Bomber: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

A bomber is a military aircraft designed to attack ground targets, primarily by dropping bombs. For other uses of the word bomber see bomber (disambiguation).

  • Attack aircraft (aka fighter-bombers) are multi-role combat aircraft which can be equipped for either air-to-air combat or air-to-ground combat. Examples: Hawker Typhoon, F/A-18 Hornet and the Panavia Tornado.

Strategic bombers often have some defensive armament, but they are not designed to engage in combat with other aircraft. They are relatively large, slow, and unmanoeuvrable. If enemy air opposition is expected, bombers must be escorted. Attack aircraft are smaller, faster, and more agile, but less-so than a fighter when armed for a ground attack mission, and carry insufficient air-to-air weaponry for protracted combat unless loaded specifically for an air-to-air mission. Typically, combat aircraft intended for ground attack duties are camouflaged in the colours of vegetation whilst interceptors and aircraft intended for "dogfighting" other airplanes at altitude are finished in light blues or greys, so that their presence and trajectory are harder to see against the sky.

The first true stealth aircraft was the F-117 Nighthawk, primarily a ground attack aircraft. It is built by Lockheed Martin, the company with the largest U.S. Defense Department contract.

The U.S. Air Force's most expensive bomber is the B-2 Spirit. It is a stealth bomber built by Northrop Grumman. Its price tag was near $2 billion per aircraft. Like its non-stealth counterparts B-1 and B-52, the B-2 Spirit has a range limited only by crew endurance, due to in-flight refueling.

No other western nations continue to fly a strategic bomber, with the phase-out of the British V-Bomber force in the 1982. Uninterceptible ICBMs meant delivering nuclear weapons became a lower priority (and in any case, jet fighters can carry modern devices), and for conventional bombing, modern fighters can now carry a bomb load comparable to most World War II bombers (except the B-29 Superfortress ) and using guided weaponry can deliver it far more accurately. In any case, developing and maintaining a bomber fleet is a massively expensive task and one which most nations do not have the resources, requirements or desire to pursue at present.

See also: bomb, V bomber, light bomber, dive-bombers, torpedo-bombers, strategic bombers, strategic bombing, stealth bombers, low-level bombing, carpet bombing, cruise missiles, Kamikaze, aerial bombing of cities, close air support, air interdiction, offensive counter air

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