[美国][航空周刊]Stealthy Chinese J-20 Vulnerable

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 18:12:45
By David A. Fulghum, Bill Sweetman, Bradley Perrett, Robert Wall
Washington, Washington, Beijing, London

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/g ... 20J-20%20Vulnerable



China’s newest combat aircraft prototype, the J-20, will require an intense development program if it is going to catch up with fast-moving anti-stealth advances.

In fact, anti-stealth will bring into question all stealth designs: How much invulnerability will current low-observability techniques offer as air defense systems adopt larger and more powerful active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radars? From the early days of AESA development, a key goal was to build a radar that could detect very small objects—such as a cruise missile at a distance great enough to target and shoot it down—or a larger object like a fighter with a very low-observable treatment.

Airborne detection of stealth aircraft may already be an operational capability. In a series of tests at Edwards AFB, Calif., in 2009, Lockheed Martin’s CATbird avionics testbed—a Boeing 737 that carries the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter’s entire avionics system—engaged a mixed force of F-22s and Boeing F-15s and was able to locate and jam F-22 radars, according to researchers. Raytheon’s family of X-band airborne AESA radar—in particular, those on upgraded F-15Cs stationed in Okinawa—can detect small, low-signature cruise missiles.

Moreover, Northrop Grumman’s lower-frequency, L-band AESA radar on Australia’s Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft is larger and potentially more capable of detecting stealth aircraft at longer ranges.

Lockheed Martin also hinted at a JSF anti-stealth capability in 2009 in a reference to combat with sophisticated, foreign aircraft. “The F-35’s avionics include onboard sensors that will enable pilots to strike fixed or moving ground targets in high-threat environments, day or night, in any weather, while simultaneously targeting and eliminating advanced airborne threats,” said Dan Crowley, then-executive vice president and F-35 program general manager.

Better images emerging from China point clearly to the J-20’s use of stealth technology, but major uncertainties and questions remain unresolved.

The overall shape resembles that of the F-35 and F-22, which have a single “chine line” uniting the forebody, upper inlet lips, and wing and canard edges with a curved surface above that line and flat, canted body surfaces below it. The wing and canard edges are aligned: The wing and canard leading edges are parallel and the trailing edge of each canard is aligned with the opposite wing’s trailing edge. The same basic philosophy also has been adopted in British, Swedish and Japanese studies for stealth fighters.

The aim in all cases is to endow a practical, agile fighter configuration with a “bow-tie” radar signature, with the smallest signature around the nose and the greatest (still much lower than that of a conventional aircraft with curved or vertical-slab sides) to the side. The fighter’s mission planning system, using a database of known radar locations, then derives a “blue line” track that weaves between radars and avoids exposing the side-on signature to those radars more than transiently.

The “diverterless” supersonic inlet avoids a signature problem caused by a conventional boundary layer diverter plate. For example, the F-22 has a conventional inlet, which is likely to require extensive radar absorbent material (RAM) treatment.

The biggest uncertainty about the Chinese design concerns the engine exhausts, which as seen on the prototype are likely to cause a radar cross-section (RCS) peak from the rear aspect. One possibility is that a stealthier two-dimensional nozzle will be integrated later in the program; however, the nozzles on the current aircraft show some signs of RCS-reducing sawtooth treatment, suggesting that the People’s Liberation Army has accepted a rear-aspect RCS penalty rather than the much greater weight and complexity of 2D nozzles.
Other features are less clear. Stealth development has been dogged by detail-design challenges. All the antennas on the aircraft have to be flush with the skin and covered with surfaces that retain stealth properties while being transparent in a specific frequency. Maintainability becomes a complex tradeoff: Some systems requiring frequent attention will be accessed via landing gear and weapon bays, and others by latched and actuated doors that can open and close without affecting RCS—but the latter involves a weight penalty.

Perhaps the toughest hurdle is managing radio-frequency surface currents over the skin. Early stealth designs used heavy, maintenance-intensive RAM. The F-22 introduced a much lighter surface treatment, but it has proven unexpectedly difficult to maintain, causing corrosion issues. Lockheed Martin now asserts that the F-35 will be robust and affordable to maintain in service, with a combination of a high-toughness, sprayed-on topcoat and a conductive layer cured into composite skin panels.

The Chengdu J-20 design has struck many analysts and observers as familiar and somewhat different from the F-22, F-35 or Sukhoi T-50.

“The J-20 is reminiscent of the Russian MiG-1.42 both in terms of planform and also with regard to the rear fuselage configuration,” says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The most obvious difference is the greater forward fuselage shaping as the basis for low-observable characteristics, along with the different engine intake configuration. The MiG program was canceled by the Russian government around 1997,” he notes. However, the similarity to the MiG concept may suggest some collusion with the Russian aviation industry.

The J-20 made its first flight shortly before 1 p.m. Beijing time on Jan. 11. The flight ended three weeks of anticipation that began in late December when the new design started taxi tests.

The discussion about the program will now shift to the aircraft’s mission (fighter or, more likely, long-range strike), sensors (strike missions would require a high-resolution, long-range radar) and communications (which would demand high-speed data links and sophisticated integration).

Conventional radars have only one-half to one-third of the range of an AESA radar. Moreover, the movement of a conventional, mechanically scanned radar antenna provides a tell-tale glint of radio-frequency reflections to enemy aircraft with advanced radars. Such reflections undercut the effectiveness of a stealth airframe. China is known to be pursuing newer radar technology.

“It’s too early to tell the true status of the Chinese AESA program,” says a Washington-based intelligence official. “We’ve seen lots of press and air show information on the program, but that doesn’t automatically translate into a robust development or give us an accurate look at where [China] is as far as fielding one anytime soon.

“Like the [high-performance] engine, it’ll be a challenge to take the step from older radars to one designed for a fifth-generation fighter,” he says. “Again, though, the J-20 is just the first or second—depending on whom you believe—prototype in a very long development program.”

If the Chinese conduct a few months of flight tests and there are no more aircraft involved in the program, this might indicate that the J-20 is a proof-of-concept or technical demonstrator. If there are several aircraft eventually, a prototype program would be a more likely conclusion.

The flight occurred during a visit to China by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who says Chinese President Hu Jintao confirmed the event to him in talks. However, Gates still believes the U.S. will retain a preponderance of stealth fighters through 2025.By David A. Fulghum, Bill Sweetman, Bradley Perrett, Robert Wall
Washington, Washington, Beijing, London

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/g ... 20J-20%20Vulnerable



China’s newest combat aircraft prototype, the J-20, will require an intense development program if it is going to catch up with fast-moving anti-stealth advances.

In fact, anti-stealth will bring into question all stealth designs: How much invulnerability will current low-observability techniques offer as air defense systems adopt larger and more powerful active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radars? From the early days of AESA development, a key goal was to build a radar that could detect very small objects—such as a cruise missile at a distance great enough to target and shoot it down—or a larger object like a fighter with a very low-observable treatment.

Airborne detection of stealth aircraft may already be an operational capability. In a series of tests at Edwards AFB, Calif., in 2009, Lockheed Martin’s CATbird avionics testbed—a Boeing 737 that carries the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter’s entire avionics system—engaged a mixed force of F-22s and Boeing F-15s and was able to locate and jam F-22 radars, according to researchers. Raytheon’s family of X-band airborne AESA radar—in particular, those on upgraded F-15Cs stationed in Okinawa—can detect small, low-signature cruise missiles.

Moreover, Northrop Grumman’s lower-frequency, L-band AESA radar on Australia’s Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft is larger and potentially more capable of detecting stealth aircraft at longer ranges.

Lockheed Martin also hinted at a JSF anti-stealth capability in 2009 in a reference to combat with sophisticated, foreign aircraft. “The F-35’s avionics include onboard sensors that will enable pilots to strike fixed or moving ground targets in high-threat environments, day or night, in any weather, while simultaneously targeting and eliminating advanced airborne threats,” said Dan Crowley, then-executive vice president and F-35 program general manager.

Better images emerging from China point clearly to the J-20’s use of stealth technology, but major uncertainties and questions remain unresolved.

The overall shape resembles that of the F-35 and F-22, which have a single “chine line” uniting the forebody, upper inlet lips, and wing and canard edges with a curved surface above that line and flat, canted body surfaces below it. The wing and canard edges are aligned: The wing and canard leading edges are parallel and the trailing edge of each canard is aligned with the opposite wing’s trailing edge. The same basic philosophy also has been adopted in British, Swedish and Japanese studies for stealth fighters.

The aim in all cases is to endow a practical, agile fighter configuration with a “bow-tie” radar signature, with the smallest signature around the nose and the greatest (still much lower than that of a conventional aircraft with curved or vertical-slab sides) to the side. The fighter’s mission planning system, using a database of known radar locations, then derives a “blue line” track that weaves between radars and avoids exposing the side-on signature to those radars more than transiently.

The “diverterless” supersonic inlet avoids a signature problem caused by a conventional boundary layer diverter plate. For example, the F-22 has a conventional inlet, which is likely to require extensive radar absorbent material (RAM) treatment.

The biggest uncertainty about the Chinese design concerns the engine exhausts, which as seen on the prototype are likely to cause a radar cross-section (RCS) peak from the rear aspect. One possibility is that a stealthier two-dimensional nozzle will be integrated later in the program; however, the nozzles on the current aircraft show some signs of RCS-reducing sawtooth treatment, suggesting that the People’s Liberation Army has accepted a rear-aspect RCS penalty rather than the much greater weight and complexity of 2D nozzles.
Other features are less clear. Stealth development has been dogged by detail-design challenges. All the antennas on the aircraft have to be flush with the skin and covered with surfaces that retain stealth properties while being transparent in a specific frequency. Maintainability becomes a complex tradeoff: Some systems requiring frequent attention will be accessed via landing gear and weapon bays, and others by latched and actuated doors that can open and close without affecting RCS—but the latter involves a weight penalty.

Perhaps the toughest hurdle is managing radio-frequency surface currents over the skin. Early stealth designs used heavy, maintenance-intensive RAM. The F-22 introduced a much lighter surface treatment, but it has proven unexpectedly difficult to maintain, causing corrosion issues. Lockheed Martin now asserts that the F-35 will be robust and affordable to maintain in service, with a combination of a high-toughness, sprayed-on topcoat and a conductive layer cured into composite skin panels.

The Chengdu J-20 design has struck many analysts and observers as familiar and somewhat different from the F-22, F-35 or Sukhoi T-50.

“The J-20 is reminiscent of the Russian MiG-1.42 both in terms of planform and also with regard to the rear fuselage configuration,” says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The most obvious difference is the greater forward fuselage shaping as the basis for low-observable characteristics, along with the different engine intake configuration. The MiG program was canceled by the Russian government around 1997,” he notes. However, the similarity to the MiG concept may suggest some collusion with the Russian aviation industry.

The J-20 made its first flight shortly before 1 p.m. Beijing time on Jan. 11. The flight ended three weeks of anticipation that began in late December when the new design started taxi tests.

The discussion about the program will now shift to the aircraft’s mission (fighter or, more likely, long-range strike), sensors (strike missions would require a high-resolution, long-range radar) and communications (which would demand high-speed data links and sophisticated integration).

Conventional radars have only one-half to one-third of the range of an AESA radar. Moreover, the movement of a conventional, mechanically scanned radar antenna provides a tell-tale glint of radio-frequency reflections to enemy aircraft with advanced radars. Such reflections undercut the effectiveness of a stealth airframe. China is known to be pursuing newer radar technology.

“It’s too early to tell the true status of the Chinese AESA program,” says a Washington-based intelligence official. “We’ve seen lots of press and air show information on the program, but that doesn’t automatically translate into a robust development or give us an accurate look at where [China] is as far as fielding one anytime soon.

“Like the [high-performance] engine, it’ll be a challenge to take the step from older radars to one designed for a fifth-generation fighter,” he says. “Again, though, the J-20 is just the first or second—depending on whom you believe—prototype in a very long development program.”

If the Chinese conduct a few months of flight tests and there are no more aircraft involved in the program, this might indicate that the J-20 is a proof-of-concept or technical demonstrator. If there are several aircraft eventually, a prototype program would be a more likely conclusion.

The flight occurred during a visit to China by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who says Chinese President Hu Jintao confirmed the event to him in talks. However, Gates still believes the U.S. will retain a preponderance of stealth fighters through 2025.
坐等翻译帝
个人觉得分析还比较中肯,我太懒了,那位能人有空给大家翻译一下
看懂了七八分
还不叫翻译官上来回话!再不上来翻,通通切鸡鸡地干活
将就下


中国最新战斗机的原型,歼- 20,将需要一个强烈的发展计划,如果它要赶上快速移动的反隐身的进步了。

事实上,反隐身将使问题的所有隐形设计:将目前的多少刀枪不入的低可观测技术提供的防空系统采用更大和更强大的有源电子扫描阵列(AESA)雷达?从AESA雷达发展的初期,一个重要目标是建立一个雷达,可以探测到巡航导弹非常小的物体,如在距离足够大,目标和拍摄下来,或像一个较大的对象非常战斗机低观察治疗。

机载探测隐身飞机可能已经是一个作战能力。在各种测试在爱德华兹空军基地,加利福尼亚州,2009年,系列洛克希德马丁公司的卡特伯德航电试验台,一架波音737客机,运载的F - 35联合攻击战斗机的整个航空电子系统进行的F - 22和波音公司的F - 15的混合部队并能够找到和果酱的F - 22雷达,据研究人员。雷神公司的X -波段机载AESA雷达的家庭中,特别是关于升级的F -冲绳可以检测小型,低签名巡航导弹驻15Cs人。

此外,诺斯罗普格鲁门公司的低频率,L波段的AESA澳大利亚的楔尾机载预警和控制飞机雷达更大,更可能在较长的范围内探测隐身飞机的能力。

洛克希德马丁还暗示了一个JSF反隐身能力,一提到打击复杂,外国飞机在2009年。 “这架F - 35的航空电子设备,包括内建感应器,使飞行员工罢固定或移动在高威胁环境中,白天或晚上在任何天气,地面目标,同时瞄准和消除先进的空中威胁,说:”丹克劳利,当时的执行副总裁和F - 35项目总经理。

摆脱中国更好的图像清晰地指向了J - 20的隐身技术的使用,但主要的不确定因素和问题仍然没有得到解决。

整体造型极为相似的F - 35和F - 22,这与该行上面平坦,倾斜的车身表面曲面下面一个“折角线”前体团结,上进的嘴唇,机翼和鸭翼边它。机翼和鸭翼边对齐:机翼和鸭翼前缘平行,每个鸭翼后缘与对面机翼的后缘对齐。相同的基本理念,也已通过了隐形战斗机在英国,瑞典和日本研究。

在所有情况下的目标是赋予了“蝴蝶结”雷达签字的实际,灵活战斗机配置,鼻子周围的最小和最大的签名(仍然比传统的飞机低弯曲或垂直板双方)在一旁。战斗机的任务规划系统,利用雷达位置已知的数据库,然后得出一个“蓝线”跟踪雷达之间编织,避免暴露侧面上签名,这些雷达瞬时以上。

在“diverterless”超音速进气道避免了由传统的签名问题边界层分流板造成的。例如,在F - 22有一个传统的进气口,这很可能需要大量的雷达吸收材料(RAM)的治疗。

关于中国设计的发动机排出的废气问题,作为对样机出现有可能导致从后方方面的雷达截面(RCS)的峰值最大的不确定因素。一种可能性是,一个隐蔽的二维喷管将被集成在后面的方案,但是,在目前飞机的喷嘴显示雷达散射截面,减少锯齿的治疗,一些迹象,这表明解放军已经接受了后方方面RCS的处罚而不是更大的重量和二维喷嘴的复杂性。
其他功能是不太清楚。隐形的发展一直困扰着细节的设计挑战。飞机上的所有天线必须冲洗与皮肤表面和隐身性能而被保留在一个特定的频率透明覆盖。可维护性成为一个复杂的权衡:有些系统需要经常注意通过将访问海湾起落架和武器,并锁存驱动门,可以打开和关闭而不影响他人的RCS,但后者涉及重的刑罚。

也许最难的是管理在皮肤上的无线电频率的表面电流。早期的隐身设计中使用的重,维护密集的RAM。这架F - 22推出了表面处理轻得多,但事实证明意外难以维持,造成腐蚀的问题。洛克希德马丁公司称,现在的F - 35将是健全和负担得起的服务,维持一个高韧性相结合,喷上面漆和导电层皮肤成复合板治愈。

在成都J - 20的设计已经取得许多分析家和观察员和有点熟悉的F - 22不同,F - 35战机或苏霍伊的T - 50。

“歼- 20是让人想起了俄罗斯米格- 142无论是在平面图上,并考虑到机身后部配置也说,”道格拉斯巴里,军事航天高级研究员伦敦国际战略研究所。 “最明显的区别是更大的前机身作为低观测特性的基础上形成,随着不同的发动机进气的配置。米格方案是由俄罗斯政府取消了1997年左右,“他说。然而,对米格概念相似度可能会提示某些与俄罗斯航空业的勾结。

在J - 20在短期内一时北京1月11日首次试飞时间。飞行结束三个星期,预计在十二月底开始时,新的设计开始滑行试验。

对于这一计划的讨论,现在将转移到飞机的使命(战斗机,或者更可能的是,远程攻击),传感器(打击任务,需要一个高清晰度,远程雷达)和通信(这将需要高速数据链和先进的集成)。

常规雷达只有一对一,一对AESA雷达的范围第三一半。此外,传统的运动,机械扫描雷达天线提供了无线电频率的思考告诉般光亮的敌人先进的雷达飞机。这种反射削弱了机体的隐形效果。中国被称为是追求新的雷达技术。

“它的结论还为时过早了中国的AESA计划的真实情况,”一位驻华盛顿的情报官员。 “我们已经看到新闻和节目航空展上的大量信息,但是这并不能自动转化为强大的开发或者给我们一个准确的要看在哪里[中国]是尽可能菲尔丁一很快。

“像[高性能]引擎,这将是一个挑战采取的步骤,从旧雷达为第五代战斗机的设计之一,”他说。 “此外,虽然中,J - 20仅仅是第一或第二取决于你相信谁在一个很长的发展方案的原型。”

如果中国进行飞行试验了几个月,也没有更多的飞机参与方案,这可能表明了J - 20是一种验证的概念或技术演示。如果有几个飞机最终,一个原型程序将是一个更可能的结论。

飞行过程中发生了美国国防部长罗伯特盖茨,谁说中国国家主席胡*锦*涛在会谈中确认这项活动,他访问中国。不过,盖茨仍然相信,美国将保留到2025年的隐形战机优势。
vulnarable:脆弱的,易受伤的
MD只要没危机感就好
不懂方言,翻译太火星
Before J20, they say raptor is something invulnerable, and now it's just a mass of shit which even an F35 can shoot down
有意思
不懂阴文
鸟文不董
不懂阴文,只认识扑克中“J,Q,K,A”
6楼乃google翻译
hyqun 发表于 2011-1-20 21:02


你知道得太多了。
If the Chinese conduct a few months of flight tests and there are no more aircraft involved in the program, this might indicate that the J-20 is a proof-of-concept or technical demonstrator. If there are several aircraft eventually, a prototype program would be a more likely conclusion.
--------------------------------
这段给出了很好的方法,来判定J20到底是原型机还是验证机。。如果只制造了一两架,可能是概念验证机或技术验证机,如果最后制造了n架,就更可能是原型机。
If the Chinese conduct a few months of flight tests and there are no more aircraft involved in the program, this might indicate that the J-20 is a proof-of-concept or technical demonstrator. If there are several aircraft eventually, a prototype program would be a more likely conclusion.
--------------------------------
这段给出了很好的方法,来判定J20到底是原型机还是验证机。。如果只制造了一两架,可能是概念验证机或技术验证机,如果最后制造了n架,就更可能是原型机。


怎么听起来是纯废话?
自动翻译就是这个笑果了
方言看着真累,没耐心看,不过还是比某些直接上日语的语言帝好点
总结一下,作者认为歼20在反隐形条件下的挑战,透波材料的维护性上与22面临同样甚至更严重的问题,因此是一架"脆弱的"战斗机(或者按文中的,"更像是战轰"),另外质疑了一下高推和aesa的进度,保留了对20是否是技术验证机的意见,综合以上和它认为20脱胎于1.42的假设,作者认为美帝对土共在隐身机上的领先将持续到2025年