Talya wrote:
Rafael wrote:
Defensible measures could include a huge smoke or particle cloud releasing device to scatter the beam. Just thinking out loud here.
Mirrored armor.
This might work against early weapons, however I think the armor would be something like a particle laden resin applied to normal armor. But I can imagine some problems:
This gives a infantry or vehicle outfitted with such armor a tale tell signature in sunlight unless the reflectivity of it was design to only react to the same wavelength the weapon was calibrated to. And even then, if that wavelength was in the visible spectrum, it would just mean instead of a gleaming bead, the armor would look like a single color from a distance.
The absorptivity (α) and tranmissivity (τ) of the mirrored element of the armor had better be damned near 0 (0 is unachievable) otherwise I'd imagine intense enough weapons would still kill a human. As the weapons got even more powerful (such as those for use in anti-vehicle rather than anti-personal applications), the α and τ of the reflective element would have to be proportionally reduced. And this doesn't consider the fact that all armor would have some sort of gaps in the reflective element. Even a particle infused quality would have tiny pores which the beam would easily penetrate since a beam is just an array of infinitely small waves.
A cloud of particles, would easily provide enough scattering to completely cause the beam to go diffuse at the perspective of the target. However, deploying such a cloud constantly would also be highly unfeasible. Reactively deploying such cloud would probably be ineffective since this weapon could probably engage and destroy multiple targets in a single instant.