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  1. #71
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    Hỏi lấo Ác. Có phải mấy cái vệt sáng đó được xuất phát từ bờ Tây không?

    Bọn Đế Quốc kinh thật!!!

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  3. #72
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    Re: Hình Ảnh và Videos về Kỹ Thuật Quân Sự Ngày Nay (2012)

    Mấy ông nội Hamas bắn bừa qua từ dải Gaza đó. Nói là bắn bừa đúng theo nghĩa đen vì hàng ngàn quả rockets (mua từ Iran) này không hề có cái mục tiêu cụ thể nào cả, mà cứ hướng về "phía địch" mà nã giống kiểu pháo kích ban đêm ở VN ngày xưa, hên xui may rủi trúng gì cũng được.

    Cũng vì bắn bừa nên tuyệt đại đa số những rockets đó rơi vào sa mạc hoang vu (chưa tới nơi thì rớt, hoặc bay quá lố, hoặc rơi vào nơi không người ở), còn mấy trăm trái rockets mà giàn radar của hệ thống Iron Dome nhanh chóng tính toán đường bay và nhận định rằng sẽ rơi vào nơi dân cư thì bị đánh chặn đầu như trong video phía trên.

    Dạo này PATRIOT PAC-3 chưa có cơ hội thi thố tài năng nên không rõ success rates đã nâng cao tới đâu so với mức thành công trên 90% của Iron Dome, nhưng cũng vui vì công nghệ phòng thủ ngày nay cũng có những bước tiến song song với những công nghệ sinh ra để hủy diệt.
    "Những người thông thái lên tiếng vì họ có điều gì đó để nói; Những kẻ đần độn thì chỉ để nói một cái gì đó." - Nhà Triết Học Plato.

    Cuộc chiến ngoại giao tại Á Châu trong thế kỷ 21 * Tin thời sự về "Tình Hữu Nghị Việt-Trung"
    1000 tấm ảnh quý hiếm của Sài Gòn - Hòn Ngọc Viễn Đông * Chiến tranh Việt Nam: Những bức ảnh sưu tầm

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  5. #73
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    Lần đầu tiên trong lịch sử, phi cơ chiến đấu không người lái được phóng từ Hàng Không Mẫu Hạm.



    Navy launches jet-sized drone from aircraft carrier for first time


    A Navy X-47B drone is launched off the nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS George H. W. Bush off the coast of Virginia, Tuesday, May 14, 2013.

    The Navy for the first time Tuesday launched an unmanned aircraft the size of a fighter jet from a warship in the Atlantic Ocean, as it wades deeper into America's drone program amid growing concerns over the legality of its escalating surveillance and lethal strikes.

    Called the X-47B, the drone is considered particularly valuable because it's the first that is designed specifically to take off and land on an aircraft carrier, allowing it to be used around the world without needing the permission of other countries to serve as a home base.

    There has been increasing pushback against the use of drones from some nations that say the strikes cause widespread civilian deaths and operate with only limited oversight, eroding the U.S. image overseas. Navy officials say the drone will provide around-the-clock intelligence, surveillance and targeting capabilities.

    The X-47B took off successfully Tuesday morning and made two low approaches to the ship before heading back toward land. The test aircraft isn't intended for operational use; instead, the military is using the information it gathers during these demonstrations to develop the drone program. The Navy already operates two other unmanned aircraft, the small, low cost ScanEagle, which does not carry weapons, and the armed Fire Scout which is built more like a helicopter.

    Both the military and the CIA use armed Predator and Reaper drones in surveillance and strike operations around the world. The military uses them routinely in Afghanistan and other warzones, while the CIA has conducted frequent strikes in the border region of Pakistan — most often secret opertaions that trigger sharp criticism from the government there.

    The X-47B can reach an altitude of more than 40,000 feet, has a range of more than 2,100 nautical miles and can reach high subsonic speeds, according to the Navy. It is also fully autonomous in flight. It relies on computer programs to tell it where it to go unless a mission operator needs to step in. That differs from other drones used by the military, which are more often piloted from remote locations.

    Some critics have said the military's use of drones, furthered by Tuesday's tests, create concerns over the development of systems that could become weaponized and have less and less human control over launching attacks.

    Human Rights Watch has called for a pre-emptive prohibition of the development and use of any unmanned systems that carry weapons and are fully autonomous.

    While current models, like the X-47B, retain some level of supervision over decisions whether to use lethal force, the group predicts that fully autonomous weapons could be developed within decades that select and engage targets with no human intervention.

    Tuesday's tests show the trend toward greater autonomy "is not one that is going to be stopped," said Steve Goose, director of the arms division at Human Rights Watch.

    "For us, the question is where do you draw line?" Goose said. "We're saying you need to draw the line when you have a fully autonomous system that is weaponized. We're saying you must have meaningful human control over key battlefield decisions of who lives and who dies. That should not be left up to the weapons system itself."

    The Department of Defense issued a directive last year that said it would not pursue fully autonomous weapons, at least for the next few years. The U.S. is the only country with such a directive, Goose said.

    Before the planes can become commonplace, however, the military has to prove they can operate in the harsh conditions aboard an aircraft carrier at sea. The aircraft used a steam catapult to launch, just like a traditional Navy warplane does.

    "These are exciting times for the Navy as we are truly doing something that has never been done before — something I never imagined could be done during my 29-year naval career," Rear Adm. Mat Winter, the Navy's program executive officer for unmanned aviation and strike weapons, wrote in a Monday blog post.

    While the tailless plane won't land on the aircraft carrier on Tuesday, the Navy plans to conduct those tests soon. Landing on a moving aircraft carrier is considered one of the most difficult challenges Navy pilots face. Following the test launch, the plane will make a series of approaches toward the aircraft carrier before landing at Naval Air Station Patuxent River in Maryland.

    Earlier this month, the Navy successfully conducted a landing at that air station where the X-47B used a tailhook on the aircraft to catch a cable and suddenly stop, just as planes landing on carriers have to do.

    In the 2014 fiscal year, the Navy plans to demonstrate that the X-47B can be refueled in flight. The program cost is $1.4 billion over eight years. Northrop Grumman was awarded the primary contract in 2007.


    http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-...or-first-time/
    Được sửa bởi Arkain lúc 08:31 ngày 16-05-2013

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  7. #74
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    U.S Navy thử nghiệm súng bắn laser mới được gắn trên Destroyer. Bắn rơi máy bay không người lái của đối phương với phí tổn $1/shot thay vì $475,000 cho mỗi phi đạn.





    Laser beams fired directly from U.S. Navy ships will soon be used to protect American Navy boats targeted by unmanned drones -- using technology to burn the drones like a blow torch.

    "This will indeed be the first, real world deployment of a directed energy weapon," said Rear Admiral Matthew Klunder, chief of naval research.

    Klunder said the laser weapon will be deployed in the Persian Gulf where Iranian speedboats and unmanned aerial vehicles -- UAVs for short -- sometimes harass U.S. Navy ships.

    "If we have to provide some type of weapon system against a small, fast boat or UAV, this would be the system," said Kundler.

    If launched from a ship, despite the bobbing of waves, the laser beam is able to stay on its target.

    Turn down the power and it can fire a warning shot or blind a spy camera trying to take pictures.

    "We can actually dazzle that sensor and degrade it completely. We can actually almost turn it off," said Kundler.

    The laser won't work against high-speed targets like incoming missiles or jet fighters, and bad weather can distort the beam, but it cost just $40 million to develop and build over six years and has the potential to revolutionize both the economics and technology of warfare, which today relies on weapons like the sidewinder missile at $475,000 a shot.

    "When we shoot one pulse of directed energy, of laser energy, it's about one dollar. It's actually a little less than a U.S. dollar compared to something that right now make take thousands of dollars, maybe even millions of dollars," said Klunder.

    The laser, the only weapon which can travel at the speed of light, is due to arrive in the Persian Gulf next year.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_16...y-from-drones/

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  9. #75
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    Công nghệ chiến hạm tàng hình thế kỷ 21


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  11. #76
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  13. #77
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  15. #78
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