Aircraft carrier An
aircraft carrier is a military
ship whose main function is to
deploy and recover aircraft.
They are generally deployed as part of a carrier
battle group which allows a nation to project power great distances without
having to depend on local bases for land-based aircraft.
Aircraft carriers are generally the largest ships operated by navies;
a Nimitz-class
carrier powered by two nuclear reactors and four steam turbines is over 1,000
feet long and costs about $4.5 billion. Only nine countries maintain aircraft
carriers: France, India,
Russia, Spain,
Brazil, Italy,
Thailand, the United
Kingdom and the United
States. The People's
Republic of China's People's
Liberation Army Navy possesses the former Soviet
aircraft carrier Varyag and may have acquired the former Brazilian carrier
Minas
Gerais, but most naval analysts believe that they have no intention to operate
either.
Aircraft carriers have two basic configurations. The most common has a flat top
deck that serves as a take-off and landing area for airplanes.
A steam-powered catapult
accelerates an aircraft under full throttle, from 0 to 165 mph in 2 seconds during
take-off to help it reach take-off speed. To land on the carrier, incoming airplanes
moving at 150 mph are equipped with tailhooks to engage one of up to four arresting
cables stretched across the deck, stopping the aircraft within 320 feet after
engaging a cable.
The second configuration, developed for the Royal
Navy, has a 'ski-jump' at one end of the flat deck, that helps launch the
aircraft. This arrangement is designed for use with VTOL
or STOVL aircraft that are able
to take off and land with little or no forward movement. These aircraft do not
require catapult facilities or arrestor cables to be deployed across the flight
deck. In either
case the ship steams at up to 30 knots
(56 km/h) straight into the wind during take-off and landing operations in order
to increase the apparent wind speed, thereby reducing the required speed of the
plane relative to the ship.
Aircraft carriers are generally accompanied by a number of other ships, to provide
protection for the relatively unwieldy carrier, to carry supplies, and to provide
additional offensive capabilities. This is often termed a battle group or carrier
group, sometimes a carrier battle group.
Cruisers and other ships of the early twentieth century often carried a few catapult
launched seaplanes that could be recovered by crane after landing on the water.
These planes were often used for reconnaissance. Many modern warships have helicopter
landing capability and helicopter assault ships represent a new form of aircraft
carriers. Eugene
Ely was the first pilot launch from a stationary ship in November 1910.
He took off from the US Cruiser
USS Birmingham at Hampton
Roads, Virginia and
landed nearby on Willoughby Spit after some five minutes in the air. On January
18, 1911 he became the first
pilot to land on a stationary ship. He took of from the Tanforan racetrack and
landed on the USS
Pennsylvania achored on the San
Francisco waterfront.
Commander Charles Samson became the first airman to take off from a moving warship
on May 2, 1912
He took off in a Shorts S27 from the battleship HMS Hibernia while she
steamed at 10.5 knots in during the Royal Fleet Review at Weymouth.
The first strike
from a carrier against a land target took place on July 19, 1918.
Seven Sopwith Camels launched from HMS Furious attacked the German Zeppelin
base at Tondern. Several airships and balloons
were destroyed.
The first ship to have a full length flat deck was HMS Argus the conversion
of which was completed in September 1918.
The first ship to be designed specifically as an aircraft carrier was the second
HMS Hermes
which was commissioned in July 1923.
Aircraft carriers
played a large role in World
War II including the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor. The Battle
of Midway where 4 Japanese carriers were sunk by planes from 3 American carriers
is often considered the turning point of the war in the Pacific.
More modern uses of aircraft carriers include the Falklands
War, where the United Kingdom was able to win a conflict some 8,000 miles
from home in large part due to the use of the carriers HMS
Hermes and HMS
Invincible. The US has also made use of carriers in the Persian
Gulf, Afghanistan
and to protect its interests in the Pacific.
In the early 21st century, worldwide aircraft carriers were capable of carrying
about 1250 aircraft. US carriers accounted for over 1000 of these; the second
leading country, the United Kingdom fielded over 50 planes. List
of aircraft carriers Photographs,
illustrations and clipart at Classroom ClipArt.com |