Anstett
Emperor Mongoose
An article today about how the US is reorganizing the Space Force nomenclature system for all equipment and missions going forward. It sparked the question about how unified are these across the Imperium, and other polities? What should be added for Deep Space Outer System designations? What would a list look like for the Aslan?
From the article:
According to the Space Force memorandum, the basic mission designations are:
arstechnica.com
From the article:
According to the Space Force memorandum, the basic mission designations are:
- A for Attack: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to attack enemy forces or equipment.
- B for Battle Management: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to direct and control friendly forces tactically engaged with an adversary.
- C for Communications: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to support communication or data transport activities.
- D for Defend: Systems, platforms, or vehicles that can protect friendly forces.
- E for Electromagnetic Warfare: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to attack, protect, or exploit signals in the electromagnetic spectrum.
- K for Support: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to ensure maintainability of space missions or payloads, including activities such as hosting, deploying, maintaining, sustaining, or servicing space vehicles or payloads while in orbit.
- M for Meteorological: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to observe, record, or relay meteorological and oceanographic data.
- N for Navigation Warfare: Systems, platforms, or vehicles that conduct navigation, positioning, and timing or navigation warfare activities.
- P for Pursuit: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to intercept space targets in support of offensive and defensive operations.
- R for Reconnaissance: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed to perform targeted collection of intelligence and/or threat indications and warning to answer specific military questions.
- S for Surveillance: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed for persistent collection of intelligence and/or threat indications and warning on a target within a terrestrial, orbital, or cyber battlespace.
- W for Warning and Tracking: Systems, platforms, or vehicles designed for the systematic observation of aerospace for the purpose of detecting, tracking, and characterizing terrestrial, air, and missile threats.
- C for Cyberspace Domain: A domain within the information environment consisting of the interdependent network of information technology infrastructures, including the Internet, telecommunications networks, computer systems, and embedded processors and controllers.
- D for Deep Space: Deep space is any orbit beyond the cislunar regime.
- G for Geosynchronous/stationary Orbit (GEO): An orbit synchronized to the Earth’s rotation, orbiting at the same rate at which the Earth rotates upon its axis. Satellites in this orbit have an altitude of approximately 36,000 km above the Earth’s surface and create a figure eight ground trace over the ground. This designator includes Geosynchronous or Geostationary as the key point of reference to describe their main mission orbital regime.
- H for Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO): A non-circular orbit with eccentricity greater than .2 that extends into other orbital regimes. Two common examples of this regime are the Tundra and Molniya orbits, both of which have low perigee (LEO altitude) and a high apogee (GEO altitude).
- L for Low-Earth Orbit (LEO): Orbits that are at a height of approximately 2,000 km or less above the surface of the Earth and average time to orbit the earth of approximately 90-100 minutes.
- M for Medium Earth Orbit (MEO): A roughly circular orbit between low-Earth orbit and geosynchronous orbit (approximately between 2,000 and 36,000 km).
- T for Terrestrial: Systems, platforms, vehicles with this designator are designed to enable effects within the space domain, but conduct operations within the land, air, and maritime domain.
- V for Various: Systems, platforms, vehicles with this designator are designed to operate across multiple orbital regimes or domains. Space vehicles with this nomenclature can either move between multiple orbits or can be the identical platform located at various orbits.
Attack, defend, pursue—the Space Force’s new naming scheme foretells new era
Ars is first to reveal how the Space Force will name its weapon systems.
arstechnica.com