None.
None.
The present invention relates generally to a cruise missile and more specifically to a process to start a gas turbine engine in a cruise missile launched from an aircraft in flight.
A cruise missile powered by a small gas turbine engine is carried within an aircraft weapons bay enclosed by weapons bay doors. To launch the cruise missile, the weapons bay doors are opened and the cruise missile is ejected outside and into the air stream. The speed of the cruise missile in the airstream is fast enough to air start the gas turbine engine of the cruise missile. However, the cruise missile has dropped in altitude a considerable amount, and once the engine starts the cruise missile must burn fuel to climb back to the altitude from which the cruise missile was released from the aircraft. This burns precious fuel and thus decreases the range and or loiter time for the cruise missile. The cruise missile could minimize altitude loss by using a pyrotechnic device to quickly accelerate and start the engine, but this adds weight, cost and still incurs speed and altitude loss.
The cruise missile could be attached to a mechanism within the weapons bay of the aircraft that will extend the cruise missile out from the weapons bay and into the airstream, but this mechanism would not be hidden from radar. Also, extending this mechanism outward from the weapons bay would require that the weapons bay doors be open for a considerable amount of time. The weapons bay doors would also be seen by radar.
A stealth cruise missile carried within a weapons bay of a stealth aircraft would be ejected from the weapons bay and towed momentarily in the airstream using a radar absorbent material (RAM) tow line that will tow the cruise missile until a gas turbine or ram jet engine accelerates and can be started. Once the cruise missile is ejected from the weapons bay, the weapons bay doors can be quickly closed in order to reduce a radar signature from the open doors and weapons bay and maintain the stealth capability of the aircraft and the cruise missile. After the cruise missile engine has been started the cruise missile releases the tow line and flies away to complete its mission. The tow line can then be retracted into the weapons bay with the doors closed through a slit or hole or discarded altogether.
The present invention is an apparatus and a process for launching a stealth cruise missile from a stealth aircraft while maintaining stealth capability by limiting exposure to a radar.
When the stealth aircraft 11 is to launch a cruise missile, the weapons bay doors 12 are opened and the cruise missile connected to the tow line 13 is ejected from the weapons bay. After the cruise missile 14 has dropped below the open doors 14, the doors 14 are quickly closed to maintain stealth capability. After the cruise missile 14 is released from the tow line 13, the tow line 13 is retracted into the weapons bay while the doors are closed or the tow line can be discarded into the free stream. A small opening on one or both edges of the doors 12 can be used to allow for the doors 12 to close while still towing the cruise missile 14.
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Entry |
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John Reed, The J-20 Stealth Fighters Weapons Bays, Jul. 6, 2011, Defense Tech, pp. 1-5. |
John Reed, The J-20 Stealth Fighters Weapons Bays, Jul. 6, 2011, Defense Tech, pp. 1-5 (Year: 2011). |