This invention involves a protection device against missiles aimed at a transport airplane.
In recent years, it has been observed that an increasing number of ground-air type missile attacks against civil airplanes are taking place. A short while ago, in Mombasa (Kenya, November 2002) and in Baghdad (Iraq, November 2003), two civil airplanes were aimed at with such missiles,
Following such events and other attacks, it has been decided to study a system that would counter such threat, but adapted to civil airplanes.
At this time, there are numerous devices that permit misleading or decoying ground-air missiles, particularly in the military field. Indeed, most of the military airplanes of today are equipped with ground-air missile detection and decoy systems.
Several means of detecting a ground-air missile are known. Such a missile can be actively detected by a Doppler effect radar or passively by an optical infrared or ultraviolet base system.
Several ways are also known to decoy a missile aimed at an airplane. For instance, the plane can sent out flares known to the specialist by this English name. They are pyrotechnic devices aimed at producing a very intense pinpoint light source. Another known method to decoy a missile is to transmit continuous and multidirectional infrared signals or an infrared directive transmission (using a laser technology that is called DIRCM or Directional InfraRed Counter Measures).
However, all these solution have been developed for military aircraft where constraints are totally different from those of civil airplanes. As such, the cost and the false alarm rate are incompatible constraints for civil applications. Moreover, for civil airplanes, the solution adopted must be usable in regions with a high population density. For instance, one cannot use flares above a city as it is done over more or less deserted areas. As such, most of the solutions evoked above are not directly applicable to a civil aircraft.
As such, the purpose of this invention is to provide an anti-missile protection device that is adapted for use on board a transport aircraft (for passengers or freight), such as those used in civil aviation. Preferably, this device must have a low cost price so that it can be mounted on a large number of aircraft and not only, for instance, on board those that fly into areas of the world where there is aimed conflict. Beneficially also, this device shall be able to be installed in existing aircraft.
This invention consequently proposes an anti-missile protection device for transportation aircraft, comprising:
The invention proposes as such a decoy that is not incorporated in the aircraft to which it is associated and by which it can be pulled. This decoy remains attached by a cable to the aircraft. As such, the decoy can be fully controlled and can be used under all conditions, even in highly populated areas. The fact of pulling the decoy permits having a decoy of a known type that does not require any special technical development to adapt it to a civil aircraft. Moreover, an existing airplane can be equipped with a device according to the invention without requiring a substantial modification of its systems.
Thanks to the automatic management of winding and unwinding of the cable to which the decoy is secured, the pilot of the plane does not have to control the protection device and is only responsible for piloting the aircraft.
The control device can be beneficially adapted to the speed of winding and/or unwinding the cable on the basis of at least a parameter selection from the flight parameters comprising altitude and vertical speed of the aircraft. The parameters selected for winding can be different from those selected for unwinding. As such, it is theoretically possible to avoid that the decoy does not touch the ground during the takeoff and landing stages. It can also be provided for the same purpose that the control device adapts the length of the unwound cable on the basis of flight parameters of the aircraft, for instance, at least on the basis of the aircraft's altitude.
The decoy used in this invention is for instance a device that transmits multidirectional infrared radiation. This solution appears being the most simple technically speaking and the easiest to implement. In this form of implementation, the frequency of the infrared radiation transmissions is preferably set on the transmission spectrum of the aircraft with which the device is associated to increase decoy efficiency.
For instance, such a device is placed in the aircraft in such a way that in the wound up position the decoy and the winding-unwinding device take place in a compartment located in the back of the aircraft and closed by a trap door leading to the outside of the aircraft. Other positions in the aircraft can be considered but the position proposed here permits the easiest adaptation of this device to any type of aircraft.
To limit the aerodynamic drag induced by the presence of the decoy, the latter shall preferably have a conical form.
In a device according to the invention, it is preferable to provide for a surveillance device that will notify the pilot of the aircraft of the wound or unwound condition of the cable so as to provide a warning in the event of failure of the device.
The length of the cable is for instance between 10 and 150 m, preferably between 20 and 50 m. Lengths are such that a missile can confuse hot sources of the aircraft with the decoy but are also rather large so that the explosion of the missile hitting the decoy does not seriously damage the airplane. This explosion should not affect safety and handling of the aircraft.
In a perfected form of implementation, the decoy secured at an end of the cable can also be associated with a missile detection system. In this case, the decoy comprises beneficially also a one-directional infrared transmission device so as to be able to react if a missile is detected. For the same purpose, the decoy can also include a device that permits launching flares.
This invention also involves an aircraft characterized by the fact that it includes a protection device as described above. This aircraft is for instance used for the transportation of passengers.
Details and advantages of this invention shall be revealed even better by the description below with reference to the attached drawing where:
FIGS. 7 to 12 show the plane of
Protective device 4 includes a cable 6 rolled around a cylindrical base 8. Cable 6 is connected at an end to a power supply system (not shown) and at its other end to a decoy 10. Cylindrical base 8 is secured in the rear part of the storage rooms and can turn around its main axis to control the winding or unwinding of cable 6. The rotation control of the cylindrical base 8 can be electric or pneumatic for instance. The winding/unwinding device thus obtained can be compared with a device of this type used for fire hoses.
Cable 6 includes (
Decoy 10 is to be dragged by the aircraft at the end of cable 6 as shown for instance on
Such a decoy 10 is known to the specialist in the field. It is a “classic” decoy 10 that aircraft 2 is dragging. It functions independently from the aircraft systems of aircraft 2.
Preferably, decoy 10 will have a conical form such as the one shown on the drawing. This form is selected for its aerodynamic properties. The purpose here is to have the weakest aerodynamic drag possible. Needless to say, other forms inducing preferably weaker drag can be selected here.
The length of cable 6 is sufficient so that in case of explosion of a missile hitting decoy 10, aircraft 2 is not damaged. On the other hand, cable 6 or more precisely the length of cable 6 unwound, must not be too long so that the missile detection system may confuse the hot sources of the aircraft with decoy 10. Moreover, if cable 6 is not too long, it can be extended very early after takeoff and pulled in very late at the time of landing. The length of cable 6 extending outside aircraft 2 can as such be between 20 and 50 m, preferably.
FIGS. 7 to 12 show a possible operation of the protection device according to the invention.
On
During takeoff (
During the climbing phase (
Inversely, during a descending phase (
During the landing phase (
In all its stages of flight, a display enables the pilot and also other members of the cockpit to know whether protective device 4 is in its extended or retracted position. As such, members of the cockpit are always informed of the position (wound or unwound) of the protective device. In case of breakdown of the automatic winding device, a control panel is provided to enable the pilot to retract (extend) dragged decoy 10. In case of a complete failure, a control of last resort triggered from the cockpit enables cable 6 to be cut, thus freeing the aircraft from the whole protective device 4 located outside plane 2, and thus assuring a landing without a problem.
The protective device described above offers the considerable advantage of being able to use a considerable number of already existing devices in the aeronautical field. First of all, as already indicated, the decoy used can be a classic decoy. The originality here consists of dragging it. The system that permits this dragging can be derived by a system already known and used for in-flight re-fueling of planes. It is also known on test aircraft to conduct static pressure measurements using a dragged device. The protective device thus obtained can this way be of a relatively cheap cost price.
Moreover, the device described above is considered as automatic, to the extent that no action of the pilots is required to meet its proper operation. The only thing that the pilots have to do is to check (through light indicators for instance) whether the device is operating properly.
The device according to the invention also offers the advantage of being able to be installed in aircraft already built because it is independent from aircraft systems and as such does not require any substantial modification of these systems.
Variants of the protective device described above can also be considered. As such, decoy 10 is scheduled to transmit multidirectional infrared radiation. An extension of operation can be considered. This decoy 10 can also include a detection system for instance. The latter includes for instance a Doppler effect radar or conducts infrared and/or ultraviolet detection. Once such a detection device is installed, decoy 10 can then be coupled to a decoy system by pyrotechnical flares or by infrared one-directional transmission, for instance of the DIRCM type. This extension permits the triggering of the transmittal (flares or infrared) only in case of detection of a ground-air missile.
Numerous variants can be considered in combination with detection systems and various decoy systems. One can foresee a detection system with a one-directional radiation system complementing a multidirectional radiation system or else, one or the other of such systems. In all cases, the device according to the invention can be considered as being an independent system. As such, its operation on all aircraft programs is large simplified.
This invention is not limited to the forms of implementation and their variants described above as non-limiting examples. It also involves implementation variants within the reach of the specialist in the field within the framework of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0401477 | Feb 2004 | FR | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60600356 | Aug 2004 | US |