Observer wrote:In a nut shell the aircraft projects a beam in front of it that alters the molecular structure of the air atoms that it is about to fly through. This in tern reduces the amount of air/suface friction which in turn reduces drag and the airframe temperature and allows for hypersonic flight.
Obs
The Russains already utilise this technology on the Shkval torpedo.
The 6,000-pound Shkval rocket torpedo has a range of about 7,500 yards and can fly through the water at more than 230 miles an hour. The solid-rocket-propelled "torpedo" achieves this high speed by producing a high-pressure stream of bubbles from its nose and skin, which coats the weapon in a thin layer of gas. The Shkval flies underwater inside a giant "envelope" of gas bubbles in a process called "supercavitation.
There are no evident countermeasures to the Shkval and, according to weapons experts, its deployment by Russian and Chinese naval forces has placed the U.S. Navy at a considerable disadvantage.
V/R
Wolf