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Wiktionary
battlespace

n. A unified military strategy to integrate and combine armed forces for the military theatres, including air, information, land, sea and space to achieve military goals.

Wikipedia
BattleSpace

BattleSpace is a FASA Corporation wargame set in the BattleTech universe. It simulates naval warfare in space. This is considered the 2nd edition of the Aerotech (Space flight & Atmospheric vehicles) rules for Battletech. This came in a game box which contained maps, rules, cardboard paper ship counters, and extensive history of Battletech universe.

The game/rules were succeeded by Aerotech2, Aerotech2 Revised, & Strategic Operations rules sets.

Usage examples of "battlespace".

The huge battlespace monitors on the wall at the far side of the room told her that the waiting was over, even before her executive officer arrived to confirm it.

Allied air units are being vectored on to the incoming hostiles by Fighter Command via Trident’s battlespace management system.

She had never seen the battlespace display so densely filled with information.

The quantum processors and software of the Trident’s Nemesis Battlespace Management System was busy collecting, analyzing, and disseminating terabytes of data every second.

There were thousands of individual contacts throughout the battlespace.

It meant that the ship’s own sensors weren’t available to directly monitor the main battlespace over the Channel and the southern counties, but the Admiralty had decided that with the German attack effectively broken, they could afford to downgrade to drone cover only.

All sensors and weapons are totally integrated via a Nemesis Two quantum array battlespace management system, so that each of those delivery options, eight tubes and a dozen missile silos, can independently engage a separate enemy in separate theaters.

The Trident’s Nemesis arrays would provide a detailed picture of three-dimensional battlespace out to five hundred kilometers.

Given the immense flows of data that streamed in from a properly monitored battlespace, he was often required to concentrate on a surprising variety of information from competing sources.

He spun the wheel until he’d lined up the flashing blue arrowhead, which designated the bow of the 101, with the red line, along which the battlespace arrays of the HMAS Havoc wanted him to launch his next attack.

Even so, 4CI—command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence—were still the key to dominating the battlespace of the future, and he was not going to let anyone get a march on the U.