DeltaV wrote:Giorgio wrote:1) Scattering attenuation of the laser in the atmosphere at 80 Km.
2) Laser beam divergence at 80 Km.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_optics
http://www.ibtimes.com.au/china-conduct ... ry-1386452
China has conducted two anti-satellite tests very recently, using its advanced laser technology. This was done during a recent exercise of the Peoples Liberation Army. The anti-satellite exercises were conducted using laser weapons. This was disclosed by Konstantin Sivkov, deputy head of the Moscow-based Think Tank, Academy of Geopolitical Problems, in an interview to Voice of Russia.
What is higher, LEO or 80 km?
Oh my my....... Here we have another one that copy random articles and wikipedia links without any understanding of what he is talking about...... For a split second I even believed that you actually was willing to have a technical and logic discussion about this issue... so silly of me to have this hope.
1) Scattering attenuation was meant to make you think to what was supposed to be the total power INPUT to the Laser to actually get a power "X" delivered to the target at 50/80 Km altitude. You clearly didn't get this as you thought it was same issue of laser divergence, which is not. Had you bothered to apply "logic" and "science" to this point you would have discovered that the laser power input scales up quite quickly and that to apply enough power to actually damage a rocket will require a laser input power in the MW region with an operational time of tens of seconds.
2) Quoting a wikipedia article about Adaptive Optic and implying that you can apply it to a MW class laser means that you have no idea of the involved problems and and technological needs. Please tell me you are NOT a real engineer....
3) The China anti satellite tests (as written in the same link you quoted) are for "blinding" satellites. The same could be achieved with the sun and a mirror big enough, Archimede docet!
Destroying a satellite in orbit with a ground laser... well, that's another issue that no one accomplished so far.
DeltaV wrote:Giorgio wrote:3) Where the ship had installed the Radar Tracking System to track a rocket flying at more than 1km sec and at 80 Km altitude.
Known launch time/location and booster performance. Good weather. Optical tracking. No radar.
Optical tracking to focus a laser on an area less than 3 mt wide at a distance of at least 50 km and moving at 1 km/sec???
Ahahahahahaha thank you, that made my day!!
DeltaV wrote:Giorgio wrote:The ship is "operated" by Univan.
Do
you know if the captain/crew are Chinese or not? Being home-ported in HK, it seems likely.
No Communist Party involvement (overt or covert) in a company based in China? Seriously?
Being home port in a country has no influence on the nationality of the captain or crew. Most of the ships managed by Univan have Indian captain and first/second officials. Generally they use Chinese personnel as third official and crew.
And no, HK is not (yet) China, I live and travel among the two places almost daily, I think I have some better knowledge than you about this.
DeltaV wrote:Giorgio wrote:2) If you think that you can actually operate some machinery from the top of a container ship than it means you have never been aboard one (I have) or you never saw one from real life.
Who said top? A containerized laser, sensing and firing through, say, a sliding door on the side of a ConEx box, could operate remotely or even autonomously, without the crew even knowing about it, if it was properly engineered. Or, just lock the human operator(s) into the box before loading. The power supply could be optimized for near-silent, one-time only use (it would only get one chance anyway).
LMAO, there are so many logical and technical flaws in such a few words that it would deserve a stand alone post.
With this paragraph you lost any whatsoever credibility you had left.
DeltaV wrote:Giorgio wrote:Engineering IS science.
DeltaV wrote:
Engineering is one application-oriented subset of science. Another is medicine.
"Science" to me means the seeking of knowledge for its own sake, regardless of application, but that's because I think like an engineer. Semantics. <Yawn.>
The world does not care about your own personal definition of science. The world defines science in specific ways, one of which is:
"Art, skill, or expertness, regarded as the result of knowledge of laws and principles."
This is why we speak about "Medical science" and "Engineering science" and so on.
Additionally if you applied the "logic" you claim to have, you would have realized that a "subset" of a thing is a part of the thing itself, hence (by your own words) engineering IS science, yet you claim the opposite.....
Like you said, "semantic", why should we bother about words meaning, let's all live in wonderland... <yawn> indeed!
A society of dogmas is a dead society.