Author Topic: How the U.S. Air Force Could Make the New B-21 Stealth Bomber Unstoppable  (Read 255 times)

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rangerrebew

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August 14, 2019

How the U.S. Air Force Could Make the New B-21 Stealth Bomber Unstoppable

Multi-band or “broadband” stealth, which is designed to elude both lower frequency area “surveillance” radar as well as high-frequency “engagement radar,” puts an emphasis upon radar cross section-reducing tailless designs such as that now envisioned for the B-21.

by Kris Osborn

Multi-band or “broadband” stealth, which is designed to elude both lower frequency area “surveillance” radar as well as high-frequency “engagement radar,” puts an emphasis upon radar cross section-reducing tailless designs such as that now envisioned for the B-21.

Despite the loud and fast-growing chorus of analysts, critics and weapons developers who continue to raise the question as to whether stealth technology may slowly be becoming obsolete, some senior weapons developers are citing some ways current and emerging stealth platforms will - for years to come - remain very difficult to destroy.

Russian built S-300 and S-400 air defense weapons, believed by many to be among the best in the world, are able to use digital technology to network “nodes” to one another to pass tracking and targeting data across wide swaths of terrain. New air defenses also use advanced command and control technology to detect aircraft across a much wider spectrum of frequencies than previous systems could. Also, much is being made of Russia’s emerging S-500 system, purported to be even more sophisticated against stealth aircraft.

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/how-us-air-force-could-make-new-b-21-stealth-bomber-unstoppable-73441
« Last Edit: August 15, 2019, 10:58:47 am by rangerrebew »