U.S. Air Force Reveals New B-21 Design, Test
Details
Steve Trimble March
08, 2023
Credit:
U.S. Air Force
A newly released Northrop Grumman
B-21 picture offers the first clear view of both of the bomber’s unique air
inlets.
The image, which the U.S. Air Force
published on March 7, reveals for the first time that the inlets are shaped
like sideways teardrops.
The designers appear to have
positioned a bulbous inboard section to ingest the boundary layer of air
flowing over the leading edge of the wing.
If viewed from above, the inlet also
appears to be L-shaped, with a right angle placed at roughly one-third of the
inlet length. Both sides sweep forward from the right angle, with the outboard
section at roughly two-thirds the length.
The B-21 is also designed with a
pair of indentations above the engine nacelles on either side of the aft
fuselage. The openings may be slits for supplemental inlets or exhausts.
Alternatively, they could be apertures for sensors or communications.
Several stenciled markings appear on
the wings and fuselages. The symbol for Northrop’s advanced projects division
appears on the right wing, as viewed from the cockpit. The roundel of the U.S.
Air Force is shown on the left wing. Along the right side of the fuselage aft
of the cockpit appear three more unit logos, but the details are not
visible.
The image appeared in a presentation
by Gen. CQ Brown, the Air Force chief of staff, who addressed the Air Warfare
Symposium (AWS) in Aurora, Colorado.
The Air Force revealed the B-21
during a Dec. 2 ceremony at the Northrop factory in Palmdale, California, but
carefully obscured views of the inlet from the crowd and live footage. The aft
section of the aircraft has still never been shown to the public, nor has the identity
and quantity of the engines on the bomber been disclosed.
The B-21 is still scheduled to fly
this year, but Air Force officials do not offer more details. “It will fly when
it’s ready,” Andrew Hunter, the assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition,
technology and logistics, told the AWS audience on March 7.
Air Force officials have
consistently said that the bomber’s development has gone generally to plan, and
that certain aspects of the program have proceeded faster than similar advanced
aircraft in the past.
The B-21’s mission system recently
demonstrated that it could detect, target, track and destroy a target in
simulations, Gen. Thomas Bussiere, the commander of Global Strike Command, said
at AWS. Although no further details were released, Bussiere’s remarks suggest
the B-21 may be further along than the Lockheed Martin F-22 and F-35 at the
same stage of development. Neither aircraft began testing the mission systems
onboard until at least three years after first flight.
“The capabilities and technology
integrated into that weapon system is second to none,” Bussiere said. “It will
be the most advanced strike platform ever designed or built on the
planet.”
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