Chogy
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Food for thought...
Inside a fighter's radome is the heart of the machine, a powerful AI radar. The material of the radome must be transparent to RF (radar) energy, so the signals can exit, echo, then return to the radar.
This is easily done on fighters like the F-16 and earlier by making the radome out of some composite material, like fiberglass. If the radome is metal, it will prevent the radar from operating.
Now, the mystery - on a stealth airplane like the F-22, the radome somehow lets the Raptor's own radar out, and also lets it return. Yet it must be opaque to an enemy radar. If an enemy signal were to penetrate, it'd bounce around on the radar hardware, exit, and make a strong echo.
So how do they do it? With a technology called a bandpass radome. Materials are selected that make this happen, but for the life of me, I can't figure out how.
How do they make a material that is transparent to the onboard radar, yet opaque/reflective to an enemy radar?
Googling "Bandpass Radome" provides a lot of hi-tech stuff, but nothing I can quite decipher. In the end, it appears that modern radomes are both extremely sophisticated, and also top-secret in materials and construction.
Any engineers want to explain how this is done?
Inside a fighter's radome is the heart of the machine, a powerful AI radar. The material of the radome must be transparent to RF (radar) energy, so the signals can exit, echo, then return to the radar.
This is easily done on fighters like the F-16 and earlier by making the radome out of some composite material, like fiberglass. If the radome is metal, it will prevent the radar from operating.
Now, the mystery - on a stealth airplane like the F-22, the radome somehow lets the Raptor's own radar out, and also lets it return. Yet it must be opaque to an enemy radar. If an enemy signal were to penetrate, it'd bounce around on the radar hardware, exit, and make a strong echo.
So how do they do it? With a technology called a bandpass radome. Materials are selected that make this happen, but for the life of me, I can't figure out how.
How do they make a material that is transparent to the onboard radar, yet opaque/reflective to an enemy radar?
Googling "Bandpass Radome" provides a lot of hi-tech stuff, but nothing I can quite decipher. In the end, it appears that modern radomes are both extremely sophisticated, and also top-secret in materials and construction.
Any engineers want to explain how this is done?