407 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
407 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: SECRET MACH 6 SPY PLANE FILE: UFO3093
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POPULAR SCIENCE - MARCH 1993
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OUT OF THE BLACK - SECRET MACH 6 SPY PLANE
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- An eyewitness description, a secret test site, and a new analysis of
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advanced aeronautics paint a portrait of Aurora
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By Bill Sweetman
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Does the U.S. Air Force - or perhaps one of America's intelligence agencies
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- have a new secret spy plane in action? A growing body of evidence
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suggest that the answer is yes. A startling disclosure came recently when
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Chris Gibson, a British oil engineer and highly trained aircraft-spotter
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produced a sketch that captured the shape and size of an unusual aircraft
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he saw during daylight hours in August 1989, flying over his drilling rig
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in the North Sea. The expert eye-witness's drawing is the keystone that,
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with other evidence, provides an understanding of a secret hypersonic
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reconnaisance aircraft that is widely rumoured to exist, but routinely
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denied by U.S. officials. Its nickname is Aurora.
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Gibson - a former member of the disbanded Royal Observer Corps, a group of
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volunteer aircraft-spotters - was able to estimate the strange airplane's
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length and width by comparing it with the known dimensions of the K-135
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refueling tanker and two F-111 bombers flying alongside. But it wasn't until
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last year, when he came across a magazine design, that Gibson suddenly made
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sense of the sharp triangualr silhouette he saw.
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Analysts believe that Aurora is an operational spy plane that replaces the
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retired Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird. Like its predecessor, Aurora costs
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several million dollars per flight, and is sent out only in missions where
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the plane's sensors can gather vital information unobtainable by satelite
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reconnaissance or other means.
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It's plausible that Aurora was used to photograph Iraq during Operation
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Desert Storm in an attempt to provide tactical intelligence to ground-based
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military commanders. Aurora's unique capabilities also equip it for
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surveillance of nuclear proliferation. The list of nations of varying
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political complexions that covertly possess or are pursuing nuclear arms
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capabilities include India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, and
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South Africa. Suprise visits by a reconnaisance aircraft can give
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intelligence analysts clues - such as the presence of military trucks at
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an ostensibly civilian plant - which wouldn't be left out in the open when
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a spy satelite is scheduled to make its pass overhead.
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Aurora overflights of Russia have probably not occurred. Such missions
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would violate an agreement in place since a Lockheed U-2 plane was shot
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down over the Soviet Union in 1960. It is likely, that the Aurora monitors
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the submarine-building programs of Russia, China and other nations from
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well outside their airspace using side-looking sensors.
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Gibson's North Sea sighting completes a puzzle that has obsessed
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military-aircraft analysts for several years. Consider the following pieces
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of evidence hinting at the existence of something unacknowlegded that flies
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high and fast:
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* In February 1990, the Air Force retired its SR-71 spy planes. The
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official reason was saving the $200 million to $300 million a year it
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cost to operate the fleet of Blackbirds. Reporters were told that the
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SR-71's role had been taken over by advanced spy satellites.
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* The money saved was less than 7 percent of the approximately $4 billion
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the Air Force spends yearly on satellite reconnaisance - mere chicken
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feed by Pentagon standards. Keeping the SR-71's in service would have
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provided cheap insurance against an unlucky string of satellite and
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rocket failures, such as the ones that occured in 1985-'86.
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* The Air Force actually discouraged congressional attempts to reverse
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this termination of its most glamorous aircraft mission. Never in its
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history had the flying service walked away from a manned mission without
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a fight.
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* The pace of activity at the Air Force's top-secret Groom Lake test
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site in the Nevada desert has increased dramatically in recent years,
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suggesting the presence there of one or more secret aircraft programs.
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By comparing recent photos of the base with ones taken in the late
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1970s, its apparant that several large new buildings were added during
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the 1980s. Always visible in the recent pictures are a number of
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chartered Boeing 737 airliners that ferry workers in from other
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defense-industry towns such as Palmdale, Burbank, or Edwards in Southern
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California, or from Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.
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* Since mid-1990, unexplained sonic booms have periodically rattled
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Southern California. Officials at the United States Geological Survey,
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the agency that monitors earth-quake activity, no doubt irked the
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military with their public statements that a very fast, high-flying
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aircraft was causing the "airquakes" registered on their array of
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seismographs.
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* The federation of American Scientists, a private Washington, D.C.-based
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policy group, issued a report late last year on the likelihood that
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unacknowledged military aircraft might exist. The cautious review of
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unclassified literature on the subject concluded that several new types
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of aircraft may indeed be covertly flying around.
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- * -
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''It is close to midnight, but all the clocks are set to 0730 Greenwich
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time. In a closed and guarded hangar, ground crews help two men into
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orange pressure suits clamber into a delta-shaped, dull black airplane.
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The pilot touches keys that tell computers to start the engines. At
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first, the aircraft emits a subdued whine, whcich builds up quickly and
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is joined by the sound of rushing air. Then there is a flash of light
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from the intake and exhaust ducts as a wave of noise explodes, rolling
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harshly over across the dry lake bed. Within the roar are the scream of
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small rockets, the cracking thunder of a huge fighter engine, and a
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massive pulsing - as low as one cycle per second - that shakes the
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entire desert base.''
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- * -
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Gibson's sighting now makes it possible to reconstruct the Aurora program's
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history. The spy plane was operational, or nearly so, by August 1989, just
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before the Air Force parked its SR-71s for the last time. Aurora would
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have made its first flight by 1986 at the latest, following a development
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effort that was launched in 1981.
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This analysis elicited denials by high officials involved in defense and
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intelligence matters. Ohio Democratic Sen. John Glenn asserted that his
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sources in the intelligence community told him there was no such aircraft.
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"I think they're telling the truth", he said.
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Pete Williams, chief spokesman for the Bush administration's Secretary of
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Defense, Dick Cheney, gave a standard answer to a query about Aurora. "If
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there were such a program, we wouldn't discuss it". Williams explained that
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Pentagon policy says the same answer "must always be given" to queries
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about secret programs - whether or not they actually exist - to avoid
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revealing the truth. Donald B. Rice, Bush's Secretary of the Air Force,
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stated :"There's no program in the Air Force, none anywhere else that I
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know of. It simply doesn't exist." To some observers the stridency of
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Rice's response was puzzling. Why didn't he simply utter the usual
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Pentagon disclaimer?
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Black is the adjective most often applied to the hidden world in which such
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engineering activites unfold. In a 1985 Pentagon budget document
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requesting production funds for 1987, a censor's slip let the line item
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"Aurora" appear, grouped with the SR-71 and U-2 programs. Even if Aurora
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actually was the project's name at the time, it almost certainly would
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have been changed after being thus compromised; "Senior Citizen" is one
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new label that has been reported. Rated by the Pentagon as an
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"unacknowlegded special-access program," the plane's existence and real
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name are secret, and therefore deniable.
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Unconfirmed reports of Aurora's existence first surfaced in 1986 and
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POPULAR SCIENCE conjectured about the airplane's likely design in the
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November 1988 issue. Now, fresh reports from secret-airplane hunters such
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as James Goodall, who heard the and felt bone-shaking sounds coming from
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the Groom Lake facility late in December, continue to flesh out the
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picture of Aurora and the technology that makes it work.
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Armed with patience and braced for occasional confrontation with
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no-nonsense security patrols, resolute observers like Goodall trek through the
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harsh Nevada desert to a mountainside overlooking desiccated Groom
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Lake. From several miles away - as close as they can get without entering
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off-limits goverment land - the watchers can see the large air base with
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its motley collection of hangars. Some of the buildings are vast.
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Yet, like a mirage the isolated facility with its six-mile runway doesn't
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exist - officially, that is. And its non-existence is longstanding. A 1992
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Lockheed Corp. paper on the early days of the U-2 program refers to
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flight-testing at Groom Lake 35 years ago as having occurred merely at "a
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remote location"
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For some, monitoring events on the dry lake bed provides the excitement of
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pursuing a mystery. Author and photographer Goodall, who has been chasing
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classfied programs for almost 30 years, is motivated by enthusiasm for
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aircraft and a conviction that he's entitled to know how his taxes are
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being spent. His earwitness account indicates that the airplane's
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propulsion system is unconventional to say the least. "We heard Aurora
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from 18 miles away. The sound was so intense that you feel it. It was quite
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something else - a pulsing noise that you'll never forget"
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- * -
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''The airplane begins rolling forward at half-past midnight, then
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accelerates and noses up into the sky like a hot fighter. Seconds later
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it is gone, trailing a shattering roar across the desert. In the
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cockpit, the pilot sees his course overlaid on a detailed map as the
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craft climbs through 60.000 feet at a steep 70-degree angle. Just
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minutes after takeoff, the plane is cruising northeast at six times the
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speed of sound, covering almost one mile per second. More than 20 miles
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above the ground, it passes unheard over Montana and North Dakota into
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Canadian airspace.
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Five thousand miles away, a loaded KC-135 tanker lifts heavily into the
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early morning sky from a secure air base in western Scotland. At a
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second base farther south, four F-111 crewmen walk toward their pair of
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aircraft. Only the crew and their base commander knows this will not be a
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routine training flight.''
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- * -
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Aurora was almost certainly built at Lockheed's fabled Skunk Works, now
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called the Lockheed Advanced Development Co. Of all known design
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organizations, only the Skunk Works has the proven ability to manage large
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programs incorporating breakthrough technology in total secrecy. Analysis
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of Lockheed's financial statements makes it possible to estimate Aurora's
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price tag at about $1 billion per aircraft. At most, 10 to 20 of the new
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spy planes have been built.
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A hypersonic prototype paved the way for Aurora. In 1975, Lockheed proposed
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a small hypersonic research aircraft that would be launched from the back
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of an early version of the SR-71. And a definite survey of Lockheed
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aircraft, published in 1982, stated that the company had already flown a
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mach 6 experimental craft. By the late 1970s the US government probably
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had two main reasons for going ahead with Aurora. The first: improved
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Soviet surface-to-air missile (SAM) systems posed an increasing threath to
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the SR-71, which flies at Mach 3.2 (2.100 mph) and reaches altitudes above
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80.000 feet. By 1980, two potent new Soviet antiaircraft weapons, the
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SA-10 Grumble and the SA-12 Gladiator/Giant, were under development. Both
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have a maximum altitude of about 100.000 feet and feature advanced
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tracking and guidance systems. The second reason for building Aurora was
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that the satelites alone are not the best solution to reconnaisance
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requirements. While they take superb pictures, satellites also have
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inherent limitations. They follow fixed, predictable orbits, which make
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their appearance no suprise to a shrewd adversary. Although earthbound
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controllers can command satellites to fire thrusters to adjust their
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orbits, this ability is strictly limited by a finite on-board fuel supply.
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In addition, because it is difficult to supply the amount of power needed
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to operate an all-weather radar, most satellites carry only daylight or
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low-light cameras.
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Although they cost several hundred million dollars apiece, spy satellites
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last, on average, only five years before they are dumped into the
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atmosphere and replaced. And it is difficult to increase surveillance
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quickly in a crisis unless a stockpile of reserve satellites and launchers
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is kept ready - as the former Soviet Union once did.
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Aircraft are much more flexible. They can be dispatched exactly where and
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when they are needed, and they can be fitted with day, night, or
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bad-weather sensors, depending on the conditions in the target area.
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- * -
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''During the hour it takes to reach the initial point for descent, the
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pilot and reconnaisance systems officer (RSO) in the backseat are fully
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occupied with checking equipment to see how it operates in the 1.000
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Fahrenheit friction heat soaking into their aircraft's structure - a
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delicate balance between speed, altitude, and deceleration rate.
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Over the North Sea, the tanker and the F-111s gather into a loose
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formation and follow a racetrack pattern. Appearing suddenly, the black
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jet turns in behind the KC-135 and connects with its refueling boom,
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wavering a little while matching the tanker's low speed. During the next
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ten minutes, 40 tons of liquid methane flow into the spy plane before it
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turns away and hurtles skyward. Already, another loaded methane tanker
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and two more F-111s are preparing to depart from their base in Britain."
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- * -
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An analysis of Aurora's three-dimensional shape can be extrapolated from
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its 75-degree swept triangular outline. the aircraft corresponds almost
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exactly in form and size to hypersonic reconnaisance aircraft studied in
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the 1970s and 1980s by McDonnell Douglas, according to Paul Czysz, now a
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professor of aerospace engineering at St.Louis University. Czysz worked on
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hypersonics while at McDonnell Douglas, including the company's proposal
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for the National Aerospace Plane program, and is an acknowlegded expert in
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the field. Efficient hypersonic planes "are basically air-breathing
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propulsion systems," he says.
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Like the SR-71, Aurora has a crew of two. Flying it is quite unlike
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piloting a conventional aircraft. There is little if any outside view,
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because a normally angled windshield causes too much drag and gets too hot.
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For these reasons, Aurora may have a retractable windshield used only for
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takeoffs and landings; at other times, the windshield would be covered by
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a heat shield. Aurora's pilot is really a mission manager, monitoring the
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aircraft and its systems and following the course of the flight on
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large-format video displays. His or her most important function is to cope
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with the unexpected; shifts in upper-atmospheric temperature, weather
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developments over the target area or refueling zone, or developments with
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the plane's mechanical or electronic systems. The RSO supervises a battery
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of sensors. The most important is a synthetic-aperture radar (SAR), a
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side-looking instrument that takes a sequence of snapshots of the target
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as the aircraft moves and compiles them into a single radar image that is
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as sharp as if had been acquired using an antenna hundreds of feet wide.
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The best SAR images are classified, but have benn described as
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"near-photographic," allowing different types of land vehicles to be easily
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distinguished from more than 100 miles away, regardless of clouds or smoke.
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In clear weather, Aurora uses daylight and infrared cameras for
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ultra-detailed work. And unlike a satellite, the craft can be scheduled to
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make its reconnaissance passes at the golden hour for covert imaging;
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early morning, when the low sun provides even illumination and long
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shadows that highlight features on the ground, before heat-induced haze
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forms. A phased-array antenna built into Aurora's upper surface - near the
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tail end, where aerodynamic heating is minimal - allows the airplane to
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transmit real-time or near real-time imagery to the Pentagon's satellite
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network.
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- * -
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''In a Middle Eastern country, a bored radar operator in an underground
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shelter fails to notice a faint blip on one egde of his screen. The
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system's computer can't make sense of an echo that's too high to be an
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airplane and stops displaying it. A few miles from a medium-size city
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lies a walled, heavily guarded compound containing equipment test stands
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and several small factory buildings. From time to time a siren sounds,
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and temporary covers thrown over sensitive equipment. All activity
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ceases for the few minutes it takes a known spy satellite's imaging path
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to pass over the base. But no warning is given this morning.
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Technicians, including two blond Caucasians, are busily preparing a
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rocket motor for testing on an open stand, and a truck that left a Czech
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machine-tool factory several days earlier is being unloaded. All of this
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detail is faithfully stored on a battery of hard-disk memories by a
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camera with a 48-inch telephoto lens. Three hours and 15 minutes after
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its takeoff from Nevada, the spy plane makes a wide turn back toward
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Northern Europe. The RSO selects the clearest image and transmits them
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to a satellite with a few keystrokes. In five minutes, hard copies as
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sharp as an original negative are rolling out of a processing machine
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6.000 miles away.''
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- * -
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Aurora uses ramjet engines, because no other type can work as efficiently
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at the speeds the plane travels. In its simplest form, a ramjet is a
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pinched tube that slows, compresses, and heats the incoming supersonic
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airstream before adding fuel to it, producing enormous thrust from the hot
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gas expanding out the exhaust nozzle. However, the compression process
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also generates tremendous drag. The ramjet designer's challenge is to keep
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the level of drag from canceling out the slim margin of thrust that
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propels the aircraft. One way to make a ramjet engine efficient is to
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stretch it along the entire length of the vehicle. In a hypersonic ramjet
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aircraft, the underside of the forward body is a ramp that initially
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compresses the air before it enters the inlet ducts, and the curved
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underside of the afterbody guides the expansion of the exhaust gas.
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IT'S A LIFTING BODY
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The compressed air underneath the body serves a second purpose: It holds
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the airplane up. At Mach 6, conventional wings would be superfluous
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appendages creating horrendous drag. Accordingly, the tips of Aurora's
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delta planform are mainly there to provide stability and control. The
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basic problem with ramjets is that they don't work at all unless the
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aircraft is moving quite fast, and they are not very efficient at speeds
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less than Mach 2.5. Therefore, Aurora needs some other systems to reach
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this speed. There are two clues to the way Aurora's designers solved the
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low-speed propulsion problem. The team for the X-30/National Aerospace
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Plane (NASP), though tight-lipped about the "accelerator" portion of the
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NASP engine design, has indicated that it functions as a ducted rocket in
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parts of its operating cycle. The seconds clue is that Aurora has been
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associated with two unusual noises: very-low-frequency pulsing sounds and
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an extremely loud roar on takeoff.
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SUPER COLD FUEL
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Even though Aurora is 80 to 90 feet long, which is about 20 feet shorter
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than the SR-71, it could weigh more - as much as 170.000 pounds when fully
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loaded. A clear two-thirds of its total mass would be fuel. Choosing the
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right fuel was crucial to Aurora's design. Because various sections of the
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craft will reach cruising-speed temperatures ranging from 1.000 fahrenheit
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to more than 1.400 fahrenheit, its fuel must both provide energy for the
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engines and extract destructive heat from the airplane's structures. This
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is done on the SR-71, but at hypersonic speeds even an exotic kerosene,
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such as the special high-flashpoint JP-7 fuel used by the Blackbird,
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cannot absorb enough heat. The solution for Aurora is a cryogenic fuel - a
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cold liquefied gas.
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The best candidates identified so far are methane and hydrogen. Liquid
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hydrogen provides more than twice as much energy and absorbs six times more
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heat per pound than any other fuel. The snag is its low density, which
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means bigger fuel tanks, a large airframe, and more drag. While liquid
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hydrogen is the fuel of choice for a space launch vehicle that accelerates
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quickly out of the atmosphere, studies have shown that liquid methane is
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better for an aircraft cruising at Mach 5 to Mach 7. Methane (natural gas)
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is widely available, provides more energy than jet fuels, and can absorb
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five times as much heat as kerosene. Compared with liquid hydrogen, it is
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three times denser and easier to handle - inflight refueling has been
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studied and poses no problem. Aurora can fly at subsonic speeds because its
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entire body, which has a great deal of area, is a lifting surface. Also,
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its sharply swept leading edge - like the Concorde's wing - generates a
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powerful vortex at nose-high flight angles, which clings to the leading
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edge and boosts the body's lift. Unencumbered by aerodynamic freeloaders
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such as a conventional fuselage, Aurora's shape is structurally efficient.
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It packs a lot of fuel and useful equipment into a relativelu small volume
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that saves weight and minimizes friction drag.
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The spy plane's airframe may incorporate some stealth technology, but it
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hardly needs it. Hypersonic aircraft are actually much harder to shoot
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down than a ballistic missile, Although a hypersonic plane isn't very
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maneuverable in the traditional sense, its velocity is such that, within
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tens of seconds, even a gentle turn puts it miles away from a SAM's
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projected interception point. So why bother with stealth?
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- * -
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''Having refueled a second time from a tanker over the North Sea after
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its Mideast photo session, the black plane heads east at high altitude
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across the Atlantic Ocean, North America, and beyond the California
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coast. Decelerating and descending above the Pacific Ocean, the craft
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drags a sonic boom over the water behind it. As it turns back towards
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its Nevada base, part of the inevitable shock wave bends through the
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upper atmosphere and rumbles across Southern California as Angelenos are
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getting ready for work. "There goes another one," they say, wondering
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wether it's a minor earthquake or "that plane we hear about." Time
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elapsed from takeoff to landing: 6.5 hours. Distance traveled: 15,500
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miles.''
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- * -
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*********************************************************************
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* -------->>> THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo <<<------- *
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