Civil Stealth Technology Report
Civil Stealth Technology Report
Civil Stealth Technology Report
org
Seminar report
On
Stealth Technology
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the award of degree
Of Civil
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Preface
I have made this report file on the topic Stealth Technology; I have tried my best to
elucidate all the relevant detail to the topic to be included in the report. While in the
beginning I have tried to give a general view about this topic.
My efforts and wholehearted co-corporation of each and everyone has ended on a successful
note. I express my sincere gratitude to ..who assisting me throughout the
preparation of this topic. I thank him for providing me the reinforcement, confidence and
most importantly the track for the topic whenever I needed it.
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Acknowledgement
I would like to thank respected Mr.. and Mr. ..for giving me such a wonderful
opportunity to expand my knowledge for my own branch and giving me guidelines to present
a seminar report. It helped me a lot to realize of what we study for.
Secondly, I would like to thank my parents who patiently helped me as i went through my
work and helped to modify and eliminate some of the irrelevant or un-necessary stuffs.
Thirdly, I would like to thank my friends who helped me to make my work more organized
and well-stacked till the end.
Next, I would thank Microsoft for developing such a wonderful tool like MS Word. It
helped my work a lot to remain error-free.
Last but clearly not the least, I would thank The Almighty for giving me strength to complete
my report on time.
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Contents:
1. Title
2. Copyright
3. Preface
4. Acknowledgement
5. Introduction
6. History
7. Stealth principle
7.1 Radar cross section reduction
7.1.1 Vehicle shape
7.1.2 Non metallic airframe
7.1.3 Radar absorbing material
7.1.5 Acoustics
7.1.6 Visibility
7.1.7 Infrared
7.1.8 Reducing radio frequency (RF) emissions
8. Measuring stealth
9. Stealth tactics
11. Background
12. Limitations
13. Detection
13.3Wavelenth match
16.6 conclusion
16.7 Glosarry
16.8 Bibliography
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INTRODUCTION:
Billions of dollars have also been spent in developing stealth over a number of
decades but the U.S. has been the only country economically able to do this.
The concept of stealth is to operate or hide without giving enemy forces any
indications as to the presence of friendly forces. This concept was first explored
through camouflage by blending into the background visual clutter. As the
potency of detection and interception technologies (radar, IRST, surface-to-air
missiles etc.) have increased over time, so too has the extent to which the design
and operation of military personnel and vehicles have been affected in response.
Some military uniforms are treated with chemicals to reduce their infrared
signature. A modern "stealth" vehicle will generally have been designed from
the outset to have reduced or controlled signature. Varying degrees of stealth
can be achieved. The exact level and nature of stealth embodied in a particular
design is determined by the prediction of likely threat capabilities.
History
In England, irregular units of gamekeepers in the 17th century were the first to
adopt drab colours (common in the 16th century Irish units) as a form of
camouflage, following examples from the continent.
In 1945 a Grumman Avenger with Yehudi lights got within 3,000 yards
(2,700 m) of a ship before being sighted. This ability was rendered obsolete by
the radar of the time.
One of the earliest stealth aircraft seems to have been the Horten Ho 229 flying
wing. This included carbon powder in the glue to absorb radio waves. However,
it was never deployed in any quantity.
In 1958, the CIA requested funding for a reconnaissance aircraft, to replace U-2
spy planes in which Lockheed secured contractual rights to produce the aircraft.
"Kelly" Johnson and his team at Lockheed's Skunk Works were assigned to
produce the A-12 or OXCART the first of the former top secret classified
Blackbird series which operated at high altitude of 70000 to 80000 ft and speed
of Mach 3.2 to avoid radar detection. Radar absorbent material had already been
introduced on U-2 spy planes, and various plane shapes had been developed in
earlier prototypes named A1 to A11 to reduce its detection from radar. Later in
1964, using previous models an optimal plane shape taking into account
compactness was developed where another "Blackbird", the SR-71, was
produced, surpassing previous models in both altitude of 90 000 ft and speed of
Mach 3.3.
During 1970s, the U.S. Department of Defence then launched a project called
Have Blue the project to develop a stealth fighter. Bidding between both
Lockheed and Northrop for the tender was fierce to secure the multi billion
dollar contract. Lockheed incorporated in its program paper written by a
Soviet/Russian physicist Pyotr Ufimtsev in 1962 titled Method of Edge Waves
in the Physical Theory of Diffraction, Soviet Radio, Moscow, 1962. In 1971 this
book was translated into English with the same title by U.S. Air Force, Foreign
Technology Division (National Air Intelligence Center ) , Wright-Patterson
AFB, OH, 1971. Technical Report AD 733203, Defense Technical Information
Center of USA, Cameron Station, Alexandria , VA, 22304-6145, USA. This
theory played a critical role in the design of American stealth-aircraft F-117 and
B-2. The paper was able to find whether a plane's shape design would minimise
its detection by radar or its radar cross-section (RCS) using a series of equations
could be used to evaluate the radar cross section of any shape. Lockheed used it
to design a shape they called the Hopeless Diamond, securing contractual rights
to mass produce the F-117 Nighthawk.
The F-117 project began with a model called "The Hopeless Diamond"
(wordplay on the Hope Diamond) in 1975 due to its bizarre appearance. In 1977
Lockheed produced two 60% scale models under the Have Blue contract. The
Have Blue program was a stealth technology demonstrator that lasted from
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1976 to 1979. The successes of Have Blue lead the Air Force to create the
Senior Trend program which developed the F-117.
Stealth principles
Almost since the invention of radar, various techniques have been tried to
minimize detection. Rapid development of radar during WWII led to equally
rapid development of numerous counter radar measures during the period; a
notable example of this was the use of chaff.
Vehicle shape
The F-35 Lightning II offers better stealthy features (such as this landing gear
door) than previous American fighters, such as the F-16 Fighting Falcon
It is now known that it had a fortuitously stealthy shape apart from the vertical
element of the tail.
On the other hand, the Tupolev 95 Russian long range bomber (NATO
reporting name 'Bear') appeared especially well on radar.
It is now known that propellers and jet turbine blades produce a bright radar
image; the Bear had four pairs of large (5.6 meter diameter) contra-rotating
propellers.
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Another important factor is the internal construction. Behind the skin of some
aircraft are structures known as re-entrant triangles. Radar waves penetrating
the skin of the aircraft get trapped in these structures, bouncing off the internal
faces and losing energy. This approach was first used on the F-117.
The most efficient way to reflect radar waves back to the transmitting radar is
with orthogonal metal plates, forming a corner reflector consisting of either a
dihedral (two plates) or a trihedral (three orthogonal plates). This configuration
occurs in the tail of a conventional aircraft, where the vertical and horizontal
components of the tail are set at right angles. Stealth aircraft such as the F-117
use a different arrangement, tilting the tail surfaces to reduce corner reflections
formed between them. A more radical approach is to eliminate the tail
completely, as in the B-2 Spirit.
In addition to altering the tail, stealth design must bury the engines within the
wing or fuselage, or in some cases where stealth is applied to an existing
aircraft, install baffles in the air intakes, so that the turbine blades are not visible
to radar. A stealthy shape must be devoid of complex bumps or protrusions of
any kind; meaning those weapons, fuel tanks, and other stores must not be
carried externally. Any stealthy vehicle becomes un-stealthy when a door or
hatch is opened.
Careful inspection shows that many small structures, such as the air intake
bypass doors and the air refueling aperture, also use the same angles. The effect
of planform alignment is to return a radar signal in a very specific direction
away from the radar emitter rather than returning a diffuse signal detectable at
many angles.
Ships have also adopted similar techniques. The Visby corvette was the first
stealth ship to enter service, though the earlier Arleigh Burke class destroyer
incorporated some signature-reduction features.
Other examples are the French La Fayette class frigate, the USS San Antonio
amphibious transport dock, and most modern warship designs.
Similarly, coating the cockpit canopy with a thin film transparent conductor
(vapor-deposited gold or indium tin oxide) helps to reduce the aircraft's radar
profile, because radar waves would normally enter the cockpit, bounce off an
object (the inside of the cockpit has a complex shape, with the pilot's helmet
itself providing a sizeable return), and possibly return to the radar, but the
conductive coating creates a controlled shape that deflects the incoming radar
waves away from the radar. The coating is thin enough that it has no adverse
effect on the pilot's vision.
Non-metallic airframe
Shaping does not offer stealth advantages against low-frequency radar. If the
radar wavelength is roughly twice the size of the target, a half-wave resonance
effect can still generate a significant return. However, low-frequency radar is
limited by lack of available frequencies-many are heavily used by other
systems, by lack of accuracy of the diffraction-limited systems given their long
wavelengths, and by the radar's size, making it difficult to transport.
A Long-wave radar may detect a target and roughly locate it, but not identify it,
and the location information lacks sufficient weapon targeting accuracy. Noise
poses another problem, but that can be efficiently addressed using modern
computer technology; Chinese "Nantsin" radar and much older Soviet-made
long-range radar were modified this way. It has been said that "there's nothing
invisible in the radar frequency range below 2 GHz".
Multiple transmitters
Moore's law
electronic warfare equipment, which will always have a quieter return signal to
mask than a non-stealth aircraft would return.
Acoustics
Acoustic stealth plays a primary role in submarine stealth as well as for ground
vehicles. Submarines have extensive usage of rubber mountings to isolate and
avoid mechanical noises that could reveal locations to underwater passive sonar
arrays.
Visibility
The simplest stealth technology is simply camouflage; the use of paint or other
materials to color and break up the lines of the vehicle or person.
Most stealth aircraft use matte paint and dark colors, and operate only at night.
Lately, interest on daylight Stealth (especially by the USAF) has emphasized
the use of gray paint in disruptive schemes, and it is assumed that Yehudi lights
could be used in the future to mask shadows in the airframe (in daylight, against
the clear background of the sky, dark tones are easier to detect than light ones)
or as a sort of active camouflage. The original B-2 design had wing tanks for a
contrail-inhibiting chemical, alleged by some to be chlorofluorosulphonic acid,
but this was replaced in the final design with a contrail sensor from Ophir that
alerts the pilot when he should change altitudeand mission planning also
considers altitudes where the probability of their formation is minimized.
Infrared
order to minimize the exhaust cross-sectional volume and maximize the mixing
of the hot exhaust with cool ambient air. Often, cool air is deliberately injected
into the exhaust flow to boost this process. Sometimes, the jet exhaust is vented
above the wing surface in order to shield it from observers below, as in the B-2
Spirit, and the unstealthy A-10 Thunderbolt II. To achieve infrared stealth, the
exhaust gas is cooled to the temperatures where the brightest wavelengths it
radiates on are absorbed by atmospheric carbon dioxide and water vapor,
dramatically reducing the infrared visibility of the exhaust plume. Another way
to reduce the exhaust temperature is to circulate coolant fluids such as fuel
inside the exhaust pipe, where the fuel tanks serve as heat sinks cooled by the
flow of air along the wings.
Measuring stealth
The size of a target's image on radar is measured by the radar cross section or
RCS, often represented by the symbol and expressed in square meters. This
does not equal geometric area. A perfectly conducting sphere of projected cross
sectional area 1 m2 (i.e. a diameter of 1.13 m) will have an RCS of 1 m2. Note
that for radar wavelengths much less than the diameter of the sphere, RCS is
independent of frequency. Conversely, a square flat plate of area 1 m2 will have
an RCS of = 4 A2 / 2 (where A=area, =wavelength), or 13,982 m2 at
10 GHz if the radar is perpendicular to the flat surface. At off-normal incident
angles, energy is reflected away from the receiver, reducing the RCS. Modern
stealth aircraft are said to have an RCS comparable with small birds or large
insects, though this varies widely depending on aircraft and radarIf the RCS was
directly related to the target's cross-sectional area, the only way to reduce it
would be to make the physical profile smaller. Rather, by reflecting much of the
radiation away or absorbing it altogether, the target achieves a smaller radar
cross section.
Stealth tactics
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Stealth aircraft
Stealth aircraft are aircraft that use stealth technologyto interfere with radar
detection as well as means other than conventional aircraft by employing a
combination of features to reduce visibility in the infrared, visual, audio, and
radio frequency (RF) spectrum. Development of stealth technology likely began
in Germany during WWII. Well-known modern examples of stealth aircraft
include the United States' F-117 Nighthawk (19812008), the B-2 Spirit
"Stealth Bomber", the F-22 Raptor, and the F-35 Lightning II. and the
Indian/Russian Sukhoi PAK FA.
Stealth is the combination of passive low observable (LO) features and active
emitters such as Low Probability of Intercept Radars, radios and laser
designators. These are usually combined with active defenses such as Chaff,
Flares, and ECM.
Background
The first true "stealth" aircraft may have been the Horten Ho 229 flying wing
fighter-bomber, developed in Germany during the last years of WWII. In
addition to the aircraft's shape, which may not have been a deliberate attempt to
affect radar deflection, the majority of the Ho 229's wooden skin was bonded
together using carbon-impregnated plywood resins designed with the purported
intention of absorbing radar waves. Testing performed in early 2009 by the
Northrop-Grumman Corporation established that this compound, along with the
aircraft's shape, would have rendered the Ho 229 virtually invisible to Britain's
Chain Home early warning radar, provided the aircraft was traveling at high
speed (~550 mph) at extremely low altitude (50100 feet).
signature an aircraft made with flat panels, called facets. In 1975, engineers at
Lockheed Skunk Works found that an airplane made with faceted surfaces
could have a very low radar signature because the surfaces would radiate almost
all of the radar energy away from the receiver. Lockheed built a model called
"the Hopeless Diamond". It was named that because it looked like a squat
diamond and looked too hopeless to ever fly. But because advanced computers
were available to control the flight of even a Hopeless Diamond, for the first
time designers realized that it might be possible to make an aircraft that was
virtually invisible to radar.
Reduced radar cross section is only one of five factors that designers addressed
to create a truly stealthy design such as the F-22. The F-22 has also been
designed to disguise its infrared emissions to make it harder to detect by
infrared homing ("heat seeking") surface-to-air or air-to-air missiles. Designers
also addressed making the aircraft less visible to the naked eye, controlling
radio transmissions, and noise abatement.
The first combat use of purpose-designed stealth aircraft was in December 1989
during Operation Just Cause in Panama. On December 20, 1989, two USAF F-
117s bombed a Panamanian Defense Force barracks in Rio Hato, Panama. In
1991, F-117s were tasked with attacking the most heavily fortified targets in
Iraq in the opening phase of Operation Desert Storm and were the only jets
allowed to operate inside
Limitations
Instability of design
Early stealth aircraft were designed with a focus on minimal radar cross section
(RCS) rather than aerodynamic performance. Highly stealth aircraft like the F-
117 Nighthawk and B-2 Spirit are aerodynamically unstable in all three axes
and require constant flight corrections from a fly-by-wire system to maintain
controlled flight. Most modern non-stealth fighter aircraft (F-16, Su-27, Gripen,
Rafale) are unstable on one or two axes only. However, in the pursuit of
increased maneuverability, most 4th and 5th-generation fighter aircraft have
been designed with some degree of inherent instability that must be controlled
by fly-by-wire computers.
Dogfighting ability
Earlier stealth aircraft (such as the F-117 and B-2) lack afterburners, because
the hot exhaust would increase their infrared footprint, and breaking the sound
barrier would produce an obvious sonic boom, as well as surface heating of the
aircraft skin which also increased the infrared footprint. As a result their
performance in air combat maneuvering required in a dogfight would never
match that of a dedicated fighter aircraft. This was unimportant in the case of
these two aircraft since both were designed to be bombers. More recent design
techniques allow for stealthy designs such as the F-22 without compromising
aerodynamic performance. Newer stealth aircraft, like the F-22 and F-35, have
performance characteristics that meet or exceed those of current front-line jet
fighters due to advances in other technologies such as flight control systems,
engines, airframe construction and materials.
Electromagnetic emissions
Stealth aircraft are still vulnerable to detection immediately during, and after
using their weaponry. Since stealth payload (reduced RCS bombs and cruise
missiles) are not yet generally available, and ordnance mount points create a
significant radar return, stealth aircraft carry all armament internally. As soon as
weapons bay doors are opened, the plane's RCS will be multiplied and even
older generation radar systems will be able to locate the stealth aircraft. While
the aircraft will reacquire its stealth as soon as the bay doors are closed, a fast
response defensive weapons system has a short opportunity to engage the
aircraft.
New stealth aircraft designs such as the F-22 can open their bays, release
munitions and return to stealthy flight in less than a second.
Some weapons require that the weapon's guidance system acquire the target
while the weapon is still attached to the aircraft. This forces relatively extended
operations with the bay doors open.
Also, such aircraft as the F-22 Raptor and F-35 Lighting II Joint Strike Fighter
can also carry additional weapons and fuel on hardpoints below their wings.
When operating in this mode the planes will not be stealthy, as the hardpoints
and the weapons mounted on those hardpoints will show up on radar systems.
This option therefore represents a trade off between stealth or range and
payload. External stores allow those aircraft to attack more targets further away,
but will not allow for stealth during that mission as compared to a shorter range
mission flying on just internal fuel and using only the more limited space of the
internal weapon bays for armaments.
Reduced payload
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In a 1994 live fire exercise near Point Mugu, California, a B-2 Spirit dropped
forty-seven 500 lb (230 kg) class Mark 82 bombs, which represents about half
of a B-2's total ordnance payload in Block 30 configuration
Fully stealth aircraft carry all fuel and armament internally, which limits the
payload. By way of comparison, the F-117 carries only two laser or GPS guided
bombs, while a non-stealth attack aircraft can carry several times more. This
requires the deployment of additional aircraft to engage targets that would
normally require a single non-stealth attack aircraft. This apparent disadvantage
however is offset by the reduction in fewer supporting aircraft that are required
to provide air cover, air-defense suppression and electronic counter measures,
making stealth aircraft "force multipliers".
Cost of maintenance
Sensitive skin
The B-2 Stealth Bomber has a skin made with highly specialized materials like
Polygraphite.
Cost of operations
Detection
Reflected waves
Passive (multistatic) radar, bistatic radar and especially multistatic systems are
believed to detect some stealth aircraft better than conventional monostatic
radars, since first-generation stealth technology (such as the F117) reflects
energy away from the transmitter's line of sight, effectively increasing the radar
cross section (RCS) in other directions, which the passive radars monitor. Such
a system typically uses either low frequency broadcast TV and FM radio signals
(at which frequencies controlling the aircraft's signature is more difficult). Later
stealth approaches do not rely on controlling the specular reflections of radar
energy and so the geometrical benefits are unlikely to be significant.
In December 2007, SAAB researchers also revealed details for a system called
Associative Aperture Synthesis Radar (AASR) that would employ a large array
of inexpensive and redundant transmitters and a few intelligent receivers to
exploit forward scatter to detect low observable targets. The system was
originally designed to detect stealthy cruise missiles and should be just as
effective against aircraft. The large array of inexpensive transmitters also
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Infrared (heat)
Some analysts claim Infra-red search and track systems (IRSTs) can be
deployed against stealth aircraft, because any aircraft surface heats up due to air
friction and with a two channel IRST is a CO2 (4.3 m absorption maxima)
detection possible, through difference comparing between the low and high
channel. These analysts also point to the resurgence in such systems in several
Russian designs in the 1980s, such as those fitted to the MiG-29 and Su-27. The
latest version of the MiG-29, the MiG-35, is equipped with a new Optical
Locator System that includes even more advanced IRST capabilities.
Wavelength match
difficult because the resonant frequency changes depending on how the stealth
aircraft is oriented with respect to the radar system.
To date, stealth aircraft have been used in several low- and moderate-intensity
conflicts, including Operation Desert Storm, Operation Allied Force and the
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2003 invasion of Iraq. In each case they were employed to strike high-value
targets that were either out of range of conventional aircraft in the theater or
were too heavily defended for conventional aircraft to strike without a high risk
of loss. In addition, because the stealth aircraft do not have to evade surface-to-
air missiles and anti-aircraft artillery over the target they can aim more carefully
and thus are more likely to hit the target and cause less collateral damage. In
many cases they were used to hit the high value targets early in the campaign,
before other aircraft had the opportunity to degrade the opposing air defense to
the point where other aircraft had a good chance of reaching those critical
targets.
Stealth aircraft in future low- and moderate-intensity conflicts are likely to have
similar roles. However, given the increasing prevalence of Russian-built
surface-to-air missile systems on the open market (such as the SA-10, SA-12
and SA-20 (S-300P/V/PMU) and SA-15 (9K331/332)), stealth aircraft are likely
to be very important in a high-intensity conflict in order to gain and maintain air
supremacy, especially to the United States who is likely to face these types of
systems. It is possible to cover one's airspace with so many air defences with
such long range and capability that conventional aircraft would find it very
difficult "clearing the way" for deeper strikes. For example, China license-
builds all of the previously mentioned SAM systems in large quantities and
would be able to heavily defend important strategic and tactical targets in the
event of a conflict. Even if anti-radiation weapons are used in an attempt to
destroy the SAM radars of such systems, or stand-off weapons are launched
against them, these modern surface-to-air missile batteries are capable of
shooting down weapons fired against them.
The first (and to date only) case of a stealth aircraft being shot down happened
on 27 March 1999, during Operation Allied Force. An Isayev S-125 'Neva-M'
missile was fired at an American F-117 Nighthawk and successfully brought it
down.
Stealth Technology
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The article How Radar Works talks about the basic principles of a radar
system. The idea is for the radar antenna to send out a burst of radio energy,
which is then reflected back by any object it happens to encounter. The radar
antenna measures the time it takes for the reflection to arrive, and with that
information can tell how far away the object is.
The metal body of an airplane is very good at reflecting radar signals, and this
makes it easy to find and track airplanes with radar equipment.
The airplane can be shaped so that any radar signals it reflects are reflected
away from the radar equipment.
The airplane can be covered in materials that absorb radar signals.
Most conventional aircraft have a rounded shape. This shape makes them
aerodynamic, but it also creates a very efficient radar reflector. The round shape
means that no matter where the radar signal hits the plane, some of the signal
gets reflected back:
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A stealth aircraft, on the other hand, is made up of completely flat surfaces and
very sharp edges. When a radar signal hits a stealth plane, the signal reflects
away at an angle, like this:
There are some more methods by which planes can avoid detection. These
methods do not need any hi-tech equipment to avoid detection. Some of them
have been used for years together by pilots to avoid detection.
One of the main efforts taken by designers of the stealth aircraft of today is to
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carry the weapons payload of the aircraft internally. This has shown that
carrying weapons internally can considerably decrease the radar cross-section of
the aircraft. Bombs and Missiles have a tendency to reflect the incoming radar
waves to a higher extent. Providing missiles with RAM and RAS is an
impossible by the cost of these things. Thus the missiles are carried in internal
bombays which are opened only when the weapons are released.
Aircraft has used another method of avoiding detection for a very long time.
Radars can use the radar waves or electro-magnetic energy of planes radar and
locate it. An aircraft can remain undetected just by turning the radar off.
In case of some of the modern stealth aircraft, it uses its wingman in tandem to
track its target and destroy it. It is done in the following way. The fighter, which
is going to attack moves forward, the wingman (the second aircraft) on the other
hand remains at a safe distance from the target which the other fighter is
approaching. The wingman provides the other fighter with the radar location of
the enemy aircraft by a secured IFDL (In Flight Data Link). Thus the enemy
radar is only able to detect the wingman while the attacking fighter approaches
the enemy without making any sharp turns. This is done not to make any sudden
variations in a stealth aircraft's radar signature. Thus the fighter, who moves
forward, is able to attack the enemy without being detected.
Plasma Stealth
The plasma thrust technology was used in the Soviet / Russian space program.
Later the same engine was used to power the American Deep Space 1 probe.
In plasma stealth, the aircraft injects a stream of plasma in front of the aircraft.
The plasma will cover the entire body of the fighter and will absorb most of the
electromagnetic energy of the radar waves, thus making the aircraft difficult to
detect. The same method is used in Magneto Hydro Dynamics. Using Magneto
Hydro Dynamics, an aircraft can propel itself to great speeds.
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On a radar screen, aircraft will have their radar cross sections with respect to
their size. This helps the radar to identify that the radar contact it has made is an
aircraft. Conventional aircraft are visible on the radar screen because of its
relative size. On the other hand, the relative size of a stealth aircraft on the radar
screen will be that of a large bird. This is how stealth aircraft are ignored by
radar and thus detection is avoided.
A new method of detecting low observable aircraft is just over the horizon.
Scientists have found a method to detect stealth aircraft with the help of
microwaves similar to the ones emitted by the cell phone towers. Nothing much
is known about this technology, but the US military seems to be very keen
about doing more research on this.
Stealth technology has its own disadvantages like other technologies. Stealth
aircraft cannot fly as fast or is not maneuverable like conventional aircraft. The
F-22 and the aircraft of its category proved this wrong up to an extent. Though
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the F-22 may be fast or maneuverable or fast, it can't go beyond Mach 2 and
cannot make turns like the Su-37.
Another serious disadvantage with the stealth aircraft is the reduced amount of
payload it can carry. As most of the payload is carried internally in a stealth
aircraft to reduce the radar signature, weapons can only occupy a less amount of
space internally. On the other hand a conventional aircraft can carry much more
payload than any stealth aircraft of its class.
Whatever may be the disadvantage a stealth aircraft can have, the biggest of all
disadvantages that it faces is its sheer cost. Stealth aircraft literally costs its
weight in gold.
Fighters in service and in development for the USAF like the B-2 ($2 billion),
F-117 ($70 million) and the F-22 ($100 million) are the costliest planes in the
world. After the cold war, the number of B-2 bombers was reduced sharply
because of its staggering price tag and maintenance charges. There is a possible
solution for this problem.
In the recent past the Russian design firms Sukhoi and Mikhoyan Gurevich
(MiG) have developed fighters which will have a price tag similar to that of the
Su-30MKI. This can be a positive step to make stealth technology affordable for
third world countries.
Stealth technology is a concept that is not at all new. During the Second World
War, allied aircraft used tin and aluminum foils in huge numbers to confuse
German radar installations. This acted as a cover for allied bombers to conduct
air raids. This method was later used as chaffs by aircrafts to dodge radar
guided missiles.
The first stealth aircraft was the F-117 developed by Lockheed Martin. It was a
top-secret project developed by its Skunk Works unit. The F-117 was only
revealed during the late 80s and then saw action in the Persian Gulf.
In due course of time the B-2 was developed as a successor to the B-2. Though
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both of them serve different purposes, the B-2 went a step ahead of the F-117.
The B-2 was developed to deliver nuclear weapons and other guided and
unguided bombs. On the other hand the F-117 was developed to deliver its
precision laser guided bombs.
Another stealth aircraft, which made a lot of promises and in the end ended up
in a trashcan, was the A-12. It was a fighter that was designed to replace the F-
14 and F-18 in the future. The capabilities of this aircraft were boasted to such
an extent that the project ended up in a big mess. Billions of dollars were wasted
for nothing.
Stealth technology became famous with the ATF contest. The Boeing-Lockheed
YF-22 and the McDonell Douglas-Grumman YF-23 fought for the milti-billion
contract to build the fighter that would take the USAF into the fifth generation
fighter era. The Boeing-Lockheed won the contract and the F-22 was approved
to be the replacement for the F-15 "Eagle" interceptor.
These fighters were developed by the two leading aviation firms in Russia
Sukhoi and Mikhoyan Gurevich (MiG). The future of these projects totally
depends on the funding which will be provided to the Russian defense sector.
There are some hopes of increase in the funding to these projects as countries
like India have started providing funds and technical assistance for these
projects.
Another competition that soon came into the spotlight after the ATF
competition was the JSF.
first supersonic VSTOL aircraft. In the end the Lockheed team with its X-35
won the contract and the fighter was re-designated as the F-35.
Many projects remain over the horizon that will use stealth technology as its
primary capability. They come from some of the most unlikely contenders.
These projects include the Euro JSF, which will be designed by the team that
developed the EF-2000. Russia is stepping forward with its LFS project with the
S-54 and other designs. Two new entries into this field will be India and China.
India will be introducing its MCA, which is a twin engine fighter without
vertical stabilizers. This fighter will use thrust vectoring instead of rudders.
China will be introducing the J-12 (F-12/XXJ).
www.studymafia.org
Conclusion:
Stealth technology is clearly the future of air combat. In the future, as air
defense systems grow more accurate and deadly, stealth technology can be a
factor for a decisive by a country over the other. In the future, stealth
technology will not only be incorporated in fighters and bombers but also in
ships, helicopters, tanks and transport planes. These are evident from the RAH-
66 "Comanche" and the Sea Shadow
stealthttp://www.totalairdominance.50megs.comh ship. Ever since the Wright
brothers flew the first powered flight, the advancements in this particular field
of technology has seen staggering heights. Stealth technology is just one of the
advancements that we have seen. In due course of time we can see many
improvements in the field of military aviation which would one-day even make
stealth technology obsolete.
References
www.google.com
www.wikipedia.com
www.studymafia.org
www.pptplant.com