10 Facts About Northrop Grumman’s B-21 Raider
November 29 2022 - 09:30AM
GlobeNewswire Inc.
Northrop Grumman’s B-21 Raider will be unveiled Dec. 2 at the
company’s site in Palmdale, Calif., marking the first time the
world’s first sixth-generation aircraft will be seen by the public.
When delivered to the Air Force, the B-21 will join the nation’s
strategic triad as a visible and flexible deterrent; supporting
national security objectives and assuring the nation’s allies and
partners.
When it comes to delivering America’s resolve, the Raider will
provide the Air Force with long range, high survivability and
mission payload flexibility. The B-21 will penetrate the toughest
defenses for precision strikes anywhere in the world. Here are 10
key facts about Northrop Grumman’s B-21 Raider.
1. Sixth Generation. The B-21 Raider benefits
from more than three decades of strike and stealth technology. It
is the next evolution of the Air Force strategic bomber fleet.
Developed with the next generation of stealth technology, advanced
networking capabilities and an open systems architecture, the B-21
is optimized for the high-end threat environment. It will play a
critical role in helping the Air Force meet its most complex
missions.
2. Stealth. Northrop Grumman is continuously
advancing technology, employing new manufacturing techniques and
materials to ensure the B-21 will defeat the anti-access,
area-denial systems it will face.
3. Backbone of the Fleet. The B-21 Raider forms
the backbone of the future for U.S. air power. The B-21 will
deliver a new era of capability and flexibility through advanced
integration of data, sensors and weapons. Capable of delivering
both conventional and nuclear payloads, the B-21 will be one of the
most effective aircraft in the sky, with the ability to use a broad
mix of stand-off and direct attack munitions.
4. A Digital Bomber. The B-21 is a digital
bomber. Northrop Grumman uses agile software development, advanced
manufacturing techniques and digital engineering tools to help
mitigate production risk on the B-21 program and enable modern
sustainment practices. Six B-21 Raiders are in various stages of
final assembly and test at Northrop Grumman’s plant in Palmdale,
California.
5. Cloud Technology. Northrop Grumman and the
Air Force successfully demonstrated the migration of B-21 ground
systems data to a cloud environment. This demonstration included
the development, deployment and test of B-21 data, including the
B-21 digital twin, that will support B-21 operations and
sustainment. This robust cloud-based digital infrastructure will
result in a more maintainable and sustainable aircraft with
lower-cost infrastructure.
6. Open Architecture. To meet the evolving
threat environment, the B-21 has been designed from day one for
rapid upgradeability. Unlike earlier generation aircraft, the B-21
will not undergo block upgrades. New technology, capabilities and
weapons will be seamlessly incorporated through agile software
upgrades and built-in hardware flexibility. This will ensure the
B-21 Raider can continuously meet the evolving threat head on for
decades to come.
7. A National Team. Since contract award in
2015, Northrop Grumman has assembled a nationwide team to design,
test and build the world’s most advanced strike aircraft. The B-21
team includes more than 8,000 people from Northrop Grumman,
industry partners and the Air Force. The team consists of more than
400 suppliers across 40 states.
8. Sustainment. Long-term operations and
sustainment affordability has been a B-21 program priority from the
start. In partnership with the Air Force, our team has made
maintainability an equally important requirement to stealth
performance to ensure we’re driving more affordable, predictable
operations and sustainment outcomes.
9. Global Reach. The B-21 Raider will be the
backbone of the U.S. bomber fleet and pivotal to supporting our
nation’s strategic deterrence strategy. In addition to its advanced
long-range precision strike capabilities that will afford Combatant
Commanders the ability to hold any target, anywhere in the world at
risk, it has also been designed as the lead component of a larger
family of systems that will deliver intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance, electronic attack and multi-domain networking
capabilities. In a dynamic global security environment, the B-21
will provide the flexibility and deterrence critical to the
security of the U.S. and our allies.
10. Raider. The B-21 Raider is named in honor
of the Doolittle Raid of World War II when 80 airmen, led by Lt.
Col. James “Jimmy” Doolittle, and 16 B-25 Mitchell medium bombers
set off on a mission that changed the course of World War II. The
actions of these 80 volunteers were instrumental in shifting
momentum in the Pacific theater. This marked the raid as a catalyst
to a multitude of future progress in U.S. air superiority from land
or sea. The courageous spirit of the Doolittle Raiders is the
inspiration behind the name of the B-21 Raider.
Credit: Northrop Grumman
Contact: |
|
Vic Beck 703-280-4456vic.beck@ngc.com |
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8794abe2-df41-4cf6-8621-cd493d2fb6a5
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