look, before you write all this, read my post and get my point. My whole point is that ASBMs are pushing carriers further and further away from where the action is. That way land based air raids will become more and more competitive to the point no one would use a carrier anymore.
This is speculation and baseless at that. Similar arguments were made when the aircraft became a weapon -- that the aircraft will render navy fleets ineffective after General Billy Mitchell successfully bombed and sank a ship in a demonstration. In that event, the target ship was stationary and did not offer any resistance. Still, proponents of airpower had no problems being overly enthusiastic and predicted the end of the surface fleet as a viable offensive weapon of future wars.
We know what happened navies since then, do we ?
And there are passive radars and detection system that don't submit any electromagnetic signals. They simply measure the change in Earth electromagnetic field or even those of regular radio stations that is caused by a moving object, i.e. an airplane. They no longer need a transmitter. They use other electromagnetic sources that are so ubiquitous these days as the transmitter. They are not as accurate as active radars but are great for early warning system. Having a number of them, you can triangulate the location of the object.
I explained to this forum the basics of radar detection that included the bi-static configuration which is the foundation of the so called 'passive radar' yrs ago, before you came on this forum. You are not telling me and the forum old timers anything new.
But you are still wrong about the phrase 'passive radar'. There is no such animal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_radar
The word radar came from an acronym of 'radio detection and ranging'. That is actually
NOT as common knowledge as believed. The reason is because the acronym is so commonly used that it became ordinary and careless of its origin. Use the word 'radar' in lay conversation and everyone will understand that it is about detection of airborne things with electromagnetism. The fact that it is a two parts process is unknown. Your argument is evident of that ignorance.
When you said this...
...use other electromagnetic sources that are so ubiquitous these days as the transmitter.
...You are describing the bi-static radar configuration.
In the illustration above, each receiver is actually a 'passive receiver of reflections from opportunistic signals'. The word 'opportunistic' denotes transmission sources that are
NOT under the ownership/control of a singular entity such as yourself. In a mono-static configuration,
YOU are that owner/controller of transmission and reception. In a bi-static configuration, you take any reflections as available. If any transmission sources go offline -- too bad. Your reception is either gone or degraded in quality. If there are multiple receivers in a network, the set up could be called 'multi-static', but the foundation of the set up is still bi-static.
The phrasing 'passive radar' is one of convenience that have at best partial technical basis. But it is essentially wrong. If you are a radar engineer, use that phrase in the company of peers and you will be laughed out of the room. If you are a layman, you will be tolerated.
That's how Iran detected US SR-71 approaching its borders a few months back. They didn't know what it was. However they knew its speed, direction and estimated location. Based on that, they submitted a notice over radio frequency and made it turn around.
And I am certain that you do not have any credible source for that either. How convenient.
You are right: "Technical ignorance results in flawed military tactical and even strategic errors". Hopefully your military leaders look at Wikipedia before they make a decision. Good that I warned you!
Iranian military leaders uses wiki. US military leaders have the real stuff and people like me to advise them how to use the real stuff best.
By visual I mean direct line of sight. They use a variety of sensors like infrared and etc. Same systems that enables the spy satellites to do their job regardless of the weather or daylight.
And you believe sensors cannot be seduced/deceived ? Let me guess, we are talking about 'Chinese physics' and 'Iranian physics' ?
So ASBMs have a much easier job to do when it comes to hitting a moving carrier than a cruise missile. (I'm not talking about evasive maneuvers shown in the video you posted. I also doubt that can happen)
Here is where you are wrong...
Which is easier to hit with a rock, a strip of surface area or a square of surface area, assuming both have the same real estate size ?
In the above illustration, the strip actually have a better chance of survival than a square.
More of your technical ignorance...The nose cone have limited internal volume.
If the sensor is radar, there is an inverse relationship between antenna size and beamwidth, meaning the smaller the antenna, the wider the beamwidth which results in poor target resolution.
http://meteorologytraining.tpub.com/14271/css/14271_60.htm
Beamwidth varies directly with wavelength and inversely with antenna size. Radar systems that produce relatively small beam widths generally provide greater target resolution.
See the highlighted ?
What this mean is that given the limited internal volume of the nose cone which will result in a small radar antenna, most likely the best resolution the radar will see of the ship is a spot of light.
The above is an AIM-7 air-air missile radar seeker antenna. The AIM-7 missile is an 8 in diameter body so that mean its radar antenna is smaller than the palm of your hand minus the fingers. Assuming the DF-21D have a radar, do
YOU know its radar antenna size ?
Most weapons systems are untested in combat. But the reality is that of the world's major sophisticated weapons systems, ours have the highest quantity of weapons systems that actually took action in combat. I am not going to criticize the DF-21D as untested in combat, but unlike the aircraft that have no countermeasures when it came out, the ship already have a complement of combat tested countermeasures when the DF-21D came out.
You are not debating this subject who is a student like you.