공군은 Lockheed의 Skunk Works에 스텔스 폴 설계를 의뢰했습니다.
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원문 출처: hackernews · Genesis Park에서 요약 및 분석
요약
1983년 실전 배치된 록히드의 F-117 나이트호크는 고속과 고고도가 전부였던 당시 항공 역사에 스텔스 혁명을 일으켰습니다. 스텔스 기술의 핵심은 소련의 피otr 우피체프 박사가 쓴 전자기파 산란 이론 논문에서 찾아낸 벤 리치 팀이었고, 이를 통해 비행기를 평면형으로 분해해 레이더 반사 면적을 계산하는 방법을 개발했습니다. 이를 바탕으로 제작된 '희망 없는 다이아몬드' 모형은 레이더 시험 결과 장착된 폴 대신 검은 까마귀가 잡힐 정도로 탁월한 은폐 성능을 입증했습니다. 그러나 기체 자체가 너무 눈에 띄지 않아 시험에 쓰인 폴이 오히려 레이더에 더 잘 잡히는 상황이 연출되는 진기명기한 해프닝이 발생하기도 했습니다.
본문
When Lockheed’s legendary F-117 Nighthawk first entered service in 1983, it brought with it a revolution in military aviation. After decades of focusing on the development of higher and faster-flying aircraft to avoid enemy air defenses, the Nighthawk proved that, through a radar-defeating design, a subsonic aircraft could actually be more survivable. What followed was decades worth of stealth innovation, competition, and advancement… but before the Nighthawk could change the world, it was up to Ben Rich, the head of Lockheed’s famed Skunk Works at the time, to sell the Air Force on the idea. And to do that, Skunk Works first had to invent a stealth pole for the Air Force. Denys Overholser discovered secret to stealth in Soviet research paper The stealth design leveraged by Skunk Works may have been uniquely American, but it was actually built upon the collective expertise of a number of scientists and researchers – some of whom even came from the wrong side of the Iron Curtain. Famously, the concept that led to stealth was born out of the work of Soviet physicist and mathematician Pyotr Ufimtsev, which had gone largely ignored by his country before catching the interest of Skunk Works’ Denys Overholser. Ufimtsev’s paper, called Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction, had just been translated by the Air Force’s Foreign Technology Division. To most, this 40-page treatise focused on developing a theory for predicting the scattering of electromagnetic waves seemed like little more than dry reading. But to Overholser, the equations buried deep in the paper represented the holy grail of low-observable aviation: a means to calculate an aircraft design’s radar cross-section without even having to build it. “Ufimtsev has shown us how to create computer software to accurately calculate the radar cross section of a given configuration, as long as it’s in two dimensions,” Denys told Rich, according to 1994 memoir. “We can break down an airplane into thousands of flat triangular shapes, add up their individual radar signatures, and get a precise total of the radar cross section.” Armed with this new approach to analyzing aircraft designs, Rich’s team at Skunk Works set about designing an aircraft with a radar cross-section thousands of times smaller than the SR-71-based D-21 supersonic reconnaissance drone, the stealthiest platform they’d built to date. This effort led to a 10-foot wooden model that the Skunk Works team dubbed the Hopeless Diamond. The design was stealthy enough for Rich to win a bet against legendary engineer Kelly Johnson, but the bigger hurdle would be convincing the Air Force that stealth was real. Related: These are the aircraft used by the Army’s Night Stalkers A Skunk Works design so stealthy… all radar could see was the pole To test their stealth design, the Skunk Works team brought their Hopeless Diamond model to McDonnel Douglas’ radar test range in the Mojave Desert and mounted it atop a 12-foot pole. This was a common practice for testing the radar returns of new aircraft designs. But when the radar array was powered on… something seemed to be wrong. The radar operator, manning an array just 1,500 feet from the model, looked to Ben Rich and told him that the Hopeless Diamond must have fallen off the pole. Rich looked and confirmed it was still there, but it wasn’t until a blackbird landed on top of the model that the operator registered a radar return. Mistaken, he thought the bird must be the aircraft. As Rich later recounted, it was the first time he felt certain that stealth was the real deal. In March of 1976, it was time for Skunk Works to prove their design was as stealthy as they claimed to the Air Force. Moving on from the 10-foot Hopeless Diamond, they arrived at the White Sands radar range with a 38-foot mock-up of the aircraft, made of wood and painted black. They were set to compete against Northrop’s stealth design for an Air Force contract, and the Air Force had brought its most powerful radar arrays to size up each firm’s entries. With five radar antennas, each broadcasting in different frequencies zeroed in on a wooden pole in the tabletop-flat test range, Rich’s team mounted their model and stepped back, waiting to hear how their design would fare against the best radar systems and operators the world had to offer… But all they could see on radar was the pole. Related: DOD official says hypersonics vital to future defense strategy ‘Since you’re so damned clever, build us a new pole!’ According to an account later written by Denys Overholser, the pole itself registered at minus 20 decibels on radar, which compared to most aircraft, was basically invisible. But compared to the Hopeless Diamond, it might as well have been a barn. You’d think being stealthier than what had previously been considered a practically “invisible” pole in the desert would be a huge win for the Skunk Works team… but it wasn’t all good news. “An Air Force colonel confronted me in a
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