I presume liquid cooling for the reactors, yes. I figured the cold-launch cells were something akin to an automobile airbag, with a small fast-burn charge at the bottom, rather than leveraging any sort of shipboard services for launch. I think you probably could do something electromagnetic, but that starts feeling sort of dubious to me financially. We might realistically expect a destroyer VLS canister/cell to fire a round maybe five or ten times over the life of the ship... I don't see the longevity gains of E&M being at all worth it here.
I guess you're right... Must still be stuck on the early Soviet revolver VLS, where only one tube would launch all the missiles in one pack and it made sense to invest in a more sophisticated launch system. Honestly, the EM VLS thing was completely over the top to start with.
I must say I really like your airbag concept of hot-launch-in-a-can, since you can directly fit the charges inside the individual canisters.
My personal reflections had landed me on a compromise with a single compressor/gas tank per VLS silo (8 cells or above) with a switch valve to shunt gas loads to secondary tanks below each cell in turn. But again, Russian design bias, that version makes more sense based on an older cold-launch culture.
Good questions, to which I don't have the answer.
On the former, yes, I'm presuming something of the same scale, and maybe even leveraging the same lower stages, as super-Standard. I don't think it's necessarily a DDG mission to carry these sorts of weapons per se, but an increased number of potential platforms carries with it the dual benefit of a decrease in maximum range required and a decrease in reaction time from the nearest regional platform to the sudden-onset target.
No problem with that, though it opens the question of the modularity of the VLS system. If it is only modular during build-up and you can't swap module types pierside, you might want to reduce the payload of your DDG to Mk.57 envelope, or reduce the amount of heavy tubes.
Also q.v. below for the political impact.
The political observation is astute. It's possible to imagine a scenario where you keep far, far short of a dual-key approach, but in which major regional powers are kept apprised of which systems are onloading and offloading for, gee just spitballing here, tooling around the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf. I don't think local powers would be perturbed or perceive it to be destabilizing to have the ability to, say, cave in a single cave in some nebulous tribal region, but it would definitely seem problematic to have tons and tons of the things. Perhaps you might have the VLS cell-block doors be a replaceable item sized for the boosters within, so that neutral satcom could keep regional powers apprised of what systems are deployed where? Just thinking out loud here.
Guess you can signal the presence of a certain type of payload in the tubes like you describe, though you might need something more phyically constraining to make deception impossible. E.g. an enlarged and color-coded tube cover on the CPGS canisters, because the missile is longer than the KEI and doesn't fit in the standard cell. Of course, the viability of that part is only as good as your country's inability to circumvent that limitation, and not everyone gets given the benefit of the doubt in that case. See the debate a few years back about Iranian miniature nuke design and the nuclearization of their SRBM arsenal. Just because you
can do something doesn't mean you are actually doing it, but it does mean that you can't be trusted
not to do it.
Your version here is actually different from the original CPGS proposals in that neither the vector or the platform are derived from a nuclear baseline (see SSBN/Trident for CPGS), so there is no initial assumption that every shot can be a nuke. OTOH, any land-attack CPGS spin-off of some full-bore KEI is in effect a high-end IRBM, and nothing prevents you from fitting a nuke in there.
Once you get there, it isn't really about busting a cave here and there but about 1) the growth potential of your platform and 2) upsetting the sub-strategic deterrence balance in a given area.
For this one, see the Russian reaction the TBMD/Aegis Ashore deployments in its strategic backyard and the counter-deployment of Iskanders on the borders. In this case, no one (serious) invokes actual offensive intent from the other sides, but seeks cover their bases to de-incentivize escalation at/beyond a certain threshold. Now consider one of your DDGs/CGs armed with both potentially-nuclear IRBMs and high-end ABMs puttering around in the Black Sea and you'll have a glimpse of the potential for destabilization. Heck, even a single CPGS can end your regime, nukes or not. A Tomahawk too, but current COTS tech can protect you from those, while a reliable export-version IRBM-killer is still some ways off.
Beside that, your diplomatic problem is compounded by the USN's policy of not declaring their nuke deployments, which presumably extends to other munitions. Even if they were keen on that, the logistics of publishing loadout manifests before sailing would be complicated by the unpredictability inherent in any warship deployment.
The gist of the problem is actually the very modularity of the VLS system. Once another country forces an IRBM-free zone upon you, let alone a nuke-free zone, you either submit to a very intrusive inspection regimen every time you sail in to ensure your ships are nuke/IRBM -free, or you just don't deploy there.
I think the PDF is talking about two flavors of systems, though they don't come right out and say it. One system is for six-into-eight drop-in Mk 41 replacements without much growth margin (maybe to Mk57-size), whereas the other system envisions wide cutouts through the hull girder, with much more flexible loadout. I suspect this latter system would not be a drop-in Mk 41 replacement without extensive structural modifications, and maybe not even then. But I'm an aero guy, not a structures guy
Welcome to the club
From what I can gather though, there doesn't appear to be any supporting structure inside the volume of a 61- or 29-cell Mk.41 block. Which means that you can drop in (at refit level, obviously) other cells with the same volume envelope, as long as you don't exceed weight and height margins.
BTW found
a very interesting discussion on another board about the genesis of the Mk.41 and this very weight/height issue, which sheds a light on the potential for exceeding margins in this context.
I've personally mused on it, but I sort of leave the implications intentionally vague. It's not at all hard to imagine development of strategic systems like ABM or CPGS that are accidentally (or intentionally) limited to a specific number of platforms, especially when the mission simply cannot be achieved on a smaller size. Something like a UAV, though... do you want to blow that sort of cash on a system that won't be deployable on the dozens of Burkes that would surely be in service for decades? Do you gain that much compared to something like ScanEagle or similar, especially when we have these huge mission bays anyway? And of course you're totally throwing away FMS possibilities, with the entire western world centered around ~21"-class Mk 41 and Sylver.
Not sure the deployability of that notional insta-UAV would be that limited. If (let's go wild here for a second) your heavy VLS is in the same envelope as a Trident tube, you could back-fit all of its payload to, say, an Ohio SSGN, maybe a Virginia B3 if length allows, or some future compatible SSGN. With the appropriate underwater-launch tube, the UAV becomes something that can be deployed anywhere from dozens of platforms. Leaving aside that it can't be that hard, in a +10-20-years timeframe, to dig out the Mk.41 pits of the newest Burkes around and retrofit them with your modular VLS.
Also I don't think I'm too way off course imagining a true HALE UAV fitting in that envelope? Maybe a puff-up aerostat-hybrid design with solar backup, it could be held aloft for weeks, and a short full-bore KEI booster segment could conceivably lift it up to around 100kft and/or a few hundred of miles off course. If that's too expensive, land it back on a carrier, pack it back up in the weapons shop and VERTREP it back to the right ship
All in all, there's value to be had, but all that stuff makes all the more sense with each payload and vector you add.