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Space mine
Redirected from Orbital mine
Space mines were weapons deployed in realspace to inflict damage upon enemy targets. Variants of this umbrella term include standard mines, proximity mines, sleeper mines, seeker mines, and ion mines. Usually around one meter in diameter, these devices activated when spacecraft (usually starfighters) came within a certain predefined range.
A large number of mines were and used in the Palpatine Mine Network during the Galactic Civil War.
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Many different types of mines have been employed throughout the history of the galaxy. Ever since the beginning of space travel, proximity mines, sleeper mines, seeker mines, and ion mines have been utilized in space combat.
- Standard mines were frequently deployed in large amounts, creating a large minefield and rendering entire areas of space impenetrable. Requiring actual contact for ignition, these weapons would release a highly explosive chemical charge that indiscriminately damaged or destroyed anything nearby. These mines were effective against vehicles of all types.
- Proximity mines were similar to standard mines insofar as they used explosives to damage enemy spacecraft. Whenever an enemy craft would enter a predetermined range, it would trigger a detonation sequence within the mine. The resulting blast would spray a cloud of shrapnel in a violent blast cloud, ranging from ten to one-hundred meters in diameter. Proximity mines were ideal for use against starfighters.
- Sleeper mines were very similar to standard mines, yet possessed stealth technology that rendered them difficult to detect on sensors.
- Once a target entered the radius of a seeker mine, the weapon would home in on the vehicle at a moderate speed and collide, causing an explosion. Though less powerful than a standard mine, seekers were very hard to detect. These mines were used to devastating effect against starfighters and capital ships alike.
- Ion mines were used to disable enemy craft flying nearby. Working in the same manner as proximity mines, ion mines would ignite a large ion cloud, disabling all electronic equipment caught in the blast area.
- The Galactic Empire also used special antimatter mines on rare occasions. These were dormant, tiny capsules of antimatter without propulsion, more or less undetectable and small enough to slip through certain particle shields. As they were extremely destructive, but also completely uncontrollable once released, they were not typically used in frequently traveled space.
Known examples
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- Defender ion mine
- Empion mine
- Mine Type A
- Mine Type B
- Mine Type C
- Proximity mine
- Derillium mine
- Sky mine
Appearances
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- Star Wars 53: The Last Gift From Alderaan (First appearance)
- X-Wing computer game series
- Star Wars: Rebel Assault II: The Hidden Empire
- Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader
- Young Jedi Knights: The Lost Ones (Mentioned only)
- Young Jedi Knights: The Emperor's Plague
- Young Jedi Knights: Return to Ord Mantell
- Recovery
- Star by Star
- Destiny's Way
- The Final Prophecy
- The Unifying Force
- Inferno
- Revelation
- Star Wars Legacy 21: Indomitable, Part 2 (Mentioned only)
Sources
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Quick Starfields on Wizards.com (original article link, backup links 1 2 on Archive.org)
Star Wars Trading Card Game – The Empire Strikes Back (Card: TIE Bomber EX-1-8)
Message to Spacers 7 on Wizards.com (original article link, backup links 1 2 on Archive.org)
- The Unknown Regions
- Starships of the Galaxy (Saga Edition)