USAF Developing New "SR-72" Supersonic Spy? 428
Kadin2048 writes "According to an Air Force Times article, the famed Lockheed Martin 'Skunk Works' may be hard at work on a new supersonic spy plane (with 'artist concept') for the U.S. military, to replace the SR-71 'Blackbird' retired a decade ago. Dubbed by some the SR-72, the jet would be unmanned and travel at about 4,000 MPH at as much as 100,000 feet, with 'transcontinental' range. Some have speculated that new high-speed spy planes could be a U.S. response to anti-satellite weapons deployed by China, in order to preserve reconnaissance capabilities in the event of a loss of satellite coverage. Neither the Air Force nor Lockheed Martin would comment on the program, or lack thereof."
better hope it's real stealthy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:better hope it's real stealthy (Score:4, Informative)
I think the AC's point was retaliation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I think the AC's point was retaliation (Score:5, Insightful)
An ICBM, unlike a cruise missile or an SR-71, has a very steep angle of ascent, and comes down pretty steeply, too, doesn't have much of a heat signature on the way down, and since most (or all?) of those held by the US and Russia have MIRV warheads, the things coming down will also be far, far smaller than an aircraft. A spy plane looks nothing like a missile on radar.
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Hmm...if that happened, all that oil over there would be A). Radio active B). Up for grabs?
Just was wondering if that happened, if we could somehow use radioactive oil in some kind of combo internal combustion/nuclear engine....talk about efficient,eh?
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Re:better hope it's real stealthy (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand you have an aircraft traveling at mach 6. This requires you to accurately plot the trajectory, get the laser in place and aimed and firing for however long it needs to be concentrated on the same spot, all in a matter of minutes. Assuming the laser needs to be concentrated on the same spot for 1 second, the aircraft will have traveled nearly a mile. Not an easy task.
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From the rest of your argument, I think you meant that shooting down a plane (with a laser) is much harder than hitting a satellite.
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They meaning China (Score:2, Informative)
You don't remember correctly.
They used the lasers to light up the satellite, and smacked it down with a missile [slashdot.org] (kinetic).
They also have the ability to blind some satellites cameras [defensetech.org] with lasers.
They do not have the ability to destroy [wikipedia.org] satellites with lasers.
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Two. It does not generate heat through the atmosphere, nor does it require 'fuel' in the normal sense.
Three. It is not exactly stealthy, since it 'glows' somewhat at night. However, due to its tremedous speed and its operating silence, it still maintains an elem
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Google has been flying this thing for photo recon already. How the hell do you think they get those shots of women with those ever lovely thong handles?
Re:fsdf 53tgvzxcreahb fg agasgdgu nbcxfharefdawsgg (Score:5, Funny)
A few comments... (Score:4, Insightful)
I hate to state the obvious, but the article is pretty sensational... I can summarize:
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No Weapon (Score:2)
At 4000 mph, it would be able to outrun any anti-aircraft missile.
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A metal dart like a large version of a tank sabot round. The kinetic energy at that speed is nuts - the explosive power is like a small nuclear explosion. This is what was proposed for a bomber version of the SR71 back in the 60's but the generals at the time wanted 'real' explosives from a 'real' bomber so the taxpayers got fine worthwhile program
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The thing about high speed is that you don't turn very quickly. So when a radar site sees you, they notify the SAM battery 400 miles downrange of your track, and the missiles are on the way up to meet you when you get there.
And the missiles are fast enough now to catch you, too.
This is why the SR-71 was retired from reconnaissance
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This happened with the M-21 drone delivery version of the A-12, which was the predecessor type to the SR-71 Blackbird. While practicing the drone release, the drone bounced off of the shock wave (despite the prodigious thrust of its ramjet) and impacted the M-21, essentially ceaving the jet in half.
Any payload released at these speeds or altitudes has to get past the shock wave first - and that's a problem so intractable that
Already got one of these (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.apogeerockets.com/SR72_Darkbird_Kit.as
It doesn't go 4,000mph, though. It just sits there. I think I was ripped off.
Already got one? (Score:2)
GUARD: Well, I'll ask him, but I don't think he'll be very keen... Uh, he's already got one, you see?
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RS-71 (Score:5, Interesting)
The SR-71 Blackbird was originally named the RS-71, but it was renamed when Lyndon Johnson accidentally rearranged the letters during his 1964 announcement of the existence of the SR-71 (which he was supposed to call RS-71). Anyway... airplane history for ya'll.
Re:RS-71 (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:RS-71 (Score:5, Informative)
Incorrect according to wiki (Score:3, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SR-71_Blackbird#Name _ and_designation [wikipedia.org]
USAF Chief of Staff Curtis LeMay preferred the SR (Strategic Reconnaisance) designation and wanted the RS-71 to be named SR-71. Before the Blackbird was to be announced by President Johnson on 29 February 1964, LeMay lobbied to modify Johnson's speech to read SR-71 instead of RS-71. The media transcript given to the press at the time still had the earlier RS-71 designation in places, creating the myth tha
Did anyone really believe the Airforce's line? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Naaw, c'mon, the Air Force stopped designing secret planes after the F117A was unveiled. That makes all kinds of sense, doesn't it?
(BTW, it's about time, guys, to juice up some airshows with some new hotness!)
erm if you look at the picture (Score:2, Funny)
New Name (Score:5, Interesting)
Necessary? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Energy based weapons?
I mean, if they can knock a MIRV out of orbit then they can knock a SR-71 out of the sky.
Of course that would depend if the Russians or Chinese had such a system.
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Will never be as *cool* as SR-71 (Score:3, Interesting)
(My previous post had bad links. Sorry.)
http://www.cnw.mk.ua/weapons/airforce/razv/sr71/im age/sr71ff.jpg [cnw.mk.ua]
http://perso.orange.fr/romain.g/sr71-1.jpg [orange.fr]
No joke. (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously.
The SR-71 is easily the baddest mofo of any item in either the Smithsonian's downtown Air & Space or Air & Space II in the big hangar out by the airport [which is where the SR-71 sits, right smack in the middle of the floor, dominating everything else around it].
Badder than the Wright Bros' biplane, badder than Lindbergh's Spirit of St Louis, badder than Apollo 11, badder than the Space Shuttle.
Just one great big Samuel Jackson Pulp Fiction Bad Mofo of an airplane.
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According to the Smithsonian - http://www.nasm.si.edu/aircraft/lockheed_sr71.htm [si.edu]
Concept sounds a lot like "Aurora" (Score:3, Informative)
That's no plane... (Score:3, Funny)
USAF + Skunkworks + Google (Score:2, Funny)
*I* heard it was going to be used by Gooogle to do the next run of Street views...
remember kids... (Score:4, Funny)
Ok, so... (Score:3, Informative)
Does it matter? Well, the first to build a working waverider aircraft was a Scottish amateur rocketry group. Story has it that when NASA and Boeing engineers saw footage of the vehicle flying, they were staring at the screen in sheer envy. They'd got no further than theory. We also all know the story of the New Zealander who has jet-propelled go-karts and his own low-cost cruise missile. And the Gauss Rifle linked to above didn't look too complex, either.
Although amateurs are very unlikely to be building supersonic or hypersonic spy planes in the near future, none of this looks so complex that it could not be done by other nations in comparable time. Don't think it won't happen - too many potential benefits. Variants will also inevitably be adopted by commercial space planes, as it's so much cheaper than using vanilla rocketry and should be much more reliable.
To me, the only question I think worth asking at this point is who will be there first? Lockheed-Martin, China or Rutan? (And after Lockheed's disastrous hovering shuttle replacement in the late 1990s, it's not wise to just assume they'll automatically win such a race.)
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I think you're confusing the hovering McDonnell Douglas DC-X [wikipedia.org] (which was a successful test vehicle until NASA got ahold of it) and the Shuttle replacement Lockheed Martin X-33 [wikipedia.org] (which was a diaster).
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News, but not really (Score:2)
Corrected links (Score:2)
probably exists now (Score:4, Insightful)
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Same with the stealth fighter.
I suspect mattel pays someone to spy no the military...or someone in the military is using mattel as their road path.
I don't care... (Score:3, Interesting)
But wait... (Score:2, Interesting)
Classified (Score:5, Funny)
I'm confused.
Obligatory linguistic correction (Score:3, Informative)
Redundant. Flak is a German-style contraction for Flugabwehrkanone, anti-aircraft cannon.
Guess that makes me a German Nazi...
rj
Re:Obligatory linguistic correction (Score:5, Funny)
You just Godwinned yourself. I've never seen that before.
Those who forget their history... (Score:3)
Sounds like D-21 redux. (Score:3, Interesting)
However, thanks to technology improvements since then, this new drone could probably work, thanks to better materials, fly-by-wire systems, and GPS navigation for more precise control of flight path. It would probably be launched off modified B-52 bombers like the D-21 drone.
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Launching from a B-52 using a booster rocket to accelerate to the speed needed to start the drone's ramjet engine was another option. One problem there was that the radar signature of a D-21 launch looked a very similar to the launch of a Hound Dog missle so there was concern that somebody
Stealth heat signature (Score:4, Interesting)
It seems that the U2 and SR-71 overflights may have had a calming effect on US military actions, as they allowed the US to better understand the USSR's level of alert, and prevented overreaction to a false belief that the USSR may have been massing for an attack.
SA-12 aka S-300 (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, tracking a target at mach 6 is no easy task. If the plane deploys some stealth or good ecm it will be no easy target. But invulnerable I seriously doubt. In the same manner that Russia upgraded its S-27 Topol M ICBM to manoeuvre in order to make targeting by the US ABM interceptor missiles, I am pretty sure that both China and Russia would be able to develop a counter to the SR-72 relatively cheaply, probably by improving the S-300 system.
I think the real use of a system such as this would be against countries like Iran, which the US fears is going to threaten Israel.
Clarification of "Classified" (Score:3, Informative)
There's no need to immediately jump to "It's classified so it must exist." If that was the case, then ask any Air Force officer privy to classified information for info on that information. If you asked "Are there aliens at Area 51?" I guarantee you they'd respond with "That's classified." Same thing with "Is the Air Force testing prototype beam weapons?" Classified. I know that in this case, they simply denied comment, but the same principle applies. Saying nothing on the issue is not a confirmation of a person's suspicions.
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what do you mean it's not mentioned??
FTFA:
"The new jet -- being referred to by some as the SR-72 -- is likely to be unmanned"
looks like it was mentioned to me...
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To the person with the "clever" moral compass comment, just because the US is performing reconnaissance doesn't make them the bad guy. Or are you saying that all through both world wars and the cold war the US was morally wrong to perform flyovers?
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That's what the C4/Thermite is for. Debris isn't worth much when all that's left won't even fill a teaspoon.
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You know, at 4000mph I really don't think C4 or Thermite would be needed. I think friction would do the trick if there were to be any unplanned aerodynamic manipulations.
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http://blackbirds.net/u2/blackcats/blackcats.html [blackbirds.net]
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Re:Particle beam weapon (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Particle beam weapon (Score:5, Funny)
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Shooting down a high-mach atmospheric drone only requires decent radar and a few dozen surface-to-air missiles. You pop up a bunch directly i
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Could you even use IR for this kind of intercept? Surely the IR tracking would be confused by the huge, and very hot, plume of air behind the aircraft? The suggestion in another post that you don't need to be faster than the "plane" to intercept doesn't work very well when the missile is guided on IR, since it will be chasing the aircraft. If it's not significantly (at least one more multiple of the speed of sound) faster than that which it's pursuing, it cannot po
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Second its not enough to just detect the plane to shoo
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My guess is the helicopters commited suicide rather than listen to him.
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Fixed that plot summary for you.
Even the most 'intelligent' AI software is going to be constrained by whatever its programming is, so that really isn't anything to worry about. Especially since something as expensive as a long range recon aircraft is going to have 3 or 4 redundant systems.
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