Tuesday, 6 November 2007

Indonesian Space Force Command

Indonesian Space Force Command  
(Komando Angkatan Antariksa Indonesia)


F-117 Nighthawk

F-117A Nighthawk "Stealth Fighter"

F-117 Nighthawk
Role Stealth attack aircraft[1]
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed Corporation
Lockheed Martin
First flight 18 June 1981
Introduced 15 October 1983
Retired 22 April 2008[2]
Primary user United States Air Force
Number built 64 (5 YF-117A, 59 F-117A)
Unit cost US$42.6 M (flyaway cost)
US$111.2 M (total program)[3]
Developed from Lockheed Have Blue

 

The F-117A Nighthawk is the world's first operational aircraft designed to exploit low-observable stealth technology. The unique design of the single-seat F-117A provides exceptional combat capabilities. About the size of an F-15 Eagle, the twin-engine aircraft is powered by two General Electric F404 turbofan engines and has quadruple redundant fly-by-wire flight controls. Air refuelable, it supports worldwide commitments and adds to the deterrent strength of the U.S. military forces. 

The F-117A can employ a variety of weapons and is equipped with sophisticated navigation and attack systems integrated into a state-of-the-art digital avionics suite that increases mission effectiveness and reduces pilot workload. Detailed planning for missions into highly defended target areas is accomplished by an automated mission planning system developed, specifically, to take advantage of the unique capabilities of the F-117A. 

Streamlined management by Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, combined breakthrough stealth technology with concurrent development and production to rapidly field the aircraft. The F-117A program has demonstrated that a stealth aircraft can be designed for reliability and maintainability. The aircraft maintenance statistics are comparable to other tactical fighters of similar complexity. Logistically supported by Sacramento Air Logistics Center, McClellan AFB, Calif., the F-117A is kept at the forefront of technology through a planned weapon system improvement program located at USAF Plant 42 at Palmdale, Calif. The Air Force thinking today is that it will phase out the Nighthawks after 2018. 

The first F-117A was delivered in 1982, and the last delivery was in the summer of 1990. The F-117A production decision was made in 1978 with a contract awarded to Lockheed Advanced Development Projects, the "Skunk Works," in Burbank, Calif. The first flight was in 1981, only 31 months after the full-scale development decision. Lockheed-Martin delivered 59 stealth fighters to the Air Force between August 1982 and July 1990. Five additional test aircraft belong to the company. 

Air Combat Command's only F-117A unit, the 4450th Tactical Group, achieved operational capability in October 1983. Since the F-117’s first Air Force flight in 1982, the aircraft has flown under different unit designations, including the 4450th Tactical Group and the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing at Tonapah Test Range, NV; the 57th Fighter Weapons Wing, Nellis AFB, NV; the 410th Flight Test Squadron/410th Test Squadron, Palmdale, CA; and Detachment 1, Test Evaluation Group, also at Holloman, which falls under the 53rd Wing, Eglin AFB, FL. 

The stealth fighter emerged from the classified world while stationed at Tonapah Airfield with an announcement by the Pentagon in November 1988 and was first shown publicly at Nellis in April 1990. The 4450th TG was deactivated in October 1989, and was reactivated as the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing. 

In 1992 the F-117A Nighthawk made its new home at Holloman Air Force Base. The official arrival ceremony for the F-117 to Holloman AFB was conducted 09 May 1992. The 49th Fighter Wing (49FW) at Holloman serves as the only F-117 Home Station. The 49th Operations Group operates and maintains the F-117A aircraft. The 7th CTS "Screamin' Demons" serves as the transition training unit, preparing experienced Air Force pilots for assignment to the F-117A Nighthawk. The 8th and 9th Fighter Squadrons are designated to employ the F-117A Nighthawk in combat. Once an F-117 pilot has successfully completed training, he is then assigned to one of only two operational Nighthawk squadrons--the 8th FS "Black Sheep" and the 9th FS "Flying Knights." The 49FW provides full compliment of flightline maintenance capabilities as well as back-shop support. The F-117 deploys in support of contingency operations, as directed by National Command Authorities. Flightline maintenance support is deployed concurrent with the aircraft. Depending on the deployment duration, varying levels of back shop maintenance support may also be deployed.
The F-117A first saw action in December 1989 during Operation Just Cause in Panama. 
The stealth fighter attacked the most heavily fortified targets during Desert Storm (January-February 1991) , and it was the only coalition jet allowed to strike targets inside Baghdad's city limits. The F-117A, which normally packs a payload of two 2,000-pound GBU-27 laser-guided bombs, destroyed and crippled Iraqi electrical power stations, military headquarters, communications sites, air defense operation centers, airfields, ammo bunkers, and chemical, biological and nuclear weapons plants. 
Although only 36 stealth fighters were deployed in Desert Storm and accounted for 2.5 percent of the total force of 1,900 fighters and bombers, they flew more than a third of the bombing runs on the first day of the war. In all during Desert Storm, the stealth fighter conducted more than 1,250 sorties, dropped more than 2,000 tons of bombs, and flew more than 6,900 hours. More than 3,000 antiaircraft guns and 60 surface-to-air missile batteries protected the city, but despite this seemingly impenetrable shield, the Nighthawks owned the skies over the city and, for that matter, the country. The stealth fighter, which is coated with a secret, radar-absorbent material, operated over Iraq and Kuwait with impunity, and was unscathed by enemy guns. 

In the opening phase of Allied Force, aimed primarily at Yugoslavia's integrated air defense system, NATO air forces conducted more than 400 sorties. During the first two night attacks, allied troops in the air and at sea struck 90 targets throughout Yugoslavia and in Kosovo. F-117 Nighthawks from the 8th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron at Holloman Air Force Base NM participated in air strikes against targets in the Balkans during NATO operations. One F-117 fighter was lost over Yugoslavia on 27 March 1999. A US search and rescue team picked up the pilot several hours after the F-117 went down outside Belgrade. On 01 April 1999, Defense Secretary William Cohen directed 12 more F-117 stealth fighters to join NATO Operation Allied Force, to join the total of 24 F-117s that were participating in NATO Operation Allied Force. 


Design

The front side of an F-117
The F-117 is shaped to deflect radar signals and is about the size of an F-15 Eagle. The single-seat Nighthawk is powered by two non-afterburning General Electric F404 turbofan engines, and has quadruple-redundant fly-by-wire flight controls. It is air refuelable. To lower development costs, the avionics, fly-by-wire systems, and other parts are derived from the F-16 Fighting Falcon, F/A-18 Hornet and F-15E Strike Eagle. The parts were originally described as spares on budgets for these aircraft, to keep the F-117 project secret. The F-117 Nighthawk has a radar signature of about 0.025 m2.[31]

Among the penalties for stealth are lower engine power thrust, due to losses in the inlet and outlet, a very low wing aspect ratio, and a high sweep angle (50°) needed to deflect incoming radar waves to the sides.[32] With these design considerations and no afterburner, the F-117 is limited to subsonic speeds.

The F-117A is equipped with sophisticated navigation and attack systems integrated into a digital avionics suite. It carries no radar, which lowers emissions and cross-section. It navigates primarily by GPS and high-accuracy inertial navigation. Missions are coordinated by an automated planning system that can automatically perform all aspects of an attack mission, including weapons release. Targets are acquired by a thermal imaging infrared system, slaved to a laser that finds the range and designates targets for laser-guided bombs.

The F-117A's split internal bay can carry 5,000 lb (2,300 kg) of ordnance. Typical weapons are a pair of GBU-10, GBU-12, or GBU-27 laser-guided bombs, two BLU-109 penetration bombs, or two Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs), a GPS/INS guided stand-off bomb.

Specifications

An orthographically projected diagram of the F-117A Nighthawk
An F-117 conducts a live exercise bombing run using GBU-27 laser-guided bombs.
Data from US Air Force,[57] National Museum[1]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
  • 2 × internal weapons bays with one hardpoint each (total of two weapons) equipped to carry:

Sumber:

TNI AU Indonesia

Friday, 2 November 2007

Fisikawan dari MIT

Collected By:

Arip Nurahman
Department of Physics, Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics
Indonesia University of Education
&
Follower Open Course Ware at MIT-Harvard University, U.S.A.



MIT Physics Open Course Ware

Fisikawan dari MIT

(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Klik di Bawah ini




In terms of intellectual interest, the MIT Department of Physics is without compare. Its graduate program was recently ranked first in the nation. Its faculty and students are dynamic, innovative, and on the cutting edge of science exploration. Faculty members are involved in research worldwide and are represented at all major research facilities.
The research activities of MIT Department of Physics affiliates have also been recognized by five Nobel Prizes awarded since 1990. Recent Nobel Laureates include:
2004 Frank Wilczek, Herman Feshbach Professor of Physics, MIT
2001 Wolfgang Ketterle, John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics, MIT;
Eric A. Cornell, MIT PhD Physics 1990
1994 Clifford G. Shull, Professor of Physics Emeritus, MIT (deceased)
1990 Jerome I. Friedman, Institute Professor and Professor of Physics, MIT;
Henry W. Kendall, Professor of Physics, MIT; MIT PhD Physics 1951, SB Physics 1948 (deceased)
1976 Samuel C. C. Ting, Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of Physics;
Burton Richter, MIT PhD Physics 1956, SB Physics 1952



MIT physics faculty and Nobel Laureates Jerome Friedman, Frank Wilczek,
Wolfgang Ketterle and Samuel Ting.

In terms of working atmosphere, the Department is committed to creating a comfortable, yet challenging environment. The atmosphere is informal and collegial, yet employees are encouraged to grow professionally as well as personally through training and educational opportunities.

friedman_jerry.jpg
Jerome I. Friedman
Institute Professor, Emeritus; Professor of Physics, Emeritus; 1990 Nobel Laureate
Experimental High Energy Physics



wilczek_frank.jpg
Frank Wilczek
Herman Feshbach Professor of Physics; 2004 Nobel Laureate
Theoretical Particle Physics

ketterle_wolfgang.jpg
Wolfgang Ketterle
John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics; Director, MIT-Harvard Center for Ultracold Atoms; 2001 Nobel Laureate
Atomic, Molecular and Optical



ting_samuel1.jpg
Samuel C. C. Ting
Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of Physics; 1976 Nobel Laureate
Experimental High Energy Physics



Physics Research Divisions:


Division of Astrophysics



COMPACT OBJECTS COSMOLOGY OTHER
X-ray Optical Space Plasma Physics
Binary Evolution Radio Planetary Astronomy
Gravitation Theory
X-ray






Research Centers and Facilities



MIT-affiliated Research Centers and Facilities
Bates Linear Accelerator Center
Center for Magnetic Resonance
Center for Materials Science and Engineering
Center for Theoretical Physics
Condensed Matter Theory Group
G. R. Harrison Spectroscopy Laboratory
Haystack Radio Observatory
The Kavli Institute for Astrophysics & Space Research at MIT
Laboratory for Nuclear Science
Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO) (with Caltech)
Magellan Project at Las Campanas Observatory (with OCIW, and the Universities of Arizona, Harvard, and Michigan)
Michigan-Dartmouth-MIT Observatory
MIT–Harvard Center for Ultracold Atoms
Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Research Laboratory of Electronics
George R. Wallace Jr. Astrophysical Observatory
U. S. Government Research Centers and Facilities
Brookhaven National Laboratory: High Flux Beam Reactor
Brookhaven National Laboratory: National Synchrotron Light Source
Sumber: http://web.mit.edu/physics/

Sunday, 28 October 2007

The Discovery of Giant Magnetoresistance

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2007 jointly to
Albert Fert
Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS/THALES, Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France,
and
Peter Grünberg
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany,

"for the discovery of Giant Magnetoresistance".

 

Nanotechnology gives sensitive read-out heads for compact hard disks

This year's physics prize is awarded for the technology that is used to read data on hard disks. It is thanks to this technology that it has been possible to miniaturize hard disks so radically in recent years. Sensitive read-out heads are needed to be able to read data from the compact hard disks used in laptops and some music players, for instance.

In 1988 the Frenchman Albert Fert and the German Peter Grünberg each independently discovered a totally new physical effect – Giant Magnetoresistance or GMR. Very weak magnetic changes give rise to major differences in electrical resistance in a GMR system. A system of this kind is the perfect tool for reading data from hard disks when information registered magnetically has to be converted to electric current. Soon researchers and engineers began work to enable use of the effect in read-out heads. In 1997 the first read-out head based on the GMR effect was launched and this soon became the standard technology. Even the most recent read-out techniques of today are further developments of GMR.

A hard disk stores information, such as music, in the form of microscopically small areas magnetized in different directions. The information is retrieved by a read-out head that scans the disk and registers the magnetic changes. The smaller and more compact the hard disk, the smaller and weaker the individual magnetic areas. More sensitive read-out heads are therefore required if information has to be packed more densely on a hard disk. A read-out head based on the GMR effect can convert very small magnetic changes into differences in electrical resistance and there-fore into changes in the current emitted by the read-out head. The current is the signal from the read-out head and its different strengths represent ones and zeros.

The GMR effect was discovered thanks to new techniques developed during the 1970s to produce very thin layers of different materials. If GMR is to work, structures consisting of layers that are only a few atoms thick have to be produced. For this reason GMR can also be considered one of the first real applications of the promising field of nanotechnology.
Read more about this year's prize
Information for the Public (pdf)
Scientific Background (pdf)
To read the text you need Acrobat Reader.
Links and Further Reading
 

Albert Fert, French citizen. Born 1938 in Carcassonne, France. Ph.D. in 1970 at Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France. Professor at Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France, since 1976. Scientific director of Unité mixte de physique CNRS/Thales, Orsay, France, since 1995.
www2.cnrs.fr/en/338.htm

Peter Grünberg, German citizen. Born 1939 in Pilsen. Ph.D. in 1969 at Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany. Professor at Institut für Festkörperforschung, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany, since 1972.
www.fz-juelich.de/portal/gruenberg_e


Prize amount: SEK 10 million to be shared equally between the Laureates

Contact persons: Erik Huss, Press Officer, Phone +46 8 673 95 44, mobile +46 70 673 96 50, erik.huss@kva.se
Ulrika Björkstén, Scientific editor, mobile +46 70 206 67 50, ulrika.bjorksten@kva.se