Maybe. Probably not. A baseball Diamond is a descriptive term referencing the game of baseball's three "bases" along with "home plate." The "pitchers mound" is an elevated area in the middle of the geometric shape of a square the bases and home plate are situated in. When viewed from any of the four corners while on the field of play, this arrangement looks like a diamond. The distance between bases is 90 feet from one to the next. The perimeter of where the ICBM could hit would be inside a square with a perimeter of 360 feet if aiming for the center.
If you targeted the coordinates of the pitchers mound in a stadium, the warhead would land somewhere within the bases. It’s a way of describing accuracy. That’s the unclassified version. Which likely means the real accuracy is significantly better.
It’s a quite a feat when you consider it’s just dead weight falling out of space. That’s how accurate the celestial targeting system is.
Am I alone in having no clue what these phrases mean?
Maybe. Probably not. A baseball Diamond is a descriptive term referencing the game of baseball's three "bases" along with "home plate." The "pitchers mound" is an elevated area in the middle of the geometric shape of a square the bases and home plate are situated in. When viewed from any of the four corners while on the field of play, this arrangement looks like a diamond. The distance between bases is 90 feet from one to the next. The perimeter of where the ICBM could hit would be inside a square with a perimeter of 360 feet if aiming for the center.
If you targeted the coordinates of the pitchers mound in a stadium, the warhead would land somewhere within the bases. It’s a way of describing accuracy. That’s the unclassified version. Which likely means the real accuracy is significantly better.
It’s a quite a feat when you consider it’s just dead weight falling out of space. That’s how accurate the celestial targeting system is.
Am I alone in having no clue what these phrases mean?
more or less means within a 60' radius