-based; seeing everywhere but behind the Moon, Moon based; seeing everywhere but behind itself and behind the Earth, and SID; seeing behind both. Only behind the Moon would not be seen by more than one station. If this were true perhaps our one and only SID is simply coordinating data from itself and 4 other Utronic stations and making the announcements. Still seems illogical however since Earth based coordination would be safest from attack. Do we know for sure whether the Utronic gear works on Earth or not? S |
Shawn, neat analysis, but you left out at least one possibility that would cover all areas with just one SID and moonbase..... Put SID at, say, L5, or the trailing lagrange pt, whichever one that might be. Put moonbase on the leading edge of the moon, the western limb, like has been suggested in the crater Riccioli. Now SID can cover all 360 degrees of the 3 dimensional globe of space around the earth with the exception of two narrow tunnels of space shadowed (shado'ed - ha!) out by the earth and the moon. But moonbase, sitting on the leading edge of the moon can cover the whole half sphere of space in front of the moon as it circles the earth, in perfect sychronicity with ol' SID sitting back there at L5, thus moonbase covers those two narrow tunnel blind spots of SID, as they would project through moonbase's coverage area. Now go to Henderson and collect your medal for saving him money guy!.... :-) Dave H. |
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