EmoBirb
E.S.T
- Joined
- 18 January 2025
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It's entirely possible to build an unmanned, nuclear powered aircraft. But the question is the why?As a rhetorical question seeing the russian advances with Burevestnik, have we reached a point where actually nuclear powered aircraft such as a bomber are feasible? It will "only" take scaling up the engine/s to the appropriate power for a bomber. In the past protecting the crew was a major concern, i have no idea how radioactive (or not) the Burevestnik engine is, but seeing that we are in the age of the UCAVs, nuclear powered unmanned bombers anyone?
The only types of aircraft that would benefit from the unlimited flight duration would be ISR assets. And the engine used on the Burevestnik is, if I recall correctly, quite literally spewing out radioactive fallout while it's flying. Such a trail would make an ISR asset easy to detect and of limited usefulness.
As for bombers, a bomber is a means to get payload from point A to point B, which is already what the Burevestnik does. A nuclear powered bomber would be redundant.
The effort, cost and headaches are not worth it. And as I said above, while I find the nuclear powered Poseidon to be a genuinely useful weapon, I still fail to see the value in Burevestnik aside from unlimited range. ICBMs can already virtually hit anything anywhere. And if it's about increasing chances to penetrate air defenses, submarine launched nuclear tipped ballistic and cruise missiles fill that role as well. Positive about Burevestnik is that even when intercepted a debris field of radioactive waste would come into being, now imagine several being intercepted over urban areas, yeah. So even interception comes at a cost. Not that it matters for the scenarios for which this missile has been envisioned, which is all out war.