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Encyclopedia > Bomber aircraft

Updated 1195 days 21 hours 37 minutes ago.

A bomber is a military aircraft designed to attack ground targets, primarily by dropping bombs. For other uses of the word bomber see bomber (disambiguation).

United States Air Force B_2 Spirit bomber
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United States Air Force B-2 Spirit bomber

Traditionally, bombers have carried only defensive armament, and are not designed to engage in combat with other aircraft. They are relatively large and unmaneuverable (although some have been as fast or faster than contemporary fighters). Attack aircraft are smaller, faster, and more agile, but less so than a fighter when armed for a ground attack mission. They may carry air_to_air armament, but typically only for self_defense.


In modern air forces, the distinction between bombers, fighter_bombers, and attack aircraft has become blurry. Many attack aircraft, even ones that look like fighters, are optimized to drop bombs, with very little ability to engage in aerial combat. Indeed, the design qualities that make an effective low_level attack aircraft make for a distinctly inferior air superiority fighter, and vice versa. Conversely, many fighter aircraft, such as the F-16, are often used as 'bomb trucks,' despite being designed for aerial combat. Perhaps the one meaningful distinction at present is the question of range: a bomber is generally a long-range aircraft capable of striking targets deep within enemy territory, whereas fighter bombers and attack aircraft are limited to 'theater' missions in and around the immediate area of battlefield combat. Even that distinction is muddied by the availability of aerial refueling, which greatly increases the potential radius of combat operations.


The development of large strategic bombers stagnated in the later part of the Cold War both because of spiraling costs and the advent of the intercontinental ballistic missile, which was felt to have equal deterrent value while being much more difficult to intercept. The USAF XB-70 Valkyrie program was cancelled for that reason in the early 1960s, and the later B-1 and B-2 Spirit aircraft entered service only after protracted political and development problems. Similarly, the Soviet Union fielded the intermediate-range Tupolev Tu-22M in the 1970s, but the Mach 3 bomber project came to naught. The Mach 2 Tupolev Tu-160 was built only in tiny numbers, leaving the earlier Tupolev Tu-16 and Tupolev Tu_95 heavy bombers of 1950s vintage to soldier on into the 21st century. Meanwhile, the British strategic bombing force largely came to an end with the phase-out of the V Bomber force (the last of which left service in 1983. The only other nation that fields a strategic bombing force at present is the People's Republic of China, which has a number of Chinese-built Tupolev Tu-16s.


Plans in the US and Russia for successors to the current strategic bomber force remain only paper projects, and present political and funding pressures suggest that they are likely to for the foreseeable future. In the US, current plans call for the existing USAF bomber fleet to remain in service until the mid-to-late 2020s, with no replacement in sight.


See also:

bomb, V bomber, light bomber, dive-bombers, torpedo-bombers, strategic bombers, strategic bombing, stealth bombers, low-level bombing, carpet bombing, cruise missiles, Kamikaze, aerial bombing of cities, close air support, aerial interdiction, offensive counter air, terror bombing



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  Results from FactBites:
 
Bomber Aircraft - MSN Encarta (858 words)
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