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Because "average RCS" is extremely vague and non-descriptive. Which is excellent when you are telling a highly secret RCS value without actually telling it.
The whole point of stealth design is to concentrate radar energy into spikes. Averaging the spikes and the troughs makes little sense except as a desperate attempt to make your non-stealthy design seem comparable - any radar energy not absorbed has to go somewhere, so averaging reduces the disparity between stealth and non-stealth designs.
The whole point of stealth design is to concentrate radar energy into spikes. Averaging the spikes and the troughs makes little sense except as a desperate attempt to make your non-stealthy design seem comparable - any radar energy not absorbed has to go somewhere, so averaging reduces the disparity between stealth and non-stealth designs.
Yet it used, i'm curious on why. The Russians can just do the same as US by telling a value without disclosing the frequency. That is already confusing enough.
I am however criticizing the use of it for comparison with value taken from a single aspect. e.g one comparing the averaged RCS of 0-30 degrees aspect with one taken only from 0 degrees. in this respect they are apple vs watermelon, add frequency (which also rarely mentioned) then they can be apple vs human. To be apple vs apple then it has to be compared with same (average vs average or single angle value vs single angle value + frequencies if possible) Which i wonder rarely done.
Nope, it really isn't. If all the radar energy is returned in four widely separated 1 degree wide spikes, for example, the "average RCS" over 360 degrees many be roughly the same as a non-stealthy aircraft, but you will only see it fleetingly at very specific angles.The whole point of stealth design is to concentrate radar energy into spikes. Averaging the spikes and the troughs makes little sense except as a desperate attempt to make your non-stealthy design seem comparable - any radar energy not absorbed has to go somewhere, so averaging reduces the disparity between stealth and non-stealth designs.
Yet it used, i'm curious on why. The Russians can just do the same as US by telling a value without disclosing the frequency. That is already confusing enough.
I am however criticizing the use of it for comparison with value taken from a single aspect. e.g one comparing the averaged RCS of 0-30 degrees aspect with one taken only from 0 degrees. in this respect they are apple vs watermelon, add frequency (which also rarely mentioned) then they can be apple vs human. To be apple vs apple then it has to be compared with same (average vs average or single angle value vs single angle value + frequencies if possible) Which i wonder rarely done.
Average RCS is a more applicable number for a combat situation, especially given mobile nature of aircraft and the huge variety of illumination angles and actuator usage.
Nope, it really isn't. If all the radar energy is returned in four widely separated 1 degree wide spikes, for example, the "average RCS" over 360 degrees many be roughly the same as a non-stealthy aircraft, but you will only see it fleetingly at very specific angles.The whole point of stealth design is to concentrate radar energy into spikes. Averaging the spikes and the troughs makes little sense except as a desperate attempt to make your non-stealthy design seem comparable - any radar energy not absorbed has to go somewhere, so averaging reduces the disparity between stealth and non-stealth designs.
Yet it used, i'm curious on why. The Russians can just do the same as US by telling a value without disclosing the frequency. That is already confusing enough.
I am however criticizing the use of it for comparison with value taken from a single aspect. e.g one comparing the averaged RCS of 0-30 degrees aspect with one taken only from 0 degrees. in this respect they are apple vs watermelon, add frequency (which also rarely mentioned) then they can be apple vs human. To be apple vs apple then it has to be compared with same (average vs average or single angle value vs single angle value + frequencies if possible) Which i wonder rarely done.
Average RCS is a more applicable number for a combat situation, especially given mobile nature of aircraft and the huge variety of illumination angles and actuator usage.
The only use I can see for quoting "average RCS" is to cover up your inability to do effective planform alignment signature control.
Nope, it really isn't. If all the radar energy is returned in four widely separated 1 degree wide spikes, for example, the "average RCS" over 360 degrees many be roughly the same as a non-stealthy aircraft, but you will only see it fleetingly at very specific angles.
The only use I can see for quoting "average RCS" is to cover up your inability to do effective planform alignment signature control.
That's precisely why stealth works. The chance of you being aligned precisely at the correct angle to receive radar from any of the the target spikes is actually very low, and when the target and source move, the target disappears as the spike now points somewhere else.
If there are only 4 azimuth positions of 1 degree where you can detect the target, that leaves (360 -4) - 354 degrees in azimuth where you can't detect it. In a dynamic battle, you might get a brief glimpse of a target at range, but it would be very hard to do anything with.
An aircraft with say 0.3 sq m RCS in all directions is pretty detectable. An aircraft with 0.001 sq m RCS in most directions and 5 sqm RCS in specific small angle ranges is much less detectable, even if it averages to the same value of 0.3 sq m.
Turkey after S-400 acquisition which would allow for a final settlement of the 5th gen vs IADS argument to be rather deflating for the arguments of "metal marble" RCS.
Turkey after S-400 acquisition which would allow for a final settlement of the 5th gen vs IADS argument to be rather deflating for the arguments of "metal marble" RCS.
How do you figure? Do you actually believe the US would sell it's most recent stealth aircraft to a country likely to have Russian 'tech support" with access to it, no matter what it's actual RCS is?
"Stealth scepticism" on this level is just stupid. Other countries have verified the basic techniques, even if few have gone as far down that path as the US.
Feel free to doubt if its worth the money, doubt that the maintenance of the coatings is easy, doubt that a fighter plane needs stealth to be effective, even imagine that possible counters to stealth are plentiful, but doubting it works in principle is just conspiracy minded garbage.
Any system will have possible counters, of course. The best possible way to enable their development is let the other side have access to it.
" A method closely related to the previous one. It is based on assigning a false designation to the defended conception or to opponent himself and since that point the entire debate is waged against this arbitrarely taken position. This technique is most often used in so-called principled debates. The enemy is accused of some obscene "ism" and then this "ism" is handily defeated. "
How do you figure? Do you actually believe the US would sell it's most recent stealth aircraft to a country likely to have Russian 'tech support" with access to it, no matter what it's actual RCS is?
Turkey purchases S-400, therefore Russians get access to F-35? Is that your logic? Why would Turkey compromise its premier fighter to the Russians, who have directly killed Turkish troops and supplied and reinforced Turkish enemies? Or do you believe Turks are stupid and wouldn't check and let S-400s hoover up data somehow on the F-35 and email to the Kremlin?
And why only reply on my mentioning of Turkey/F-35? Didn't want to talk about B-2s low level redesign? NG itself admits it was redesigned
I want to make one thing very clear, my entire statement was that standard claims of "golf ball RCS" and such are simply not accurate in my view.
Don't compare me to fucking Pierre "Turkey" Sprey.
S-400 will come with Russian technicians. They would love to test S-400 against the F-35s. Turkey might agree to it. How were they planning to prevent the S-400 shooting down their F-35s? They won't discclose anything to Russia to help with IADS integration? What if Russia say they need detailed RCS signature profiles for their NCTR system in S-400 radar?
I think its wrong to conclude, as you appear to, that the US is frightened Turkey will prove that the S-400 defeats the F-35 was the motivation to stop F-35 sales to Turkey.
The switch to support low level flight was made to prolong the lifespan of the B-2 in the event that counters to stealth were developed, at at time when the Soviet Union was still going on 20% GDP defence spending. It was also the USAF's decision, not Northrop's. Not sure why this is relevant?. Post Soviet collapse, development of the main adversary systems went glacially slow for 20 years, and B-2 has never had to fly low in the 30 years since.
Apologies if I misunderstood your point, but I still think you are factually off base. The breakthough of stealth was realising that a shape that only has controlled narrow lobe spikes (4, 6 or 8 main directions depending on type) in its RCS plot will not be visible on radar long enough to be tactically relevant. Nobody every said that the B-2 has the RCS of a golf ball from every single direction in every possible wavelength. "Golf Ball" or "marble" is a way of visualising the RCS equivalent area from a tactically relevant direction and radar wavelength (e.g front quarter for F-117A) which is memorable and showy. There's a bit of marketing there, for sure.
The art of designing a successful stealth aircraft is to make sure the most likely threat directions and wavelengths are covered, and the radar energy as far as possible is not sent back to the sender from tactically meaningful directions. This is also why early stealth aircraft systems include detailed route planning, to ensure threats as far as possible don't lie in those directions.
Stealth aircraft are more static in nature than surface to air missile system. You can change the software of a surface to air radar, you can change the radar aperture.Turkey would love to test both S-400 and F-35, no need for Almaz-Antei personnel there, or LM ones for that matter, it's a simple matter of one country being able to control for all variables when testing each of them in battlefield-like field exercises.
Also, Almaz-Antei had no problem exporting this system to Turkey, unlike LM/USA. Had these claims/estimations of .0001 sq m RCS and 23km detection ranges against F-35 on part of the S-400 been combat accurate, then it would have been an absolute crushing blow to a system frozen in design characteristics, removing any and all export potential for the system, and a perfect counter-will op against Russia, India, China, and any other country operating the system. And it would solidify Turkey's position in USA/NATO's orbit as it remove Russia as a "alternative" to them.
And it wouldn't require any data leakage to Russia, after all, highly doubt Turkey would buy a system they couldn't use against Russia.
The design of B-21 seem to suggest that it come back to high altitude mission thoughAnd how do you know it was lifespan-prolonging and not an rethinking of parameters and expected performance of S-300 and its variants? Original purpose and mission for B-2 was gravity nuclear bomb drop on tactical Warsaw Pact formations from high cruising altitude utilizing VLO against long range SAMs and altitude against short-range AAA
Evidently much changed, now both missions for B-2 and B-21 are fulfilled with nuclear LRSO. And yes, B-2 never had to fly low, it never faced Soviet S-300s in the missions it was thought necessary.
Consider the atmosphere absorption of terahertz frequency, any radar working with that frequency will be quite useless for air defense purposes.terahertz and photonic circuit based radars.
This is why I believe that average RCS measurements hold more weight when regarding "threat envelopes" for VLO aircraft.
Turkey would love to test both S-400 and F-35, no need for Almaz-Antei personnel there, or LM ones for that matter, it's a simple matter of one country being able to control for all variables when testing each of them in battlefield-like field exercises.
Also, Almaz-Antei had no problem exporting this system to Turkey, unlike LM/USA. Had these claims/estimations of .0001 sq m RCS and 23km detection ranges against F-35 on part of the S-400 been combat accurate, then it would have been an absolute crushing blow to a system frozen in design characteristics, removing any and all export potential for the system, and a perfect counter-will op against Russia, India, China, and any other country operating the system. And it would solidify Turkey's position in USA/NATO's orbit as it remove Russia as a "alternative" to them.
And it wouldn't require any data leakage to Russia, after all, highly doubt Turkey would buy a system they couldn't use against Russia.
Stealth aircraft are more static in nature than surface to air missile system. You can change the software of a surface to air radar, you can change the radar aperture.
But it would be much more impractical to change the whole airframe of the aircraft.
It would not be beneficial for US if the Russian know exactly which distance their radar can detect an F-35, which angle is the easiest to detect it, and how the signature characteristic of an F-35 different from a MALD.
The design of B-21 seem to suggest that it come back to high altitude mission though
Consider the atmosphere absorption of terahertz frequency, any radar working with that frequency will be quite useless for air defense purposes.
And the so called photonic radar is probably mostly marketing hype, it is very unlikely to come here anytime soon, we probably only have them once B-21 already retired
You seem oddly keen to ascribe miraculous powers to the S-400.
Whole load of ifs, buts and maybes and your conclusion is wildly off base. If the S-400 has a detection range of 23km against the F-35 (which isn't demonstrated) and if it can successfully track it (which we don't know) and if it can fire at a tactically useful distance (20km?) and if the missile seeker is able to track it and if the proximity fusing work correctly and if the warhead detonates.... unless you are building an IADS for the Vatican City you are going to need one giant shedload of S-400 systems to cover your country. And of course, the F-35 could use stand off weapons from outside 23km range...
In my view, S-400 can detect/track/engage F-35s from quite a bit further, but I'd rather not find out due to real life engagements.
You don't seem to understand, it is much easier to change the aperture or the software of a surface radar than it is to change the airframe or internal RAS of an aircraftThe changes you describe are significant to a SAM system, and its not just radar that might require a change, but missile design as well, these are all expensive to modify especially a deep in production stage system like S-400. The same goes for F-35.
I don't think that is the key, even the old AGM-86 and AGM-129 could allow the B-52 stay outside the engagement range of any SAMAbsolutely, especially with LRSO integration.
No, the biggest problem of Terahertz radar is exactly atmosphere attenuation. The absorption rate at 1 THz is literally 10,000 dB/km and dB unit scaled exponentially, in other words, every 1 km that the signal pass through the atmosphere, the signal strength reduced by 10^1000, can you even imagine how big is that number? you would be lucky if your THz radar can see past the 10 meters range. And why would THz radar be immune to stealth? the wavelength would be too short that all reflection will be specular reflection, literally the type that stealth aircraft most optimized againstTerahertz radar's biggest problem was creation of components such as waveform generators and waveguides not necessarily its attenuation in atmosphere. It's a very useful waveband due to its high detail, and with use of pencil beams its range can be quite high plus its high accuracy and near immunity to RCS reduction.
in the labs sure, but it is decades from being reality, just like dozens others catchy inventionOn photonic circuit based radars, several prototypes have been created, I'd be willing to bet that Su-57M will be carrying it in serial.
This is why I believe that average RCS measurements hold more weight when regarding "threat envelopes" for VLO aircraft.
This discussion has so far also omitted any references to how much more effective any ECM will be with a smaller target reflection. Perhaps you get a fleeting glance and can focus your energy in that area, but with a modern aircraft that is unlikely to not go unnoticed and might provoke active countermeasures.
In my view, S-400 can detect/track/engage F-35s from quite a bit further, but I'd rather not find out due to real life engagements.
I'm really struggling to understand your point. What are you basing this view on? A hunch you have?
My point was we don't know enough about the F-35 OR the S-400 to be able to form an opinion. You appeared to suggest earlier that the US stopping F-35 sales to Turkey somehow proved how awesomely the S-400 would perform against it. I simply don't follow the logic here. Plenty of other explanations.
You don't seem to understand, it is much easier to change the aperture or the software of a surface radar than it is to change the airframe or internal RAS of an aircraft
I'm referring to nuclear role.I don't think that is the key, even the old AGM-86 and AGM-129 could allow the B-52 stay outside the engagement range of any SAM
No, the biggest problem of Terahertz radar is exactly atmosphere attenuation. The absorption rate at 1 THz is literally 10,000 dB/km and dB unit scaled exponentially, in other words, every 1 km that the signal pass through the atmosphere, the signal strength reduced by 10^1000, can you even imagine how big is that number? you would be lucky if your THz radar can see past the 10 meters range. And why would THz radar be immune to stealth? the wavelength would be too short that all reflection will be specular reflection, literally the type that stealth aircraft most optimized against
Not really. Because of Swerling target assumptions, which is about the ratio of instantaneous to average RCS, you end up for
say a 0.9 probability of detection for a Swerling 1 target, needing the ability to detect 1/10th of the average RCS i.e. 10 dB below the
average RCS.
I think just about every air defense radar out there uses some form of Swerling target model.
I'm not referring to target model, I'm referring to actual distribution of RCS measurements in azimuth and vertical illumination angles.
I'm not referring to target model, I'm referring to actual distribution of RCS measurements in azimuth and vertical illumination angles.
I don't think you understand how these distributions get used in air defense radars...
I'm not referring to target model, I'm referring to actual distribution of RCS measurements in azimuth and vertical illumination angles.
I don't think you understand how these distributions get used in air defense radars...
I don't think you understand the crux of the argument, what targeting models radars currently use is of no bearing to my discussion of how practical using average RCS calculations versus measurements taken at certain points.
Well aside from the fact that your premise is ill-posed...do you want arithmetic mean, log mean, geometric mean, harmonic mean?
Some of the radar literature would prefer that you use the median since that might be more representative of the target type of interest.
In fact, some of the literature on LO aircraft suggests medians are more representative.
Rather goes back to the target models which you don't like.
Really? Considering until recently Thz devices were practically lab based, "existing" was the biggest problem for it. Second of all, yes attenuation is enormous at THz range, yet still being worked on for radar/imagery, due to the fact that THz doesn't care at all shaping, I fail to see how stealth aircraft would be "optimized" against Thz.
Well aside from the fact that your premise is ill-posed...do you want arithmetic mean, log mean, geometric mean, harmonic mean?
Some of the radar literature would prefer that you use the median since that might be more representative of the target type of interest.
In fact, some of the literature on LO aircraft suggests medians are more representative.
Rather goes back to the target models which you don't like.
Arithmetic mean, a simple average of the values measured over a horizontal range at a certain vertical value, at a specified wavelength. What is the reality for them? are they all .001 sq m RCS at all angles except four specific degrees thereby rendering them tactically invisible? Or is there some truth to the standard average RCS claims of .3-.5 sqm RCS?
This is what I wish to discuss.
But the biggest issue for me of course to find what RCS value i should use as input, which the whole point of me asking why Russian use average and why US one likes to use one from just an angle.
I don't think you got the point,Lol, I don't understand? I just told you that those two are not the only characteristics of an IADS system. And those two characteristics are not as easy as you think, software refinement takes time, and limited in how much improvement there is, rather difficult to squeeze another 20 percent performance through just software improvements.
And aperture? Sure, comes with more power draw, difficult to cope with on a limited powerbase available. I highly doubt you'll see a S-400M anytime soon, compared to a brand new system like S-500.
And sure internals are difficult to change on aircraft, my point exactly, both systems are frozen in most part for their primary design characteristics.
AGM-129 has nuclear warheadI'm referring to nuclear role.
All THz devices are labs based because the sheer idea of using THz radar for air defense purposes is even less practical than using a toy water gun to intercept ballistic missiles.Really? Considering until recently Thz devices were practically lab based, "existing" was the biggest problem for it. Second of all, yes attenuation is enormous at THz range, yet still being worked on for radar/imagery, due to the fact that THz doesn't care at all shaping, I fail to see how stealth aircraft would be "optimized" against Thz.