Chinese researchers have allegedly developed a new paper-thin coating that can turn radar waves into heat to hide aircraft.
The AUKUS alliance's collaboration on a nuclear-powered submarine highlights the increasing complexity and cost of modern ...
The U.S. Navy is transforming a costly flub into a potent weapon with the first shipborne hypersonic weapon, which is being ...
China claims to have created a new stealth material that is so advanced that it allows fighter jets to slip past enemy ...
The side internal weapons bays are designed to house the PL-10 short-range air-to-air missile. Additionally, the J-20's bay ...
In the race for next-generation stealth technology, China’s J-35A and the U.S.'s F-35 Lightning II stand as two of the most ...
Currently, due to their thinness, the materials coated on stealth aircraft are unable to effectively absorb these long-wave signals. China has deployed a large number of anti-stealth radars along ...
Interestingly, this is just the latest in a flurry of new "anti-stealth" innovations made by the Chinese in recent years. Back in February of this year, for example, it was reported that China had ...
The new material is said to be able to absorb electromagnetic waves with wavelengths ranging from 2.3 feet to 0.6 feet, which covers the key frequencies of most anti-stealth radars, specifically the P ...