🥷 Stealth Aircraft
The Invisible Warriors of Modern Air Power
Aircraft designed to evade radar, infrared, and other detection systems. From the revolutionary F-117 to the next-generation B-21 Raider.
What Makes an Aircraft “Stealth”?
Stealth technology encompasses multiple disciplines working together:
📐 Shape
Angled surfaces deflect radar waves away from the receiver. Flying-wing designs eliminate radar-reflecting joints.
🎨 Materials
Radar-Absorbing Materials (RAM) convert radar energy into heat. Carbon fiber composites reduce reflections.
🌡️ IR Suppression
Buried engines, cooled exhausts, and special coatings reduce infrared signature from heat-seeking missiles.
📡 Electronic
Low Probability of Intercept (LPI) radars, passive sensors, and electronic countermeasures complete the stealth package.
Dedicated Stealth Aircraft
F-117 Nighthawk
World’s First Stealth Aircraft
First-generation faceted stealth. Invisible to radar but subsonic. Combat proven in Panama, Gulf War, Kosovo.
Status: Retired (2008)
B-2 Spirit
$2.1 Billion Flying Wing
Second-generation curved stealth. Can strike anywhere on Earth from Missouri. Only 21 built.
Status: Active
B-21 Raider
Next-Generation Stealth Bomber
America’s newest bomber. Advanced stealth, optional unmanned operation, drone controller capability.
Status: Active (entering service)
Stealth Fighters
These aircraft combine stealth with supersonic performance:
Stealth Technology Evolution
Gen 1 (1980s): Faceted surfaces — F-117 Nighthawk
Gen 2 (1990s): Curved stealth — B-2 Spirit
Gen 3 (2000s): Stealth + supersonic — F-22 Raptor, F-35
Gen 4 (2020s): Advanced materials + optional unmanned — B-21 Raider
Gen 5 (2030s+): Adaptive stealth + AI + drone swarm control — NGAD/GCAP