
The possibly afterburning exhaust suggests that rear-aspect stealth is traded away for increased speed (likely in bursts). Or maybe the shorter, stealthy engine just is not ready yet.
Northrop-Grumman X-47B:

X-47B first carrier launch attempt today
Do some googling on the rapidly expanding capabilities and fields IBM's Watson Near-AI-engine is being applied to. Pseudo-"Inspired" courses of action (i.e. 'human judgment') from artificial platforms are becoming more and more probable by the day. That solves the command & control part of autonomous drones/UCAVs/AKVs. Eliminate humans and designing the airframes for rapid and radical high-gee maneuvers becomes much easier. I.e. manned fighters die fast.DeltaV wrote:As long as the drones don't try to take on manned fighters for the next few decades, they'll be OK.
You are making the mistake in your assumption that you will have one UAV fight one manned fighter. In that situation, the manned fighter will most likely win. But, I forsee a future where you have several UAVs against one manned fighter. That will completely change the odds.DeltaV wrote:Do some googling on combat flight dynamics, nonlinear systems theory and how far machines have yet to go to match the broadband processing power, sensor fusion, inventiveness, intuition and experience of one well-trained human brain.
It will be decades, at best, before a UCAV can defeat a top-of-the-line fighter flown by a capable pilot. Pilots are currently trained to evade "AI" SAMs/AAMs, which can pull many more gees than a larger future UCAV.
Note that I am not saying that UCAVs can never reach that level of dogfighting.
By the time that capability is attained by UCAVs, however, compact, speed-of-light, directed-energy weapons and distributed-aperature sensors will nullify their high-gee advantage, and their small size will become a disadvantage.
As I have discussed here,
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=1643&p=34763&sid=51 ... 9b4#p34763
and elsewhere.
Bring 'em on."...the lasers could shoot between 50 and 100 mosquitoes per second."
If you had just read my link above:Skipjack wrote:And those same lasers cant shoot down manned fighters just as easily as drones?
So, if you want to turn your nimble little drone into a flying fortress similar in size/area/volume/power to it's manned fighter opponent, go ahead. But, then you won't be able to swarm the fighter in overwhelming numbers without bankrupting yourself, so it's back to mano-a-mecho. The automated fire control on each bird will be similar, but the fighter will have the additional advantage of unpredictable human decision making and higher-level strategizing."Dogfights" of the future will be more like drive-by shootings. The advantage will go to the weapons platform with the best sensors, the best fire control, the most weapon apertures and the most available power for the weapons employed. The small size of UAVs, touted as an advantage above, will become a disadvantage as maneuverability becomes immaterial, and the abilities to (a) resolve targets (sensor aperture, interferometric baseline), (b) bring a greater number of weapon apertures to bear (exterior area) and (c) provide a greater amount of power to each weapon (internal volume) become paramount.
Wrong. And getting wronger every day. Not even counting game-changing advances in HTSCs, LENRs, metamaterial optics, etc.Skipjack wrote:Putting aside that all these systems are AFAIK to big to be on a fighter jet.
Well right now they are too big for small fighter jets. The future may be different. But then, some drones right now are not that much smaller than manned fighters. They save money however, because of the things needed for supporting and protecting a human life are missing.DeltaV wrote:If you had just read my link above:Skipjack wrote:And those same lasers cant shoot down manned fighters just as easily as drones?So, if you want to turn your nimble little drone into a flying fortress similar in size/area/volume/power to it's manned fighter opponent, go ahead. But, then you won't be able to swarm the fighter in overwhelming numbers without bankrupting yourself, so it's back to mano-a-mecho. The automated fire control on each bird will be similar, but the fighter will have the additional advantage of unpredictable human decision making and higher-level strategizing."Dogfights" of the future will be more like drive-by shootings. The advantage will go to the weapons platform with the best sensors, the best fire control, the most weapon apertures and the most available power for the weapons employed. The small size of UAVs, touted as an advantage above, will become a disadvantage as maneuverability becomes immaterial, and the abilities to (a) resolve targets (sensor aperture, interferometric baseline), (b) bring a greater number of weapon apertures to bear (exterior area) and (c) provide a greater amount of power to each weapon (internal volume) become paramount.
Wrong. And getting wronger every day. Not even counting game-changing advances in HTSCs, LENRs, metamaterial optics, etc.Skipjack wrote:Putting aside that all these systems are AFAIK to big to be on a fighter jet.
The future is nearly now. For example, F-35B was designed so that the shaft-driven lift fan could be replaced with a generator that powers directed-energy weapons.Skipjack wrote:Well right now they are too big for small fighter jets. The future may be different.
Because they need to carry those big satellite dishes and complex, unjammable, encrypted, real-time data links to do anything useful.Skipjack wrote:But then, some drones right now are not that much smaller than manned fighters.
You forgot to add the cost of onboard, real-time data link equipment, expensive comm sat channels, ground-based control and uplink/downlink equipment in Nevada, and replacement costs due to their high crash and capture rates.Skipjack wrote:They save money however, because of the things needed for supporting and protecting a human life are missing.
USAF Splashes One Reaper... Northrop’s Global Hawk and General Atomics’s Predator and Reaper unmanned aerial vehicles have had a combined 9.31 accidents for every 100,000 hours of flying. That’s the highest rate of any category of aircraft and more than triple the fleet-wide average of 3.03, according to military data compiled by Bloomberg.
Iran–U.S. RQ-170 incidentOperators lost control over the unmanned aircraft during its operation. With the UAV headed in a direction where it was about to depart Afghanistan's air space, a U.S. Air Force aircraft brought down the Reaper in what the Air Force says was a remote part of Afghanistan.
On 4 December 2011, an American Lockheed Martin RQ-170 Sentinel unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was captured by Iranian forces near the city of Kashmar in northeastern Iran. The Iranian government announced that the UAV was brought down by its cyberwarfare unit which commandeered the aircraft and safely landed it, after initial reports from Western news sources inaccurately claimed that it had been "shot down". The United States government claims that the UAV malfunctioned and crashed.
GEN. SCHWARTZ:
The bottom line on your multiple questions -- let me start first with the rationale. It was our expectation, our -- certainly our hope, that the advantages that a Global Hawk-like platform provides would -- which we anticipated both would be cost of operation, on the one hand, and clearly persistence on the other -- would play out in practice.
The reality is that the Global Hawk system has proven not to be less expensive to operate than the U-2. And in many respects, the Global Hawk Block 30 system is not as capable from a sensor point of view, as is the U-2. And so we have made the choice, as the deputy secretary mentioned yesterday -- cancel the Block 30 program.
I have never argued that drones and manned fighters would not be used in combination. I have argued against your assertion that drones can replace manned fighters within a few decades.Skipjack wrote:Finally, having drones that are as capable (or even almost as capable) as manned fighter jets, means that you can employ completely new tactics.