- Joined
- May 26, 2024
If this is a serious question, as I understand it, you can do a lot to 'stealth' various forms of attacks but a giant fucking laser in orbit that can generate enough energy to cause fires on the ground, that would need to be enormous and have a variety of signatures that it would be easily seen with any sensor worth anything, even in some cases on the ground.How easy is it to see a satellite in orbit with the naked eye? It's impossible.
My question is if someone wanted to burn shit that way in the most subtle manner possible with rays or whatever could we even prove or disprove it?
The thermal signature alone would almost be like a smaller, second sun to infrared sensor technology, I think. You can do a lot to absorb and redirect radar waves and trick the eye, but you can't just make heat disappear, especially in space. This goes for a lot of other forms of detection as well. You'd have to have a huge heatsink of some description, and then... y'know, you have a huge heatsink, which would probably be like 'something the size of an entire, decently-sized asteroid' in the case of a space-to-ground laser. The atmosphere is much thicker than you'd think for these purposes.
It's a nice bond villain superweapon but if you're going to put a weapon in orbit, the more realistic options are some kind of kinetic energy weapon or a more conventional missile, that just starts in space instead of on the ground.
The US military have been trying to implement laser weapons, and they've been useful enough to put on ships to an experimental degree even today. Then again, you need the support infrastructure of an entire warship to support the laser beam. It's an easy assumption to make that maybe some people (like the jews, reptoids, w/e, etc) are dicking around with lasers way better than are publicly known and available, but in my opinion it's easier to believe that California is just getting what it deserves after incompetency.
if anybody has a giant space laser or some other form of undetectable fire starter, I think they'd be using it a lot more often.