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Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s
College of Engineering and Technology.
Noida, U.P., India
Seminar Report
On
“STEALTH TECHNOLOGY”
As
Part of B. Tech Curriculum
Submitted By:
Name: VIVEK-BISHT
Semester: 05
Roll No: 1109540043
Under the Guidance of:
Guide:- Mr. Rahul chauhan.
Seminar Coordinator:- Mr.Ravindra Ram.
(Seminar Coordinator) Submitted to:- Prof. Sachin Jambhale.
Mechanical Engineering Department,
MGM’s COET,
Noida.
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Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s
College of Engineering and Technology.
Noida, U.P., India
Department of Mechanical Engineering
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that Mr. VIVEK-BISHT
of B. Tech. Mechanical Engineering, Class: TT-ME Roll No.
1109540043 has delivered seminar on the topic “STEALTH
TECHNOLOGY”. His seminar presentation and report during
the academic year as the part of B. Tech Mechanical Engineering
curriculum was poor/fair/good/excellent.
(Seminar Coordinator) (Guide) (Head of the Department)
Mr. Ravindra Ram Mr. Rahul chauhan Mr. Sachin Jambhale
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I express my sincere gratitude to Prof. SACHIN JAMBHALE, Head of the Department,
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s college of
engineering and Technology, Noida, for his valuable suggestion, advice, guidance and
encouragement in carrying out the seminar.
I especially thank Mr. RAVINDRA RAM and Mr. RAHUL CHAUHAN, our seminar
coordinator and guide, for their guidance and help rendered for the successful completion
of my seminar and for making available the facilities of the department for the
presentation of this seminar.
I also express my gratitude to all members of staff, my parents and friends who were
very co-operative for the successful presentation of this seminar report. Last but not the
least I thank the God Almighty for his abundant grace on preparing this seminar report.
VIVEK-BISHT
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ABSTRACT
Stealth refers to the act of trying to hide or evade detection. Stealth technology is ever
increasingly becoming a paramount tool in battle especially “high technology wars” if
one may occur in the future where invincibility means invincibility. Able to strike with
impunity, stealth aircraft, missiles and warships are virtually invisible to most types of
military sensors. The experience gained at the warfront emphasizes the need to
incorporate stealth features at the design stage itself. According to conventional military
wisdom, surprise is the best form of attack. With evermore sophisticated methods of
detection, however, catching the enemy unawares has becoming increasingly difficult.
Thus paving way to the development of increasingly sophisticated technologies that help
in evading the enemy's ever vigilant “eyes”. Stealth Technology essentially deals with
designs and materials engineered for the military purpose of avoiding detection by radar
or any other electronic system. Stealth, or anti-detection, technology is applied to
vehicles (e.g., tanks, missiles, ships, and aircraft)with the goal of making the object more
difficult to detect at closer and closer ranges thus providing an element of surprise in the
attacks. Attacking with surprise gives the attacker more time to perform its mission and
exit before the defending force can counterattack. For example, If a surface to air missile
a type of antiaircraft battery defending a target observes a bomb falling and surmises that
there must be a stealth aircraft in the vicinity it is still unable to respond if it cannot get a
lock on the aircraft in order to feed guidance.
As stated earlier stealth technology can be looked upon as a perfect blend between the
engineering skills of "designing" and "technology". And for attaining stealth various
dectection techniques have to be surpassed.
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CONTENTS
TOPIC PAGE PAGE NO:
1. INTRODUCTION. 1.
2. STEALTH PRINCIPLE. 2.
3. HISTORY. 3.
4. WHAT IS STEALTH. 5.
5. RADAR. 6.
5.1. RADAR CROSS SECTION (RCS). 7.
5.2. RADAR ABSORBING MATERIAL (RAM) 8.
6. INFRARED (IR). 10.
7. VISUAL STEALTH. 11.
8. VECHICAL SHAPE. 13.
9. METHODS OF AVOIDING DETECTION. 15.
10. PLASMA STEALTH. 16.
11. DETECTION METHODS OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT. 18.
12. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY 19.
13. STEALTH AIRCRAFT OF YESTERDAY TODAY AND TOMMOROW. 21.
14. APPLICATION. 22.
15. ADVANCED STEALTH AIRCRAFT (5th
GENERATION AIRCRAFT). 23.
16. FUTURE OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT. 25.
17. FUTURE OF STRALTH AIRCRAFT-(INDIA). 28.
18. CONCLUSION 31.
19. REFERENCE 33.
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LIST OF FIGURES
Fig no TOPIC PAGE NO.
3.1 F-117A (“NIGHTHAWK”). 3
3.2 Sea shadow 4
5.1 Concept of radar cross-section. 7
5.2 Properties of RAM’s Based on angle of incidence. 8
7.1 F-117B as it Conducted almost all its mission at night. 12
8.1 F-35B. 13
8.2 B-2 (stealth bomber). 13
11.1 A very High power 3-D Radar can detect a stealth aircraft. 18
15.1 F-22 Raptor (Advanced stealth fighter). 24
15.2 F-35 Lightning. 24
16.1 Stealth helicopter (RAH-comanche). 26
16.2 BAE type 45-Destroyer. 26
16.3 X-47B (UCAV) Unmanned combat air Vechical 27
17.1 Sukhoi PAK-FA (Su50) HAL/SUKHOI. 28
17.2 INS-shivalik (stealth frigate). 29
17.3 UCAV-AURA (Concept) 30
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STEALTH TECHNOLOGY:
1.INTRODUCTION
Stealth or low observability (as it is scientifically known) is one of the most
misunderstood and misinterpreted concepts in military aviation by the common man.
Stealth aircraft are considered as invisible aircraft, which dominate the skies. With an
additional boost from Hollywood action movies, stealth is today termed as the concept
invincibility rather than invisibility. Though, the debate still continues on whether stealth
technology can make an aircraft invincible it was found that stealth aircraft are detectable
by radar.
The motive behind incorporating stealth technology in an aircraft is not just to avoid
missiles being fired at is but also to give total deniability to covert operations. This is
very much useful to strike targets where it is impossible to reach. Thus we can clearly say
that the job of a stealth aircraft pilot is not to let others know that he was ever there.
In simple terms, stealth technology allows an aircraft to be partially invisible to Radar or
any other means of detection. This doesn't allow the aircraft to be fully invisible on radar.
Stealth technology cannot make the aircraft invisible to enemy or friendly radar. All it
can do is to reduce the detection range or an aircraft. This is similar to the camouflage
tactics used by soldiers in jungle warfare. Unless the soldier comes near you, you can't
see him. Though this gives a clear and safe striking distance for the aircraft, there is still a
threat from radar systems, which can detect stealth aircraft. Stealth technology is
expanded into each of those areas which seek to detect the aircraft, ships & missiles.
Thus it is essential to develop visual, infrared acoustic and radar stealth. However many
countries have announced that they have developed counter-stealth techniques that allow
them to negate stealth.
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2.STEALTH PRINCIPLES
Stealth technology (or LO for "Low Observability") is not a single technology. It is a
combination of technologies that attempt to greatly reduce the distances at which a
vehicle can be detected; in particular radar cross section reductions, but also acoustic,
thermal, and other aspects.
Stealth technology aims at minimizing signatures and signals, and prevent/delay
detection and identification, thus increasing the efficiency of the vehicles own
countermeasures and sensors. Ben Rich, the leader of the Lockheed team that designed
the F117, pretty much sums up stealth technology when he say: “A stealth aircraft has to
be stealthy in six disciplines: radar, infrared, visual, acoustic, smoke and contrail. If you
don’t do that, you flunk the course.”
However, not all disciplines are equally important when discussing any given platform
category. Underwater warfare will naturally hand dominance to the acoustic spectrum.
However, land combat will emphasize visual, infrared and acoustic signatures. Radar and
infrared bands dominate the scene of airspace surveillance.
3.HISTORY OF STEALTH.
In the late 1930’s and 1940’s Radar technology was commonly used for dectecting
aircrafts. Since radar technology was developed during the Second World War, it should
not be surprising to learn that the first attempts at stealth technology occurred during this
period also. It might be surprising to learn, however, that it was the Germans, not the
Allies, who worked on the project. The Germans were responding to the success the
Allies were having with the early radar sets. Not only was their radar very effective at
spotting incoming enemy bombers, but it was also very important in the battle for the
Atlantic. The Germans developed a radar absorbing paint. While this ferrite-based paint
was much too heavy for aircraft, it could be used on submarines.
The United States' first stealth development was totally accidental and quickly forgotten.
Shortly after the war, Northrop Aircraft developed an experimental bomber called the
YB-49 Flying Wing. As the name implies, the aircraft had no body or tail; it was simply a
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large flying wing. The aircraft was assigned to perform a normal test flight over the
Pacific. When the test was completed, they turned and headed for home, pointing the slim
wing edge directly at the base radar station. The radar crew was shocked to see the
aircraft suddenly appear almost overhead because they had seen no evidence of it on the
radar screen. Interest in the project quickly faded after the bomber crashed in the Mojave
Desert in 1948. The plane was very unstable in flight and this stability problem was listed
as the cause of the crash. With the “cold war” and the Soviet Union well under way in the
early 1950s, it became imperative that the U.S. should learn about military developments
deep inside the country. Old bombers were converted to spy planes, but they soon proved
to be very vulnerable to attack. In order to plug this intelligence gap, a new plane was
designed. The idea was to create a plane that could cruise safely at very high altitudes,
well out of the reach of any existing fighter. The design specification required that
“consideration is given…to minimize the delectability by enemy radar.”
The task of making this plane a reality fell upon the Advanced Development Projects
team at Lockheed in California. This was a small team of highly qualified and highly
motivated engineers and pilots. This highly secret facility became known as the “Skunk
Works” and has been on the leading edge of stealth technology since the early 1950s. The
aircraft they developed became known as the U-2, and it was highly successful.
After much effort they were successful in building an aircraft that could evade the enemy
RADAR’s called the F-117A nicknamed as the “Nighthawk”, developed by Lockheed
Martin in 1983.
Figure 3.1:- 117A (“NIGHTHAWK”)
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There is a boat the Skunk Works developed shortly after the F-117A. It is called the "Sea
Shadow" and was built in 27 months and operated secretly in the late 1980 for $200
million dollars. The Sea Shadow was first unveiled on April 9, 1993. The barge used for
the program was the Hughes Mining Barge (HMB-1), a vessel was originally built for a
secret CIA project in the early '70s, and had been in mothballs for years. The CIA project,
it has since come out, was an attempt to recover a Soviet nuclear sub that sank off the
coast of Hawaii in 1968. The project included two ships, the Gosimir Explorer which was
basically a ship capable of deep Sea mining, and the HMB-1 which actually submerged
under the Gosimir Explorer. The HMB-1 had a claw to retrieve the USSR submarine,
which was operated by the drill on the Gossimir Explorer. (The operation was partially
successful with half of the ill-fated Soviet sub and crew being brought up from the ocean
bottom.) The Sea Shadow's stats are: Length: 160 ft. Width: 68 ft. Draft: 14.5 ft.
Displacement: 560 tons (full load).
In May 1999, the Sea Shadow was reactivated by the Navy for a 5 year program in order
to "research future ship engineering concepts and to serve as a host vessel for companies
to demonstrate advanced naval technologies." The Sea Shadow is currently operation out
of San Francisco Bay.
Figure 3.2:- SEA SHADOW
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4.WHAT IS STEALTH?
In simple terms, stealth technology allows an aircraft to be partially invisible to Radar or
any other means of detection. This doesn't allow the aircraft to be fully invisible on radar.
Stealth technology cannot make the aircraft invisible to enemy or friendly radar. All it
can do is to reduce the detection range or an aircraft. This is similar to the camouflage
tactics used by soldiers in jungle warfare. Unless the soldier comes near you, you can't
see him. Though this gives a clear and safe striking distance for the aircraft, there is still a
threat from radar systems, which can detect stealth aircraft.
The Russian 1R13 radar system is very much capable of detecting the F-117 "Night
Hawk" stealth fighter. There are also some other radar systems made in other countries,
which are capable of detecting the F-117. During the Gulf war the Iraqis were able to
detect the F-117 but failed to eliminate its threat because of lack of coordination. The
most unforgettable incident involving the detection and elimination of a stealth aircraft
was during the NATO air-war over Yugoslavia. This was done by a Russian built "not so
advanced" SAM (possibly the SA-3 or SA-6). The SAM system presumably used optical
detection for target acquisition in the case.
HOW DOES STEALTH TECHNOLOGY WORK?
The concept behind the stealth technology is very simple. As a matter of fact it is totally
the principle of reflection and absorption that makes aircraft "stealthy". Deflecting the
incoming radar waves into another direction and thus reducing the number of waves does
this, which returns to the radar. Another concept that is followed is to absorb the
incoming radar waves totally and to redirect the absorbed electromagnetic energy in
another direction. What ever may be the method used, the level of stealth an aircraft can
achieve depends totally on the design and the substance with which it is made of.
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5.RADAR.
In the early 1930's and 1940's radar technology was increasingly used to dectect aircrafts.
During the Second World War all counters Germany, Great Britain, France and The
United States of America used this technology for navigating ships and to dectect
approaching enemy aircrafts. This technology didn't pose much of a threat then as this
was not incorporated into Antiaircraft defenses then. This whole story changed during
The Vietnam and Yom Kipper wars. to make the feet more secure for use and more
effective the Americans who were the sheet anchor needed to develop an effective way to
evade radar.
RADAR (RADAR DETECTION AND RANGING):
Thus RADAR as it is abbreviated so uses radio waves for dectection of the target. Radar
basically works on two major principles.
ECHO:
Echo can be considered as a wave bouncing off a surface and coming back to the source.
This Principle can be applied for all types of waves starting from sound waves to light
waves. The time for the reception of the transmitted signal to reach the transmitter cum
receiver can be effectively used to calculate the distance of the target from the
transmitter.
THE DOPLIER SHIFT:
This being the second principle of the radar. This effect is more commonly felt for sound.
The sound that you hear as a vehicle is approaching you is at a higher pitch or a higher
frequency than the sound you hear when the vehicle is moving away from you. This
property when applied to radar can be used to determine the speed of the object. The
frequency of the reflected wave can be the same, greater or lower than the transmitted
radio wave. if the reflected wave frequency is less then this means that the target is
moving away from the transmitter and if higher then moving close to the transmitter and
if constant then the target is not moving like a helicopter hovering at a point. This can be
used to predict the speeds of the target too.
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5.1 RCS (RADAR CROSS SECTION SURFACE).
RAS or Radar absorbent surfaces are the surfaces on the aircraft, which can deflect the
incoming radar waves and reduce the detection range. RAS works due to the angles at
which the structures on the aircraft's fuselage or the fuselage itself are placed. These
structures can be anything from wings to a refueling boom on the aircraft. The extensive
use of RAS is clearly visible in the F-117 "Night Hawk". Due to the facets (as they are
called) on the fuselage, most of the incoming radar waves are reflected to another
direction. Due to these facets on the fuselage, the F-117 is a very unstable aircraft.
The concept behind the RAS is that of reflecting a light beam from a torch with a mirror.
The angle at which the reflection takes place is also more important. When we consider a
mirror being rotated from 0o to 90o, the amount of light that is reflected in the direction
of the light beam is more. At 90o, maximum amount of light that is reflected back to
same direction as the light beam's source. On the other hand when the mirror is tilted
above 90o and as it proceeds to 180o, the amount of light reflected in the same direction
decreases drastically.
Figure 5.1:- Concept of Radar cross section
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5.2RAM (RADAR ABSORBING MATERIAL).
Radar absorbent surfaces absorb the incoming radar waves rather than deflecting it in
another direction. RAS totally depends on the material with which the surface of the
aircraft is made. Though the composition of this material is a top secret. The F-117
extensively uses RAM to reduce its radar signature or its radar cross section. The RAS is
believed to be silicon based inorganic compound. This is assumed by the information that
the RAM coating on the B-2 is not water roof. This is just a supposition and may not be
true. What we know is that the RAM coating over the B-2 is placed like wrapping a cloth
over the plane. When radar sends a beam in the direction of the B-2, the radar waves are
absorbed by the plane's surface and is redirected to another direction after it is absorbed.
Figure 5.2:- Properties of RAM’s Based on angle of incidence
TYPES OF RAMs:
(i) Iron ball paint
One of the most commonly known types of RAM is iron ball paint. It contains tiny
spheres coated with carbonyl iron or ferrite. Radar waves induce molecular oscillations
from the alternating magnetic field in this paint, which leads to conversion of the radar
energy into heat. The heat is then transferred to the aircraft and dissipated. The iron
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particles in the paint are obtained by decomposition of iron pentacarbonyl and may
contain traces of carbon, oxygen and nitrogen.A related type of RAM consists of
neoprene polymer sheets with ferrite grains or carbon black particles (containing about
30% of crystalline graphite) embedded in the polymer matrix. The tiles were used on
early versions of the F-117A Nighthawk, although more recent models use painted RAM.
The painting of the F-117 is done by industrial robots with the plane covered in tiles
glued to the fuselage and the remaining gaps filled with iron ball paint. The United States
Air Force introduced a radar absorbent paint made from both ferrofluidic and non-
magnetic substances. By reducing the reflection of electromagnetic waves, this material
helps to reduce the visibility of RAM painted aircraft on radar.
(ii) Foam absorber
It is used as lining of anechoic chambers for electromagnetic radiation measurements.
This material typically consists of fireproofed urethane foam loaded with carbon black,
and cut into long pyramids. The length from base to tip of the pyramid structure is chosen
based on the lowest expected frequency and the amount of absorption required. For low
frequency damping, this distance is often 24 inches, while high frequency panels are as
short as 3-4 inches. Panels of RAM are installed with the tips pointing inward to the
chamber. Pyramidal RAM attenuates signal by two effects: scattering and absorption.
Scattering can occur both coherently, when reflected waves are in-phase but directed
away from the receiver, and incoherently where waves are picked up by the receiver but
are out of phase and thus have lower signal strength. This incoherent scattering also
occurs within the foam structure, with the suspended carbon particles promoting
destructive interference. Internal scattering can result in as much as 10dB of attenuation.
Meanwhile, the pyramid shapes are cut at angles that maximize the number of bounces a
wave makes within the structure. With each bounce, the wave loses energy to the foam
material and thus exits with lower signal strength.[4] Other foam absorbers are available
in flat sheets, using an increasing gradient of carbon loadings in different layers.
(iii) Jaumann absorber
A Jaumann absorber or Jaumann layer is a radar absorbent device. When first introduced
in 1943, the Jaumann layer consisted of two equally-spaced reflective surfaces and a
conductive ground plane. One can think of it as a generalized, multi-layered Salisbury
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screen as the principles are similar. Being a resonant absorber (i.e. it uses wave
interfering to cancel the reflected wave), the Jaumann layer is dependent upon the λ/4
spacing between the first reflective surface and the ground plane and between the two
reflective surfaces (a total of λ/4 + λ/4). Because the wave can resonate at two
frequencies, the Jaumann layer produces two absorption maxima across a band of
wavelengths (if using the two layers configuration). These absorbers must have all of the
layers parallel to each other and the ground plane that they conceal. More elaborate
Jaumann absorbers use series of dielectric surfaces that separate conductive sheets. The
conductivity of those sheets increases with proximity to the ground plane.
6.IR (INFRARED).
Another important factor that influences the stealth capability of an aircraft is the IR
(infrared) signature given out by the plane. Usually planes are visible in thermal imaging
systems because of the high temperature exhaust they give out. This is a great
disadvantage to stealth aircraft as missiles also have IR guidance system. If reducing the
radar signature of an aircraft is tough, then reducing the IR signature of the aircraft is
tougher. Engines for stealth aircraft are specifically built to have a very low IR signature.
The technology behind this is top secret like others in stealth aircraft. Another main
aspect that reduces the IR signature of a stealth aircraft is to place the engines deep into
the fuselage. This is done in stealth aircraft like the B-2, F-22 and the JSF. The IR
reduction scheme used in F-117 is very much different from the others. The engines are
placed deep within the aircraft like any stealth aircraft and at the outlet, a section of the
fuselage deflects the exhaust to another direction. This is useful for deflecting the hot
exhaust gases in another direction.
Every IR system model is composed of basic building blocks and every IR system
whether active or passive, is composed of most if not all of these building blocks. For
example, all IR systems include a source or target, a background, an atmosphere or
environment, optics and a detector. With the aid of this generalized model, the path of IR
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radiation from its sources can be analyzed, step – by – step through the various
modifications necessary for its final presentation in some form of display.
7.VISUAL STEALTH.
Historically, stealth aircrafts like the F-117 and the B-2 Spirit were painted black and
were supposed to fly only during the night time for effective camouflaging. However, the
concept of day-time stealth has been researched by Lockheed Martin, such a plane would
need to blend into the background sky and also carry antiradar and infrared stealth
technology. Researchers at the University of Florida are in the process of developing an
‘electro chromic polymer’. These thin sheets cover the aircraft’s white skin and sense the
hue, color and brightness of the surrounding sky and ground. The image received is then
projected onto the aircraft’s opposite side. When charged to a certain voltage, these
panels undergo color change. At the Tonopah test range airstrip in Nevada, another
system was tested; as claimed by a technician working at the base, an F-15 equipped with
this technology took off from the runway only to disappear from sight 3 Km away. Yet
another similar “skin” is being tested at the topsecret Groom Lake facility at Area 51 in
Nevada. It is composed of an electro-magnetically conductive polyaniline-based radar
absorbent composite material. The system also disposes photo-sensitive receptors all over
the plane that scans the surrounding area; subsequently the data is interpreted by an
onboard computer which outputs it much like a computer screen. Perhaps one day, in the
very near future, one may fly in a completely invisible aircraft. B-2 Spirit bomber,
Boeing’s Bird of Prey and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter represent the pinnacle of modern
day advancements in this particular field of human endeavor.
1. Aircraft Camouflage
The design of camouflage for aircraft is complicated by the fact that the appearance of
the aircraft's background varies widely, depending on the location of the observer (above
or below) and the nature of the background. Many aircraft camouflage schemes of the
past used counter shading, where a light color was used underneath and darker colors
above. Other camouflage schemes acknowledge that the aircraft will be twisting and
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turning while in combat, and the camouflage pattern is applied to the entire aircraft.
Neutral and dull colors are preferred, and two or three shades selected, depending on the
size of the aircraft. Though air-to-air combat is often initialized outside of visual range, at
medium distances camouflage can make an enemy pilot hesitate until certain of the
attitude, distance and maneuver of the camouflaged aircraft. The higher speeds of modern
aircraft and the reliance on radar and missiles in air combat have reduced the value of
visual camouflage, while increasing the value of electronic "stealth" measures. Modern
paint is designed to absorb electromagnetic radiation used by radar, reducing the
signature of the aircraft, and to limit the emission of infrared light used by heat seeking
missiles to detect their target. Further advances in aircraft camouflage are being
investigated in the field of active camouflage.
Figure 7.1:- F-117b as it conducted almost all its flights at night
2. Ship Camouflage
Until the 20th century, naval weapons had a very short range, so camouflage was
unimportant for ships or the men on board them. Paint schemes were selected on the basis
of ease of maintenance or aesthetics, typically buff upperworks (with polished brass
fittings) and white or black hulls. At the turn of the century the increasing range of naval
engagements, as demonstrated by the Battle of Tsushima, prompted the introduction of
the first camouflage, in the form of some solid shade of gray overall, in the hope that
ships would fade into the mist.
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8.VECHICAL SHAPE.
The possibility of designing aircraft in such a manner as to reduce their radar cross-
section was recognized in the late 1930s, when the first radar tracking systems were
employed, and it has been known since at least the 1960s that aircraft shape makes a
significant difference in detectability. TheAvro Vulcan, a British bomber of the 1960s,
had a remarkably small appearance on radar despite its large size, and occasionally
disappeared from radar screens entirely. It is now known that it had a fortuitously stealthy
shape apart from the vertical element of the tail. In contrast, the Tupolev 95Russian 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.
Another important factor is internal construction. Some stealth aircraft have skin that is
radar transparent or absorbing, behind which are structures termed re-entrant triangles.
Radar waves penetrating the skin get trapped in these structures, reflecting off the internal
faces and losing energy. This method was first used on the Blackbird series .
Figure 8.1:- F-35B Figure 8.2:- B-2 Stealth bomber
The most efficient way to reflect radar waves back to the emitting 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
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surfaces to reduce corner reflections formed between them. A more radical method 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 extant aircraft, install
baffles in the air intakes, so that the compressor blades are not visible to radar. A stealthy
shape must be devoid of complex bumps or protrusions of any kind; meaning that
weapons, fuel tanks, and other stores must not be carried externally. Any stealthy vehicle
becomes un-stealthy when a door or hatch opens.
Planform alignment is also often used in stealth designs. Planform alignment involves
using a small number of surface orientations in the shape of the structure. For example,
on the F-22A Raptor, the leading edges of the wing and the tail surfaces are set at the
same angle. Careful inspection shows that many small structures, such as the air intake
bypass doors and the air refuelingaperture, 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 signaldetectable at many angles.
Stealth airframes sometimes display distinctive serrations on some exposed edges, such
as the engine ports. The YF-23 has such serrations on the exhaust ports. This is another
example in the use of re-entrant triangles and planform alignment, this time on the
external airframe.
Shaping requirements have strong negative influence on the aircraft's aerodynamic
properties. The F-117 has poor aerodynamics, is inherently unstable, and cannot be flown
without a fly-by-wire control system.
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, reflect off objects (the inside of a cockpit
has a complex shape, with a pilot helmet alone forming 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 pilot vision.
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9.METHODS OF AVOIDING DETECTION .
 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
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 enemy radar is
only able to detect wingman while the attacking fighter approaches the enemy
without making any sharp turn. This is done not to make sudden variation in a
stealth aircraft’s radar signature.
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10.PLASMA STEALTH.
Plasma stealth technology is what can be called as "Active stealth technology" in
scientific terms. This technology was first developed by the Russians. It is a milestone in
the field of stealth technology. The technology behind this not at all new. 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. Plasma stealth will be incorporated in the MiG-35 "Super
Fulcrum / Raptor Killer". This is a fighter which is an advanced derivative of the MiG-29
"Fulcrum / Baaz". Initial trials have been conducted on this technology, but most of the
results have proved to be fruitful.
When electromagnetic waves, such as radar signals, propagate into a conductive plasma,
ions and electrons are displaced as a result of the time varying electric and magnetic
fields. The wave field gives energy to the particles. The particles generally return some
fraction of the energy they have gained to the wave, but some energy may be
permanently absorbed as heat by processes like scattering or resonant acceleration, or
transferred into other wave types by mode conversion or nonlinear effects. A plasma can,
at least in principle, absorb all the energy in an incoming wave, and this is the key to
plasma stealth. However, plasma stealth implies a substantial reduction of an aircraft's
RCS, making it more difficult (but not necessarily impossible) to detect. The mere fact of
detection of an aircraft by a radar does not guarantee an accurate targeting solution
needed to intercept the aircraft or to engage it with missiles. A reduction in RCS also
results in a proportional reduction in detection range, allowing an aircraft to get closer to
the radar before being detected.
The central issue here is frequency of the incoming signal. A plasma will simply reflect
radio waves below a certain frequency (which depends on the plasma properties). This
aids long-range communications, because low-frequency radio signals bounce between
the Earth and the ionosphere and may therefore travel long distances. Early-warning
23
over-the-horizon radars utilize such low-frequency radio waves. Most military airborne
and air defense radars, however, operate in the microwave band, where many plasmas,
including the ionosphere, absorb or transmit the radiation (the use of microwave
communication between the ground and communication satellites demonstrates that at
least some frequencies can penetrate the ionosphere). Plasma surrounding an aircraft
might be able to absorb incoming radiation, and therefore prevent any signal reflection
from the metal parts of the aircraft: the aircraft would then be effectively invisible to
radar. A plasma might also be used to modify the reflected waves to confuse the
opponent's radar system: for example, frequency-shifting the reflected radiation would
frustrate Doppler filtering and might make the reflected radiation more difficult to
distinguish from noise.
Control of plasma properties is likely to be important for a functioning plasma stealth
device, and it may be necessary to dynamically adjust the plasma density, temperature or
composition, or the magnetic field, in order to effectively defeat different types of radar
systems. Radars which can flexibly change transmission frequencies might be less
susceptible to defeat by plasma stealth technology. Like LO geometry and radar
absorbent materials, plasma stealth technology is probably not a panacea against radar.
Plasma stealth technology also faces various technical problems. For example, the plasma
itself emits EM radiation. Also, it takes some time for plasma to be re-absorbed by the
atmosphere and a trail of ionized air would be created behind the moving aircraft.
Thirdly, plasmas (like glow discharges or fluorescent lights) tend to emit a visible glow:
this is not necessarily compatible with overall low observability. Furthermore, it is likely
to be difficult to produce a radar-absorbent plasma around an entire aircraft traveling at
high speed. However, a substantial reduction of an aircraft's RCS may be achieved by
generating radar-absorbent plasma around the most reflective surfaces of the aircraft,
such as the turbojet engine fan blades, engine air intakes, and vertical stabilizers.
At least one detailed computational study exists of plasma-based radar cross section
reduction using three-dimensional computations.
24
11.DETECTION METHODS FOR STEALTH AIRCRAFT
Whenever a technology is developed for military purposes, another technology is also
developed to counter that technology. There are strong efforts to develop a system that
can counter the low obervability of the fifth generation stealth aircraft. There are ways of
detection and elimination of a low observable aircraft but this doesn't give a 100%
success rageat present. 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. A proven method to detect and destroy stealth aircraft is to triangulate
its location with a network of radar systems. This was done while the F-117 was shot
down during the NATO offensive over Yugoslavia. 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.
Figure 11.1:- A very high power 3-d radar can detect a stealth aircraft.
25
12.ADVANTAGES OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY
 A smaller number of stealth vehicles may replace fleet of conventional attacks
vehicles with the same or increased combat efficiency. Possibly resulting in
longer term savings in the military budget.
 A Stealth vehicles strike capability may deter potential enemies from taking
action and keep them in constant fear of strikes, since they can never know if the
attack vehicles are already underway.
 The production of a stealth combat vehicles design may force an opponent to
pursue the same aim, possibly resulting in significant weakening of the
economically inferior party.
 Stationing stealth vehicles in a friendly country is a powerful diplomatic gesture
as stealth vehicles incorporate high technology and military secrets.
 Decreasing causality rates of the pilots and crew members.
 The aircraft cannot be easily aimed by any type of surface to air missiles,
therefore there is minimum chances of hitting that aircraft.
DISADVANTAGE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY
 Stealth technology has its own disadvantages like other technologies. Stealth
aircraft cannot fly as fast or is not maneuverable like conventional aircraft. The
F-117 nighthawk and the aircraft of its category proved this wrong up to an
26
extent. Though the F-117 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 vehicles 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.
 The B-2 Spirit carries a large bomb load, but it has relatively slow speed,
resulting in 18 to 24 hour long missions when it flies half way around the globe
to attack overseas targets. Therefore advance planning and receiving intelligence
in a timely manner is of paramount importance.
 Stealth aircraft are vulnerable to detection immediately before, during and after
using their weaponry. since reduced RCS bombs and cruise Missiles are yet not
available; all armament must be carried internally to avoid increasing the radar
cross section. As soon as the bomb bay doors opened, the planes RCS will be
multiplied.
 Another problem with incorporating "stealth" technology into an aircraft is a
wing shape that does not provide the optimum amount of lift. The resulting
27
increase in drag reduces flight performance. "Stealth" shapes, such as the
"faceting" found on Lockheed's F-117 "stealth" fighter, also tend to be
aerodynamically destabilizing. This is brought under control only through the use
of highly sophisticated computers that serve to electronically balance the aircraft
in flight through its autopilot and control system. All of these modifications,
however, hurt the plane's performance, adding weight, affecting aerodynamics,
and altering the structure of the aircraft. The advantages of stealth technology
must always be weighed against its disadvantages impossible.
13.STEALTH AIRCRAFT OF YESTERDAY, TODAY AND
TOMORROW.
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 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. 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. 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. merica now has a competitors, Russia decided to
respond to the development of the F-22 by making the Su-47 (S-37) "Berkut" and the
28
MiG-35 "Super Fulcrum / Raptor Killer". 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. This time Boeing developed the X-32 and the Lockheed martinh. its X-35.
With the experience gained from developing the F-22, they were tasked with making a
replacement for the F-16. This saw great technological advances, as they had to make the
first operational supersonic VSOL aircraft. Lockheed martin took the technical assistance
of Russian scientists who developed the Yak-141. TheYak-141 is the first supersonic
VSTOL aircraft. 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.
14.APPLICATIONS.
The benefits of stealth apply not only to platforms but to a lot of weapons as well. Anti-
surface munitions like the JSOW, JASSM, Apache/SCALP/Storm Shadow,
Taurus/KEPD and many others are specifically shaped and treated to minimize their radar
and IR signatures. This has two useful payoffs: On the one hand, the weapon itself
becomes less vulnerable to enemy defensive systems, which means that fewer of the
weapons launched will be shot down before reaching their target(s). This in turn means
that fewer weapons and their parent platforms need to be allocated to any given mission,
and finally the end result is that a greater number of targets can be confidently engaged
with a given force. The other benefit is the advantage of surprise and its effect in cases
29
where shrinking the enemy„¢s available reaction time is of the essence. A good example
of such a situation is a typical OCA strike against an airfield. If non-stealthy strike
aircraft or stand-off weapons are used, it is quite likely that they will be detected far
enough out that the enemy will have some time available (even just 4-5 mins will do) to
gets many of his ready-to-fly aircraft in the air and fly them somewhere else to preserve
them. If the aircraft being flushed include armed hot-pad alert fighters (a common
protective measure) these can immediately and actively contribute to the baseâ„¢s
defence against the incoming attack. Contrast this with a situation where, as a result of
using stealthy
40. weapons and/or platforms, the base is caught virtually napping and the attack is
detected so perilously close that the enemy Has no time to get anything in the air but
instead can only rely on his ground-based terminal defences. This can mean the
difference between the base suffering little or no damage and being virtually obliterated.
15.ADVANCED STEALTH AIRCRAFT OR (5th
GENERATION AIRCRAFT).
A fifth-generation jet fighter is a fighter aircraft classification used in the United States
and elsewhere encompassing the most advanced generation of fighter aircraft as of 2013.
Fifth-generation aircraft are designed to incorporate numerous technological advances
over the fourth generation jet fighter. The exact characteristics of fifth generation jet
fighters are controversial and vague, with Lockheed Martin defining them as having all-
aspect stealth even when armed, Low Probability of Intercept Radar (LPIR), high-
performance air frames, advanced avionics features, and highly integrated computer
systems capable of networking with other elements within the theatre of war
for situational awareness. The only currently combat-ready fifth-generation fighters,
the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptors, entered service with the U.S. Air Force in 2005.
30
Figure 15.1:- F-22 RAPTOR (Advanced stealth aircraft)
Figure 15.2:- F-35 lightning
REDUCING DISADVANTAGES OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT.
Previous generation stealth aircraft, such as the B-2 Spirit and F-117 Nighthawk, were
designed to be bombers, lacking the LPI Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA)
radars, LPI radio networks, performance, and weapons necessary to engage other
aircraft. In the early 1970s, various American design projects identified stealth, speed,
and maneuverability as key characteristics of a next generation air to air combat aircraft.
This led to the Request for Information for the Advanced Tactical Fighter which results
in the formation advance 5th
generation stealth aircraft like f-22 raptor and f-35c
lightning. Later the Soviet Union outlined the need for a next-generation aircraft to
replace fourth-generation fighter aircraft. Two projects were proposed to meet this need,
31
the 4.5th generation fighter aircraft: Sukhoi Su-47 and the Mikoyan Project
1.44 (although later modernized MiG-35 to 4.5th generation fighter).
 Software defined aircraft.
All revealed fifth-generation fighters use commercial off-the-shelf main
processors to directly control all sensors to form a consolidated view of the battle
space with both onboard and networked sensors, while previous generation jet
fighters used federated systems where each sensor or pod would present its own
readings for the pilot to combine in their own mind a view of the battle space.
 Advanced engines with thrust vectoring nozzle.
Fifth generation jet fighters use the newest generation of high performance jet
engines and only the American Pratt & Whitney F119 is fully developed. These
engines come with thrust vectoring nozzles. Thrust vectoring, also thrust vector
control or TVC, is the ability of an aircraft, or other vehicle to manipulate the
direction of the thrust from its engine(s) or motor in order
to control the attitude or angular velocity of the vehicle. Subsequently, it was
realized that using vectored thrust in combat situations enabled aircraft to perform
various maneuvers not available to conventional-engined planes.
To perform turns, aircraft that use no thrust vectoring must rely on aerodynamic
control surfaces only, such as ailerons or elevator; craft with vectoring must still
use control surfaces, but to a lesser extent.
 Internal pay load and fuel tank.
All the missile system and fuel tank is placed internally so that radar waves will
not strike it and gets reflected back to the radar stations.
 Improve aerodynamics.
More recent design techniques allow for stealthy designs such as the F-22 without
compromising aerodynamic performance. Newer stealth aircraft, like the F-22, F-
35 and the Sukhoi T-50, 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.
32
16.FUTURE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY.
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.
Figure 16.1:- Stealth helicopter (RAH-COMANCHE)
Figure 16.2:- BAE type-45 Destroyer
These are evident from theRAH-66 "Comanche" and the BAE Type-45 stealth 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.
33
Figure 16.3:- X-47B UCAV (Unmanned combat air vehicle)
In future stealth technology can also be applied to the unmanned combat air
vehicle (UCAV). In these (ucav) pilots are not required for flying it instead it is
controlled by command and control system
34
17.FUTURE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY-(INDIA).
 In October 2007, India and Russia signed a pact to develop a Fifth Generation
Fighter Aircraft which is a derivative project from the PAK FA T-50. The Indian
version will be a two-seater, air superiority fighter. Another agreement was signed
between India's Hindustan Aeronautics and Russia's United Aircraft
Corporation (UAC) in December 2008 which detailed the joint development and
production the aircraft. Work on the program will start by mid-2009 and the
program is expected to be completed by 2017. Indian Air Force will get 200 twin-
seated and 50 single seated FGFAs. Sukhoi/HAL FGFA when fully developed is
intended to replace the MiG-29 Fulcrum and Mikoyan MiG-27 in the Indian
inventory.
Figure 17.1:- Sukhoi PAK-FA (SU-50) HAL/SUKHOI.
 India (HAL) has also started design work on an Advanced Medium Combat
Aircraft (AMCA), which is a twin-engined 5th generation stealth multirole
fighter. It will complement the HAL Tejas, the Sukhoi/HAL FGFA, the Sukhoi
Su-30MKI and the Dassault Rafale in the Indian Air Force. The AMCA will be
designed with a very small radar cross-section and will also feature serpentine
35
shaped air-intakes, internal weapons and the use of composites and other
materials. It will be a twin-engined design using the GTX Kaveri engine
with thrust vectoring with the possibility of giving the
aircraft supercruise capabilities.
 The Shivalik class or Project 17 class is a class of multi-role stealth frigates in
service with the Indian Navy. They are the first stealth warships built in India.
The Shivalik class, along with the seven Project 17A frigates currently being
developed from them, are projected be the principal frigates of the Indian Navy in
the first half of the 21st century.
Figure 17.2:- INS-SHIVALIK (Stealth frigate).
 DRDO of india is also developing the AURA (Autonomous Unmanned Research
Aircraft) which is an Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) for the Indian Air
Force. The design work on the UCAV is carried out by Aeronautical
Development Agency (ADE). The AURA UCAV will be a tactical stealth aircraft
built largely with composites, and capable of delivering laser-guided strike
weapons. The AURA will cruise at medium altitude and will be capable of
carrying two or more guided strike weapons with on-board sensors for targeting
36
and weapon guidance. The flight control system and data link packages of Aura
(unmanned combat aerial vehicle) will be designed and developed jointly by
ADA and Defense Electronic Application Laboratory.
Figure 17.3:- UCAV-AURA (Cocept)
37
18.CONCLUSION.
The Detection and Stealth Technology has improved significantly more advanced in the
last fifty years or so. This trend is likely to continue as these two oppose each other. Till
date stealth aircraft have been used in several low and moderate intensity conflicts,
including operation Desert Storm. Operation Allied Force and the 2003 invasion of Iraq
.In each Case they were employed to strike high value targets which were either out of
range of conventional aircraft or which were too heavily defended for conventional
aircraft to strike without a high risk of loss. In addition, because The stealth aircraft aren’t
going to be dodging surface to air missiles and anti-aircraft artillery over the target they
can aim more carefully and thus are more likely to hit the high value targets early in the
campaign (or even for it) ,Before other aircraft had the opportunity to degrade the
opposing air defense. However, given the increasing prevalence of excellent Russion-bilt
Surface –to-air missile (SAM) system on the open market, stealth aircraft are likely to be
very important in a high intensity conflict in order to gain and maintain air supremacy.
Stealth technology .in future, would be required for clearing the way for deeper strikes ,
which conventional aircraft would find very difficult .For example ,China license-builds
a wide range of SAM systems in quantity and would be able to heavily defend important
strategic and tactical targets in the event of some kind of conflict .Even if antiradiation
weapons are used in an attempt to destroy the SAM radars of such systems, these SAMs
are capable of shooting down weapons fired against them. The surprise of a stealth attack
may become the only reasonable way of making a safe corridor for conventional
bombers. It would then be possible for the less-stealth force with superior weaponry to
suppress the remaining systems and gain air superiority. The development and the
deployment of the Visby’s- the first commissioned Stealth ships has raised new threats in
the maritime boundaries. The sudden appearance of sea clutters on the radar at a region
may be these ships. The plasma stealth technology raises new hopes of engineering
brilliance. As plasma is said to absorb all electromagnetic radiation the development of a
counter stealth technology to such a mechanism will be a strenuous task. Well to
conclude the current scenario appears something similar to the cold war both sides are
38
accumulating weapons to counter each other and each side can be termed as “Stealth
Technology” and the other as “Anti-Stealth Technology”. It’s an arm race except it isn't
between specific countries. “It’s a fight between Technologies”.
39
19.REFERENCE
1. http://www.totalairdominance.50megs.com/articles/stealth.htm
2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_technology
3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar
4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_ship
5. http://www.resonancepub.com/images/stealth_ship.gif
6. http://images.google.co.in/images
7. http://science.howstuffworks.com/question69.htm
8. http://www.espionageinfo.com/Sp-Te/Stealth-Technology.html
9. http://www.airplanedesign.info/51.htm
10. http://www.hitechweb.genezis.eu/stealth4f_soubory/image013.jpg
11. http://www.geocities.com/electrogravitics/scm.html
12. http://www.razorworks.com/enemyengaged/chguide/images/lo- reflecting.gif
13. htp://www.x20.org/library/thermal/pdm/ir_thermography.htm
14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_stealth
15. http://www.military-heat.com/43/russian-plasma
40

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Stealth technology 2

  • 1. 1 Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s College of Engineering and Technology. Noida, U.P., India Seminar Report On “STEALTH TECHNOLOGY” As Part of B. Tech Curriculum Submitted By: Name: VIVEK-BISHT Semester: 05 Roll No: 1109540043 Under the Guidance of: Guide:- Mr. Rahul chauhan. Seminar Coordinator:- Mr.Ravindra Ram. (Seminar Coordinator) Submitted to:- Prof. Sachin Jambhale. Mechanical Engineering Department, MGM’s COET, Noida.
  • 2. 2 Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s College of Engineering and Technology. Noida, U.P., India Department of Mechanical Engineering CERTIFICATE This is to certify that Mr. VIVEK-BISHT of B. Tech. Mechanical Engineering, Class: TT-ME Roll No. 1109540043 has delivered seminar on the topic “STEALTH TECHNOLOGY”. His seminar presentation and report during the academic year as the part of B. Tech Mechanical Engineering curriculum was poor/fair/good/excellent. (Seminar Coordinator) (Guide) (Head of the Department) Mr. Ravindra Ram Mr. Rahul chauhan Mr. Sachin Jambhale
  • 3. 3 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I express my sincere gratitude to Prof. SACHIN JAMBHALE, Head of the Department, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Mahatma Gandhi Mission’s college of engineering and Technology, Noida, for his valuable suggestion, advice, guidance and encouragement in carrying out the seminar. I especially thank Mr. RAVINDRA RAM and Mr. RAHUL CHAUHAN, our seminar coordinator and guide, for their guidance and help rendered for the successful completion of my seminar and for making available the facilities of the department for the presentation of this seminar. I also express my gratitude to all members of staff, my parents and friends who were very co-operative for the successful presentation of this seminar report. Last but not the least I thank the God Almighty for his abundant grace on preparing this seminar report. VIVEK-BISHT
  • 4. 4 ABSTRACT Stealth refers to the act of trying to hide or evade detection. Stealth technology is ever increasingly becoming a paramount tool in battle especially “high technology wars” if one may occur in the future where invincibility means invincibility. Able to strike with impunity, stealth aircraft, missiles and warships are virtually invisible to most types of military sensors. The experience gained at the warfront emphasizes the need to incorporate stealth features at the design stage itself. According to conventional military wisdom, surprise is the best form of attack. With evermore sophisticated methods of detection, however, catching the enemy unawares has becoming increasingly difficult. Thus paving way to the development of increasingly sophisticated technologies that help in evading the enemy's ever vigilant “eyes”. Stealth Technology essentially deals with designs and materials engineered for the military purpose of avoiding detection by radar or any other electronic system. Stealth, or anti-detection, technology is applied to vehicles (e.g., tanks, missiles, ships, and aircraft)with the goal of making the object more difficult to detect at closer and closer ranges thus providing an element of surprise in the attacks. Attacking with surprise gives the attacker more time to perform its mission and exit before the defending force can counterattack. For example, If a surface to air missile a type of antiaircraft battery defending a target observes a bomb falling and surmises that there must be a stealth aircraft in the vicinity it is still unable to respond if it cannot get a lock on the aircraft in order to feed guidance. As stated earlier stealth technology can be looked upon as a perfect blend between the engineering skills of "designing" and "technology". And for attaining stealth various dectection techniques have to be surpassed.
  • 5. 5 CONTENTS TOPIC PAGE PAGE NO: 1. INTRODUCTION. 1. 2. STEALTH PRINCIPLE. 2. 3. HISTORY. 3. 4. WHAT IS STEALTH. 5. 5. RADAR. 6. 5.1. RADAR CROSS SECTION (RCS). 7. 5.2. RADAR ABSORBING MATERIAL (RAM) 8. 6. INFRARED (IR). 10. 7. VISUAL STEALTH. 11. 8. VECHICAL SHAPE. 13. 9. METHODS OF AVOIDING DETECTION. 15. 10. PLASMA STEALTH. 16. 11. DETECTION METHODS OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT. 18. 12. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY 19. 13. STEALTH AIRCRAFT OF YESTERDAY TODAY AND TOMMOROW. 21. 14. APPLICATION. 22. 15. ADVANCED STEALTH AIRCRAFT (5th GENERATION AIRCRAFT). 23. 16. FUTURE OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT. 25. 17. FUTURE OF STRALTH AIRCRAFT-(INDIA). 28. 18. CONCLUSION 31. 19. REFERENCE 33.
  • 6. 6 LIST OF FIGURES Fig no TOPIC PAGE NO. 3.1 F-117A (“NIGHTHAWK”). 3 3.2 Sea shadow 4 5.1 Concept of radar cross-section. 7 5.2 Properties of RAM’s Based on angle of incidence. 8 7.1 F-117B as it Conducted almost all its mission at night. 12 8.1 F-35B. 13 8.2 B-2 (stealth bomber). 13 11.1 A very High power 3-D Radar can detect a stealth aircraft. 18 15.1 F-22 Raptor (Advanced stealth fighter). 24 15.2 F-35 Lightning. 24 16.1 Stealth helicopter (RAH-comanche). 26 16.2 BAE type 45-Destroyer. 26 16.3 X-47B (UCAV) Unmanned combat air Vechical 27 17.1 Sukhoi PAK-FA (Su50) HAL/SUKHOI. 28 17.2 INS-shivalik (stealth frigate). 29 17.3 UCAV-AURA (Concept) 30
  • 7. 7 STEALTH TECHNOLOGY: 1.INTRODUCTION Stealth or low observability (as it is scientifically known) is one of the most misunderstood and misinterpreted concepts in military aviation by the common man. Stealth aircraft are considered as invisible aircraft, which dominate the skies. With an additional boost from Hollywood action movies, stealth is today termed as the concept invincibility rather than invisibility. Though, the debate still continues on whether stealth technology can make an aircraft invincible it was found that stealth aircraft are detectable by radar. The motive behind incorporating stealth technology in an aircraft is not just to avoid missiles being fired at is but also to give total deniability to covert operations. This is very much useful to strike targets where it is impossible to reach. Thus we can clearly say that the job of a stealth aircraft pilot is not to let others know that he was ever there. In simple terms, stealth technology allows an aircraft to be partially invisible to Radar or any other means of detection. This doesn't allow the aircraft to be fully invisible on radar. Stealth technology cannot make the aircraft invisible to enemy or friendly radar. All it can do is to reduce the detection range or an aircraft. This is similar to the camouflage tactics used by soldiers in jungle warfare. Unless the soldier comes near you, you can't see him. Though this gives a clear and safe striking distance for the aircraft, there is still a threat from radar systems, which can detect stealth aircraft. Stealth technology is expanded into each of those areas which seek to detect the aircraft, ships & missiles. Thus it is essential to develop visual, infrared acoustic and radar stealth. However many countries have announced that they have developed counter-stealth techniques that allow them to negate stealth.
  • 8. 8 2.STEALTH PRINCIPLES Stealth technology (or LO for "Low Observability") is not a single technology. It is a combination of technologies that attempt to greatly reduce the distances at which a vehicle can be detected; in particular radar cross section reductions, but also acoustic, thermal, and other aspects. Stealth technology aims at minimizing signatures and signals, and prevent/delay detection and identification, thus increasing the efficiency of the vehicles own countermeasures and sensors. Ben Rich, the leader of the Lockheed team that designed the F117, pretty much sums up stealth technology when he say: “A stealth aircraft has to be stealthy in six disciplines: radar, infrared, visual, acoustic, smoke and contrail. If you don’t do that, you flunk the course.” However, not all disciplines are equally important when discussing any given platform category. Underwater warfare will naturally hand dominance to the acoustic spectrum. However, land combat will emphasize visual, infrared and acoustic signatures. Radar and infrared bands dominate the scene of airspace surveillance. 3.HISTORY OF STEALTH. In the late 1930’s and 1940’s Radar technology was commonly used for dectecting aircrafts. Since radar technology was developed during the Second World War, it should not be surprising to learn that the first attempts at stealth technology occurred during this period also. It might be surprising to learn, however, that it was the Germans, not the Allies, who worked on the project. The Germans were responding to the success the Allies were having with the early radar sets. Not only was their radar very effective at spotting incoming enemy bombers, but it was also very important in the battle for the Atlantic. The Germans developed a radar absorbing paint. While this ferrite-based paint was much too heavy for aircraft, it could be used on submarines. The United States' first stealth development was totally accidental and quickly forgotten. Shortly after the war, Northrop Aircraft developed an experimental bomber called the YB-49 Flying Wing. As the name implies, the aircraft had no body or tail; it was simply a
  • 9. 9 large flying wing. The aircraft was assigned to perform a normal test flight over the Pacific. When the test was completed, they turned and headed for home, pointing the slim wing edge directly at the base radar station. The radar crew was shocked to see the aircraft suddenly appear almost overhead because they had seen no evidence of it on the radar screen. Interest in the project quickly faded after the bomber crashed in the Mojave Desert in 1948. The plane was very unstable in flight and this stability problem was listed as the cause of the crash. With the “cold war” and the Soviet Union well under way in the early 1950s, it became imperative that the U.S. should learn about military developments deep inside the country. Old bombers were converted to spy planes, but they soon proved to be very vulnerable to attack. In order to plug this intelligence gap, a new plane was designed. The idea was to create a plane that could cruise safely at very high altitudes, well out of the reach of any existing fighter. The design specification required that “consideration is given…to minimize the delectability by enemy radar.” The task of making this plane a reality fell upon the Advanced Development Projects team at Lockheed in California. This was a small team of highly qualified and highly motivated engineers and pilots. This highly secret facility became known as the “Skunk Works” and has been on the leading edge of stealth technology since the early 1950s. The aircraft they developed became known as the U-2, and it was highly successful. After much effort they were successful in building an aircraft that could evade the enemy RADAR’s called the F-117A nicknamed as the “Nighthawk”, developed by Lockheed Martin in 1983. Figure 3.1:- 117A (“NIGHTHAWK”)
  • 10. 10 There is a boat the Skunk Works developed shortly after the F-117A. It is called the "Sea Shadow" and was built in 27 months and operated secretly in the late 1980 for $200 million dollars. The Sea Shadow was first unveiled on April 9, 1993. The barge used for the program was the Hughes Mining Barge (HMB-1), a vessel was originally built for a secret CIA project in the early '70s, and had been in mothballs for years. The CIA project, it has since come out, was an attempt to recover a Soviet nuclear sub that sank off the coast of Hawaii in 1968. The project included two ships, the Gosimir Explorer which was basically a ship capable of deep Sea mining, and the HMB-1 which actually submerged under the Gosimir Explorer. The HMB-1 had a claw to retrieve the USSR submarine, which was operated by the drill on the Gossimir Explorer. (The operation was partially successful with half of the ill-fated Soviet sub and crew being brought up from the ocean bottom.) The Sea Shadow's stats are: Length: 160 ft. Width: 68 ft. Draft: 14.5 ft. Displacement: 560 tons (full load). In May 1999, the Sea Shadow was reactivated by the Navy for a 5 year program in order to "research future ship engineering concepts and to serve as a host vessel for companies to demonstrate advanced naval technologies." The Sea Shadow is currently operation out of San Francisco Bay. Figure 3.2:- SEA SHADOW
  • 11. 11 4.WHAT IS STEALTH? In simple terms, stealth technology allows an aircraft to be partially invisible to Radar or any other means of detection. This doesn't allow the aircraft to be fully invisible on radar. Stealth technology cannot make the aircraft invisible to enemy or friendly radar. All it can do is to reduce the detection range or an aircraft. This is similar to the camouflage tactics used by soldiers in jungle warfare. Unless the soldier comes near you, you can't see him. Though this gives a clear and safe striking distance for the aircraft, there is still a threat from radar systems, which can detect stealth aircraft. The Russian 1R13 radar system is very much capable of detecting the F-117 "Night Hawk" stealth fighter. There are also some other radar systems made in other countries, which are capable of detecting the F-117. During the Gulf war the Iraqis were able to detect the F-117 but failed to eliminate its threat because of lack of coordination. The most unforgettable incident involving the detection and elimination of a stealth aircraft was during the NATO air-war over Yugoslavia. This was done by a Russian built "not so advanced" SAM (possibly the SA-3 or SA-6). The SAM system presumably used optical detection for target acquisition in the case. HOW DOES STEALTH TECHNOLOGY WORK? The concept behind the stealth technology is very simple. As a matter of fact it is totally the principle of reflection and absorption that makes aircraft "stealthy". Deflecting the incoming radar waves into another direction and thus reducing the number of waves does this, which returns to the radar. Another concept that is followed is to absorb the incoming radar waves totally and to redirect the absorbed electromagnetic energy in another direction. What ever may be the method used, the level of stealth an aircraft can achieve depends totally on the design and the substance with which it is made of.
  • 12. 12 5.RADAR. In the early 1930's and 1940's radar technology was increasingly used to dectect aircrafts. During the Second World War all counters Germany, Great Britain, France and The United States of America used this technology for navigating ships and to dectect approaching enemy aircrafts. This technology didn't pose much of a threat then as this was not incorporated into Antiaircraft defenses then. This whole story changed during The Vietnam and Yom Kipper wars. to make the feet more secure for use and more effective the Americans who were the sheet anchor needed to develop an effective way to evade radar. RADAR (RADAR DETECTION AND RANGING): Thus RADAR as it is abbreviated so uses radio waves for dectection of the target. Radar basically works on two major principles. ECHO: Echo can be considered as a wave bouncing off a surface and coming back to the source. This Principle can be applied for all types of waves starting from sound waves to light waves. The time for the reception of the transmitted signal to reach the transmitter cum receiver can be effectively used to calculate the distance of the target from the transmitter. THE DOPLIER SHIFT: This being the second principle of the radar. This effect is more commonly felt for sound. The sound that you hear as a vehicle is approaching you is at a higher pitch or a higher frequency than the sound you hear when the vehicle is moving away from you. This property when applied to radar can be used to determine the speed of the object. The frequency of the reflected wave can be the same, greater or lower than the transmitted radio wave. if the reflected wave frequency is less then this means that the target is moving away from the transmitter and if higher then moving close to the transmitter and if constant then the target is not moving like a helicopter hovering at a point. This can be used to predict the speeds of the target too.
  • 13. 13 5.1 RCS (RADAR CROSS SECTION SURFACE). RAS or Radar absorbent surfaces are the surfaces on the aircraft, which can deflect the incoming radar waves and reduce the detection range. RAS works due to the angles at which the structures on the aircraft's fuselage or the fuselage itself are placed. These structures can be anything from wings to a refueling boom on the aircraft. The extensive use of RAS is clearly visible in the F-117 "Night Hawk". Due to the facets (as they are called) on the fuselage, most of the incoming radar waves are reflected to another direction. Due to these facets on the fuselage, the F-117 is a very unstable aircraft. The concept behind the RAS is that of reflecting a light beam from a torch with a mirror. The angle at which the reflection takes place is also more important. When we consider a mirror being rotated from 0o to 90o, the amount of light that is reflected in the direction of the light beam is more. At 90o, maximum amount of light that is reflected back to same direction as the light beam's source. On the other hand when the mirror is tilted above 90o and as it proceeds to 180o, the amount of light reflected in the same direction decreases drastically. Figure 5.1:- Concept of Radar cross section
  • 14. 14 5.2RAM (RADAR ABSORBING MATERIAL). Radar absorbent surfaces absorb the incoming radar waves rather than deflecting it in another direction. RAS totally depends on the material with which the surface of the aircraft is made. Though the composition of this material is a top secret. The F-117 extensively uses RAM to reduce its radar signature or its radar cross section. The RAS is believed to be silicon based inorganic compound. This is assumed by the information that the RAM coating on the B-2 is not water roof. This is just a supposition and may not be true. What we know is that the RAM coating over the B-2 is placed like wrapping a cloth over the plane. When radar sends a beam in the direction of the B-2, the radar waves are absorbed by the plane's surface and is redirected to another direction after it is absorbed. Figure 5.2:- Properties of RAM’s Based on angle of incidence TYPES OF RAMs: (i) Iron ball paint One of the most commonly known types of RAM is iron ball paint. It contains tiny spheres coated with carbonyl iron or ferrite. Radar waves induce molecular oscillations from the alternating magnetic field in this paint, which leads to conversion of the radar energy into heat. The heat is then transferred to the aircraft and dissipated. The iron
  • 15. 15 particles in the paint are obtained by decomposition of iron pentacarbonyl and may contain traces of carbon, oxygen and nitrogen.A related type of RAM consists of neoprene polymer sheets with ferrite grains or carbon black particles (containing about 30% of crystalline graphite) embedded in the polymer matrix. The tiles were used on early versions of the F-117A Nighthawk, although more recent models use painted RAM. The painting of the F-117 is done by industrial robots with the plane covered in tiles glued to the fuselage and the remaining gaps filled with iron ball paint. The United States Air Force introduced a radar absorbent paint made from both ferrofluidic and non- magnetic substances. By reducing the reflection of electromagnetic waves, this material helps to reduce the visibility of RAM painted aircraft on radar. (ii) Foam absorber It is used as lining of anechoic chambers for electromagnetic radiation measurements. This material typically consists of fireproofed urethane foam loaded with carbon black, and cut into long pyramids. The length from base to tip of the pyramid structure is chosen based on the lowest expected frequency and the amount of absorption required. For low frequency damping, this distance is often 24 inches, while high frequency panels are as short as 3-4 inches. Panels of RAM are installed with the tips pointing inward to the chamber. Pyramidal RAM attenuates signal by two effects: scattering and absorption. Scattering can occur both coherently, when reflected waves are in-phase but directed away from the receiver, and incoherently where waves are picked up by the receiver but are out of phase and thus have lower signal strength. This incoherent scattering also occurs within the foam structure, with the suspended carbon particles promoting destructive interference. Internal scattering can result in as much as 10dB of attenuation. Meanwhile, the pyramid shapes are cut at angles that maximize the number of bounces a wave makes within the structure. With each bounce, the wave loses energy to the foam material and thus exits with lower signal strength.[4] Other foam absorbers are available in flat sheets, using an increasing gradient of carbon loadings in different layers. (iii) Jaumann absorber A Jaumann absorber or Jaumann layer is a radar absorbent device. When first introduced in 1943, the Jaumann layer consisted of two equally-spaced reflective surfaces and a conductive ground plane. One can think of it as a generalized, multi-layered Salisbury
  • 16. 16 screen as the principles are similar. Being a resonant absorber (i.e. it uses wave interfering to cancel the reflected wave), the Jaumann layer is dependent upon the λ/4 spacing between the first reflective surface and the ground plane and between the two reflective surfaces (a total of λ/4 + λ/4). Because the wave can resonate at two frequencies, the Jaumann layer produces two absorption maxima across a band of wavelengths (if using the two layers configuration). These absorbers must have all of the layers parallel to each other and the ground plane that they conceal. More elaborate Jaumann absorbers use series of dielectric surfaces that separate conductive sheets. The conductivity of those sheets increases with proximity to the ground plane. 6.IR (INFRARED). Another important factor that influences the stealth capability of an aircraft is the IR (infrared) signature given out by the plane. Usually planes are visible in thermal imaging systems because of the high temperature exhaust they give out. This is a great disadvantage to stealth aircraft as missiles also have IR guidance system. If reducing the radar signature of an aircraft is tough, then reducing the IR signature of the aircraft is tougher. Engines for stealth aircraft are specifically built to have a very low IR signature. The technology behind this is top secret like others in stealth aircraft. Another main aspect that reduces the IR signature of a stealth aircraft is to place the engines deep into the fuselage. This is done in stealth aircraft like the B-2, F-22 and the JSF. The IR reduction scheme used in F-117 is very much different from the others. The engines are placed deep within the aircraft like any stealth aircraft and at the outlet, a section of the fuselage deflects the exhaust to another direction. This is useful for deflecting the hot exhaust gases in another direction. Every IR system model is composed of basic building blocks and every IR system whether active or passive, is composed of most if not all of these building blocks. For example, all IR systems include a source or target, a background, an atmosphere or environment, optics and a detector. With the aid of this generalized model, the path of IR
  • 17. 17 radiation from its sources can be analyzed, step – by – step through the various modifications necessary for its final presentation in some form of display. 7.VISUAL STEALTH. Historically, stealth aircrafts like the F-117 and the B-2 Spirit were painted black and were supposed to fly only during the night time for effective camouflaging. However, the concept of day-time stealth has been researched by Lockheed Martin, such a plane would need to blend into the background sky and also carry antiradar and infrared stealth technology. Researchers at the University of Florida are in the process of developing an ‘electro chromic polymer’. These thin sheets cover the aircraft’s white skin and sense the hue, color and brightness of the surrounding sky and ground. The image received is then projected onto the aircraft’s opposite side. When charged to a certain voltage, these panels undergo color change. At the Tonopah test range airstrip in Nevada, another system was tested; as claimed by a technician working at the base, an F-15 equipped with this technology took off from the runway only to disappear from sight 3 Km away. Yet another similar “skin” is being tested at the topsecret Groom Lake facility at Area 51 in Nevada. It is composed of an electro-magnetically conductive polyaniline-based radar absorbent composite material. The system also disposes photo-sensitive receptors all over the plane that scans the surrounding area; subsequently the data is interpreted by an onboard computer which outputs it much like a computer screen. Perhaps one day, in the very near future, one may fly in a completely invisible aircraft. B-2 Spirit bomber, Boeing’s Bird of Prey and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter represent the pinnacle of modern day advancements in this particular field of human endeavor. 1. Aircraft Camouflage The design of camouflage for aircraft is complicated by the fact that the appearance of the aircraft's background varies widely, depending on the location of the observer (above or below) and the nature of the background. Many aircraft camouflage schemes of the past used counter shading, where a light color was used underneath and darker colors above. Other camouflage schemes acknowledge that the aircraft will be twisting and
  • 18. 18 turning while in combat, and the camouflage pattern is applied to the entire aircraft. Neutral and dull colors are preferred, and two or three shades selected, depending on the size of the aircraft. Though air-to-air combat is often initialized outside of visual range, at medium distances camouflage can make an enemy pilot hesitate until certain of the attitude, distance and maneuver of the camouflaged aircraft. The higher speeds of modern aircraft and the reliance on radar and missiles in air combat have reduced the value of visual camouflage, while increasing the value of electronic "stealth" measures. Modern paint is designed to absorb electromagnetic radiation used by radar, reducing the signature of the aircraft, and to limit the emission of infrared light used by heat seeking missiles to detect their target. Further advances in aircraft camouflage are being investigated in the field of active camouflage. Figure 7.1:- F-117b as it conducted almost all its flights at night 2. Ship Camouflage Until the 20th century, naval weapons had a very short range, so camouflage was unimportant for ships or the men on board them. Paint schemes were selected on the basis of ease of maintenance or aesthetics, typically buff upperworks (with polished brass fittings) and white or black hulls. At the turn of the century the increasing range of naval engagements, as demonstrated by the Battle of Tsushima, prompted the introduction of the first camouflage, in the form of some solid shade of gray overall, in the hope that ships would fade into the mist.
  • 19. 19 8.VECHICAL SHAPE. The possibility of designing aircraft in such a manner as to reduce their radar cross- section was recognized in the late 1930s, when the first radar tracking systems were employed, and it has been known since at least the 1960s that aircraft shape makes a significant difference in detectability. TheAvro Vulcan, a British bomber of the 1960s, had a remarkably small appearance on radar despite its large size, and occasionally disappeared from radar screens entirely. It is now known that it had a fortuitously stealthy shape apart from the vertical element of the tail. In contrast, the Tupolev 95Russian 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. Another important factor is internal construction. Some stealth aircraft have skin that is radar transparent or absorbing, behind which are structures termed re-entrant triangles. Radar waves penetrating the skin get trapped in these structures, reflecting off the internal faces and losing energy. This method was first used on the Blackbird series . Figure 8.1:- F-35B Figure 8.2:- B-2 Stealth bomber The most efficient way to reflect radar waves back to the emitting 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
  • 20. 20 surfaces to reduce corner reflections formed between them. A more radical method 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 extant aircraft, install baffles in the air intakes, so that the compressor blades are not visible to radar. A stealthy shape must be devoid of complex bumps or protrusions of any kind; meaning that weapons, fuel tanks, and other stores must not be carried externally. Any stealthy vehicle becomes un-stealthy when a door or hatch opens. Planform alignment is also often used in stealth designs. Planform alignment involves using a small number of surface orientations in the shape of the structure. For example, on the F-22A Raptor, the leading edges of the wing and the tail surfaces are set at the same angle. Careful inspection shows that many small structures, such as the air intake bypass doors and the air refuelingaperture, 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 signaldetectable at many angles. Stealth airframes sometimes display distinctive serrations on some exposed edges, such as the engine ports. The YF-23 has such serrations on the exhaust ports. This is another example in the use of re-entrant triangles and planform alignment, this time on the external airframe. Shaping requirements have strong negative influence on the aircraft's aerodynamic properties. The F-117 has poor aerodynamics, is inherently unstable, and cannot be flown without a fly-by-wire control system. 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, reflect off objects (the inside of a cockpit has a complex shape, with a pilot helmet alone forming 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 pilot vision.
  • 21. 21 9.METHODS OF AVOIDING DETECTION .  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 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 enemy radar is only able to detect wingman while the attacking fighter approaches the enemy without making any sharp turn. This is done not to make sudden variation in a stealth aircraft’s radar signature.
  • 22. 22 10.PLASMA STEALTH. Plasma stealth technology is what can be called as "Active stealth technology" in scientific terms. This technology was first developed by the Russians. It is a milestone in the field of stealth technology. The technology behind this not at all new. 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. Plasma stealth will be incorporated in the MiG-35 "Super Fulcrum / Raptor Killer". This is a fighter which is an advanced derivative of the MiG-29 "Fulcrum / Baaz". Initial trials have been conducted on this technology, but most of the results have proved to be fruitful. When electromagnetic waves, such as radar signals, propagate into a conductive plasma, ions and electrons are displaced as a result of the time varying electric and magnetic fields. The wave field gives energy to the particles. The particles generally return some fraction of the energy they have gained to the wave, but some energy may be permanently absorbed as heat by processes like scattering or resonant acceleration, or transferred into other wave types by mode conversion or nonlinear effects. A plasma can, at least in principle, absorb all the energy in an incoming wave, and this is the key to plasma stealth. However, plasma stealth implies a substantial reduction of an aircraft's RCS, making it more difficult (but not necessarily impossible) to detect. The mere fact of detection of an aircraft by a radar does not guarantee an accurate targeting solution needed to intercept the aircraft or to engage it with missiles. A reduction in RCS also results in a proportional reduction in detection range, allowing an aircraft to get closer to the radar before being detected. The central issue here is frequency of the incoming signal. A plasma will simply reflect radio waves below a certain frequency (which depends on the plasma properties). This aids long-range communications, because low-frequency radio signals bounce between the Earth and the ionosphere and may therefore travel long distances. Early-warning
  • 23. 23 over-the-horizon radars utilize such low-frequency radio waves. Most military airborne and air defense radars, however, operate in the microwave band, where many plasmas, including the ionosphere, absorb or transmit the radiation (the use of microwave communication between the ground and communication satellites demonstrates that at least some frequencies can penetrate the ionosphere). Plasma surrounding an aircraft might be able to absorb incoming radiation, and therefore prevent any signal reflection from the metal parts of the aircraft: the aircraft would then be effectively invisible to radar. A plasma might also be used to modify the reflected waves to confuse the opponent's radar system: for example, frequency-shifting the reflected radiation would frustrate Doppler filtering and might make the reflected radiation more difficult to distinguish from noise. Control of plasma properties is likely to be important for a functioning plasma stealth device, and it may be necessary to dynamically adjust the plasma density, temperature or composition, or the magnetic field, in order to effectively defeat different types of radar systems. Radars which can flexibly change transmission frequencies might be less susceptible to defeat by plasma stealth technology. Like LO geometry and radar absorbent materials, plasma stealth technology is probably not a panacea against radar. Plasma stealth technology also faces various technical problems. For example, the plasma itself emits EM radiation. Also, it takes some time for plasma to be re-absorbed by the atmosphere and a trail of ionized air would be created behind the moving aircraft. Thirdly, plasmas (like glow discharges or fluorescent lights) tend to emit a visible glow: this is not necessarily compatible with overall low observability. Furthermore, it is likely to be difficult to produce a radar-absorbent plasma around an entire aircraft traveling at high speed. However, a substantial reduction of an aircraft's RCS may be achieved by generating radar-absorbent plasma around the most reflective surfaces of the aircraft, such as the turbojet engine fan blades, engine air intakes, and vertical stabilizers. At least one detailed computational study exists of plasma-based radar cross section reduction using three-dimensional computations.
  • 24. 24 11.DETECTION METHODS FOR STEALTH AIRCRAFT Whenever a technology is developed for military purposes, another technology is also developed to counter that technology. There are strong efforts to develop a system that can counter the low obervability of the fifth generation stealth aircraft. There are ways of detection and elimination of a low observable aircraft but this doesn't give a 100% success rageat present. 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. A proven method to detect and destroy stealth aircraft is to triangulate its location with a network of radar systems. This was done while the F-117 was shot down during the NATO offensive over Yugoslavia. 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. Figure 11.1:- A very high power 3-d radar can detect a stealth aircraft.
  • 25. 25 12.ADVANTAGES OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY  A smaller number of stealth vehicles may replace fleet of conventional attacks vehicles with the same or increased combat efficiency. Possibly resulting in longer term savings in the military budget.  A Stealth vehicles strike capability may deter potential enemies from taking action and keep them in constant fear of strikes, since they can never know if the attack vehicles are already underway.  The production of a stealth combat vehicles design may force an opponent to pursue the same aim, possibly resulting in significant weakening of the economically inferior party.  Stationing stealth vehicles in a friendly country is a powerful diplomatic gesture as stealth vehicles incorporate high technology and military secrets.  Decreasing causality rates of the pilots and crew members.  The aircraft cannot be easily aimed by any type of surface to air missiles, therefore there is minimum chances of hitting that aircraft. DISADVANTAGE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY  Stealth technology has its own disadvantages like other technologies. Stealth aircraft cannot fly as fast or is not maneuverable like conventional aircraft. The F-117 nighthawk and the aircraft of its category proved this wrong up to an
  • 26. 26 extent. Though the F-117 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 vehicles 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.  The B-2 Spirit carries a large bomb load, but it has relatively slow speed, resulting in 18 to 24 hour long missions when it flies half way around the globe to attack overseas targets. Therefore advance planning and receiving intelligence in a timely manner is of paramount importance.  Stealth aircraft are vulnerable to detection immediately before, during and after using their weaponry. since reduced RCS bombs and cruise Missiles are yet not available; all armament must be carried internally to avoid increasing the radar cross section. As soon as the bomb bay doors opened, the planes RCS will be multiplied.  Another problem with incorporating "stealth" technology into an aircraft is a wing shape that does not provide the optimum amount of lift. The resulting
  • 27. 27 increase in drag reduces flight performance. "Stealth" shapes, such as the "faceting" found on Lockheed's F-117 "stealth" fighter, also tend to be aerodynamically destabilizing. This is brought under control only through the use of highly sophisticated computers that serve to electronically balance the aircraft in flight through its autopilot and control system. All of these modifications, however, hurt the plane's performance, adding weight, affecting aerodynamics, and altering the structure of the aircraft. The advantages of stealth technology must always be weighed against its disadvantages impossible. 13.STEALTH AIRCRAFT OF YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW. 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 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. 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. 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. merica now has a competitors, Russia decided to respond to the development of the F-22 by making the Su-47 (S-37) "Berkut" and the
  • 28. 28 MiG-35 "Super Fulcrum / Raptor Killer". 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. This time Boeing developed the X-32 and the Lockheed martinh. its X-35. With the experience gained from developing the F-22, they were tasked with making a replacement for the F-16. This saw great technological advances, as they had to make the first operational supersonic VSOL aircraft. Lockheed martin took the technical assistance of Russian scientists who developed the Yak-141. TheYak-141 is the first supersonic VSTOL aircraft. 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. 14.APPLICATIONS. The benefits of stealth apply not only to platforms but to a lot of weapons as well. Anti- surface munitions like the JSOW, JASSM, Apache/SCALP/Storm Shadow, Taurus/KEPD and many others are specifically shaped and treated to minimize their radar and IR signatures. This has two useful payoffs: On the one hand, the weapon itself becomes less vulnerable to enemy defensive systems, which means that fewer of the weapons launched will be shot down before reaching their target(s). This in turn means that fewer weapons and their parent platforms need to be allocated to any given mission, and finally the end result is that a greater number of targets can be confidently engaged with a given force. The other benefit is the advantage of surprise and its effect in cases
  • 29. 29 where shrinking the enemy„¢s available reaction time is of the essence. A good example of such a situation is a typical OCA strike against an airfield. If non-stealthy strike aircraft or stand-off weapons are used, it is quite likely that they will be detected far enough out that the enemy will have some time available (even just 4-5 mins will do) to gets many of his ready-to-fly aircraft in the air and fly them somewhere else to preserve them. If the aircraft being flushed include armed hot-pad alert fighters (a common protective measure) these can immediately and actively contribute to the baseâ„¢s defence against the incoming attack. Contrast this with a situation where, as a result of using stealthy 40. weapons and/or platforms, the base is caught virtually napping and the attack is detected so perilously close that the enemy Has no time to get anything in the air but instead can only rely on his ground-based terminal defences. This can mean the difference between the base suffering little or no damage and being virtually obliterated. 15.ADVANCED STEALTH AIRCRAFT OR (5th GENERATION AIRCRAFT). A fifth-generation jet fighter is a fighter aircraft classification used in the United States and elsewhere encompassing the most advanced generation of fighter aircraft as of 2013. Fifth-generation aircraft are designed to incorporate numerous technological advances over the fourth generation jet fighter. The exact characteristics of fifth generation jet fighters are controversial and vague, with Lockheed Martin defining them as having all- aspect stealth even when armed, Low Probability of Intercept Radar (LPIR), high- performance air frames, advanced avionics features, and highly integrated computer systems capable of networking with other elements within the theatre of war for situational awareness. The only currently combat-ready fifth-generation fighters, the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptors, entered service with the U.S. Air Force in 2005.
  • 30. 30 Figure 15.1:- F-22 RAPTOR (Advanced stealth aircraft) Figure 15.2:- F-35 lightning REDUCING DISADVANTAGES OF STEALTH AIRCRAFT. Previous generation stealth aircraft, such as the B-2 Spirit and F-117 Nighthawk, were designed to be bombers, lacking the LPI Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radars, LPI radio networks, performance, and weapons necessary to engage other aircraft. In the early 1970s, various American design projects identified stealth, speed, and maneuverability as key characteristics of a next generation air to air combat aircraft. This led to the Request for Information for the Advanced Tactical Fighter which results in the formation advance 5th generation stealth aircraft like f-22 raptor and f-35c lightning. Later the Soviet Union outlined the need for a next-generation aircraft to replace fourth-generation fighter aircraft. Two projects were proposed to meet this need,
  • 31. 31 the 4.5th generation fighter aircraft: Sukhoi Su-47 and the Mikoyan Project 1.44 (although later modernized MiG-35 to 4.5th generation fighter).  Software defined aircraft. All revealed fifth-generation fighters use commercial off-the-shelf main processors to directly control all sensors to form a consolidated view of the battle space with both onboard and networked sensors, while previous generation jet fighters used federated systems where each sensor or pod would present its own readings for the pilot to combine in their own mind a view of the battle space.  Advanced engines with thrust vectoring nozzle. Fifth generation jet fighters use the newest generation of high performance jet engines and only the American Pratt & Whitney F119 is fully developed. These engines come with thrust vectoring nozzles. Thrust vectoring, also thrust vector control or TVC, is the ability of an aircraft, or other vehicle to manipulate the direction of the thrust from its engine(s) or motor in order to control the attitude or angular velocity of the vehicle. Subsequently, it was realized that using vectored thrust in combat situations enabled aircraft to perform various maneuvers not available to conventional-engined planes. To perform turns, aircraft that use no thrust vectoring must rely on aerodynamic control surfaces only, such as ailerons or elevator; craft with vectoring must still use control surfaces, but to a lesser extent.  Internal pay load and fuel tank. All the missile system and fuel tank is placed internally so that radar waves will not strike it and gets reflected back to the radar stations.  Improve aerodynamics. More recent design techniques allow for stealthy designs such as the F-22 without compromising aerodynamic performance. Newer stealth aircraft, like the F-22, F- 35 and the Sukhoi T-50, 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.
  • 32. 32 16.FUTURE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY. 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. Figure 16.1:- Stealth helicopter (RAH-COMANCHE) Figure 16.2:- BAE type-45 Destroyer These are evident from theRAH-66 "Comanche" and the BAE Type-45 stealth 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.
  • 33. 33 Figure 16.3:- X-47B UCAV (Unmanned combat air vehicle) In future stealth technology can also be applied to the unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV). In these (ucav) pilots are not required for flying it instead it is controlled by command and control system
  • 34. 34 17.FUTURE OF STEALTH TECHNOLOGY-(INDIA).  In October 2007, India and Russia signed a pact to develop a Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft which is a derivative project from the PAK FA T-50. The Indian version will be a two-seater, air superiority fighter. Another agreement was signed between India's Hindustan Aeronautics and Russia's United Aircraft Corporation (UAC) in December 2008 which detailed the joint development and production the aircraft. Work on the program will start by mid-2009 and the program is expected to be completed by 2017. Indian Air Force will get 200 twin- seated and 50 single seated FGFAs. Sukhoi/HAL FGFA when fully developed is intended to replace the MiG-29 Fulcrum and Mikoyan MiG-27 in the Indian inventory. Figure 17.1:- Sukhoi PAK-FA (SU-50) HAL/SUKHOI.  India (HAL) has also started design work on an Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), which is a twin-engined 5th generation stealth multirole fighter. It will complement the HAL Tejas, the Sukhoi/HAL FGFA, the Sukhoi Su-30MKI and the Dassault Rafale in the Indian Air Force. The AMCA will be designed with a very small radar cross-section and will also feature serpentine
  • 35. 35 shaped air-intakes, internal weapons and the use of composites and other materials. It will be a twin-engined design using the GTX Kaveri engine with thrust vectoring with the possibility of giving the aircraft supercruise capabilities.  The Shivalik class or Project 17 class is a class of multi-role stealth frigates in service with the Indian Navy. They are the first stealth warships built in India. The Shivalik class, along with the seven Project 17A frigates currently being developed from them, are projected be the principal frigates of the Indian Navy in the first half of the 21st century. Figure 17.2:- INS-SHIVALIK (Stealth frigate).  DRDO of india is also developing the AURA (Autonomous Unmanned Research Aircraft) which is an Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) for the Indian Air Force. The design work on the UCAV is carried out by Aeronautical Development Agency (ADE). The AURA UCAV will be a tactical stealth aircraft built largely with composites, and capable of delivering laser-guided strike weapons. The AURA will cruise at medium altitude and will be capable of carrying two or more guided strike weapons with on-board sensors for targeting
  • 36. 36 and weapon guidance. The flight control system and data link packages of Aura (unmanned combat aerial vehicle) will be designed and developed jointly by ADA and Defense Electronic Application Laboratory. Figure 17.3:- UCAV-AURA (Cocept)
  • 37. 37 18.CONCLUSION. The Detection and Stealth Technology has improved significantly more advanced in the last fifty years or so. This trend is likely to continue as these two oppose each other. Till date stealth aircraft have been used in several low and moderate intensity conflicts, including operation Desert Storm. Operation Allied Force and the 2003 invasion of Iraq .In each Case they were employed to strike high value targets which were either out of range of conventional aircraft or which were too heavily defended for conventional aircraft to strike without a high risk of loss. In addition, because The stealth aircraft aren’t going to be dodging surface to air missiles and anti-aircraft artillery over the target they can aim more carefully and thus are more likely to hit the high value targets early in the campaign (or even for it) ,Before other aircraft had the opportunity to degrade the opposing air defense. However, given the increasing prevalence of excellent Russion-bilt Surface –to-air missile (SAM) system on the open market, stealth aircraft are likely to be very important in a high intensity conflict in order to gain and maintain air supremacy. Stealth technology .in future, would be required for clearing the way for deeper strikes , which conventional aircraft would find very difficult .For example ,China license-builds a wide range of SAM systems in quantity and would be able to heavily defend important strategic and tactical targets in the event of some kind of conflict .Even if antiradiation weapons are used in an attempt to destroy the SAM radars of such systems, these SAMs are capable of shooting down weapons fired against them. The surprise of a stealth attack may become the only reasonable way of making a safe corridor for conventional bombers. It would then be possible for the less-stealth force with superior weaponry to suppress the remaining systems and gain air superiority. The development and the deployment of the Visby’s- the first commissioned Stealth ships has raised new threats in the maritime boundaries. The sudden appearance of sea clutters on the radar at a region may be these ships. The plasma stealth technology raises new hopes of engineering brilliance. As plasma is said to absorb all electromagnetic radiation the development of a counter stealth technology to such a mechanism will be a strenuous task. Well to conclude the current scenario appears something similar to the cold war both sides are
  • 38. 38 accumulating weapons to counter each other and each side can be termed as “Stealth Technology” and the other as “Anti-Stealth Technology”. It’s an arm race except it isn't between specific countries. “It’s a fight between Technologies”.
  • 39. 39 19.REFERENCE 1. http://www.totalairdominance.50megs.com/articles/stealth.htm 2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_technology 3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar 4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_ship 5. http://www.resonancepub.com/images/stealth_ship.gif 6. http://images.google.co.in/images 7. http://science.howstuffworks.com/question69.htm 8. http://www.espionageinfo.com/Sp-Te/Stealth-Technology.html 9. http://www.airplanedesign.info/51.htm 10. http://www.hitechweb.genezis.eu/stealth4f_soubory/image013.jpg 11. http://www.geocities.com/electrogravitics/scm.html 12. http://www.razorworks.com/enemyengaged/chguide/images/lo- reflecting.gif 13. htp://www.x20.org/library/thermal/pdm/ir_thermography.htm 14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_stealth 15. http://www.military-heat.com/43/russian-plasma
  • 40. 40