Monday, January 25, 2016

Here Is Every Aircraft Carrier in the World

 

Here Is Every Aircraft Carrier in the World

From Brazil to the U.S.A., a guide to air power at sea.

Only a handful of countries have aircraft carriers in their arsenals. They form an exclusive club, one whose members who have decided their interests stretch so far from their own waters they need to put air power at sea.
Broadly speaking, there are three kinds of aircraft carrier today: larger aircraft carriers that carry both fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, smaller carriers that operate helicopters, and amphibious ships that have full-length flight decks, hangars, and carry helicopters. Some of the world's carriers are new, bristling with planes and capable of circumnavigating the globe without refueling. Others are a half-century old or older, carry just a handful of obsolete planes, and rarely leave base.
Here's a look at the world's fleet. Not surprisingly, it's dominated by the U.S. Navy, which boasts 19 of the 36 such ships currently plying the world's waters

United States of America

The United States now operates 10 Nimitz-class "supercarriers," aircraft carriers that dwarf all other flat-tops worldwide both in size and capability.
The Nimitz carriers are 1,092 feet long and weigh a whopping 101,600 tons—60 percent larger than their nearest counterparts, the Queen Elizabeth class. Each ship is propelled to speeds in excess of 30 knots by a pair of nuclear reactors, giving them nearly unlimited range. The ships are built with high-tensile steel for protection, with layers of Kevlar over vital spaces.
Each Nimitz typically carries an air wing consisting of 24 F/A-18C Hornets, 24 F/A-E/F Super Hornets, 4 to 5 E/A-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft, 4 E-2D Hawkeye airborne early warning and control aircraft, 2 C-2 Greyhound transport aircraft, and 6 Seahawk helicopters.
In addition to the Nimitz-class, the United States Navy also operates nine landing helicopter dock ships of the Wasp and America classes. These ships are 843 feet long and displace roughly 40,000 tons. The ships are designed to carry air and land elements of a U.S. Marine corps landing force and have full-length carrier-like flight decks.
Each ship can carry 10 MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor transports, 4 CH-53E heavy transport helicopters, 3 UH-1 Huey helicopters, 4 AH-1Z attack helicopters, and 6 AV-8B Harrier jump jets. With minimal modification, each Wasp can carry 24 Harriers. The America class is optimized towards carrying Marine aviation units and can carry a few more Ospreys. In the near future the F-35B Joint Strike Fighter will replace the Harriers on a 1:1 basis, and the America class will be capable of supporting up to 20 F-35Bs at once.
Two new carriers, USS Gerald R. Ford and USS John F. Kennedy, are under construction, as well as an America-class ship, USS Tripoli.

China

Despite its growing military prowess, China has one just aircraft carrier, the Liaoning. She began life as the Soviet aircraft carrier Riga, but was never completed and instead sold for scrap to a Chinese investor whose stated goal was to convert it to a casino. Eventually the ship passed into the hands of the Chinese government. The government then spent more than a decade studying and updating the ship to modern standards before it was commissioned in 2012.
Liaoning is 999 feet long and displaces nearly 60,000 tons when fully loaded. She lacks catapults to launch aircraft, instead using a ski ramp to help fixed-wing aircraft take flight. Unfortunately for China, this cuts down the range and weapons payload of the ship's 24 Shenyang J-15 "Flying Shark" fighters. Liaoning's air wing also includes 6 Z-18 transport helicopters, 4 Ka-31 anti-submarine helicopters, and 2 Z-9 liaison helicopters.
China has a second carrier under construction and at least two more carriers planned.

Russia

Russia has one aircraft carrier on active duty, the Admiral Kuznetsov. The carrier was built in what is now Ukraine, and after an extensive construction period complicated by the breakup of the Soviet Union, was put into Russian service in 1991. Technically speaking, Kuznetsov is a sister ship of the Chinese carrier Liaoning.
Just over 1,000 feet long, Kuznetsov displaces 65,000 tons fully loaded. Her air wing consists of 18 Su-33 Flanker-D interceptors, 4 Su-25 Frogfoot attack jets, two Ka-31RLD airborne early warning and control helicopters, and 15 Ka-27PL anti-submarine warfare helicopters. Unlike other aircraft carriers, Kutznetsov also packs a punch in the form of 12 SS-N-19 Shipwreck supersonic anti-ship missiles and carries a naval version of the Tor surface to air missile for self-defense.
Admiral Kuznetsov is not particularly mechanically reliable, having broken down at sea in 2012. Like most large Russian Navy ships, the carrier is accompanied by an oceangoing tug whenever it conducts an overseas cruise. You know, just in case.
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United Kingdom

The U.K. has two aircraft carriers currently under construction. There's the Queen Elizabeth, due to become operational in 2020, and Prince of Wales, due in 2022. They will be the largest ships ever built for the Royal Navy.
Once completed, the carriers will be 920 feet long and displace 65,000 tons apiece. Conventionally powered, the two will operate both gas turbine and diesel engines. A high level of automation will keep the number of sailors manning each ship to just 679, with that number increasing to 1,600 with the air wing embedded.
Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales will feature a ski jump to assist jet takeoff instead of catapults. Each carrier will carry approximately 12 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters and 4 helicopters on peacetime cruises, with the capability to surge to 36 F-35s in wartime. Alternately, the ships can operate a mix of Apache, Merlin, Chinook, and Wildcat helicopters to land and support a Royal Marine landing force.

France

France has one working aircraft carrier, Charles de Gaulle. Commissioned in 2001, it measures 856 feet long and displaces 43,100 tons fully loaded. De Gaulle is the only nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in the world that's not part of the U.S. Navy. It has practically unlimited range.
The carrier typically supports an air wing consisting of 10 to 14 Rafale M multi-role fighters, 10 to 12 Super Etendard attack jets, 2 or 3 E-2C Hawkeye airborne early warning and control aircraft, and 4 to 5 search-and-rescue and transport helicopters. It is one of the few non-American carriers to have steam catapults to assist in takeoffs and arrestor wires to aid landings.

India

The first of India's two carriers, Viraat, is an ex-British light aircraft carrier that was until recently the flagship of the Indian Navy. Built during World War II, she is the oldest serving aircraft carrier in the world. Displacing 28,700 tons and 741 feet long, Viraat can carry 9 Indian Navy Sea Harrier fighters and 15 Sea King, Helix, and Chetak helicopters.
The Indian Navy's new flagship is the carrier Vikramaditya (pictured). Formerly a Soviet ship used for anti-submarine warfare, Vikramaditya was fitted with an angled flight deck, given a 14-degree ski jump, and extensively modernized. Completed, she is 930 feet long and displaces 45,000 tons.
Vikramaditya has a powerful air wing consisting of 36 MiG-29K multi-role fighters—modernized versions of the MiG-29 optimized for carrier operations. She also embarks 12 Helix helicopters, both for airborne early warning and control and search-and-rescue operations.
A replacement for the Viraat, also named Viraat, is currently under construction and will be India's first locally designed and built carrier.
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Japan

Once the world's preeminent aircraft carrier power, Japan has three of what it calls "helicopter destroyers"—aircraft carriers in all but name.
The country has two helicopter carriers of the Hyuga class. Coming in at 646 feet long and displacing 18,000 tons fully loaded, Hyuga and her sister ship Ise can handle tasks including anti-submarine warfare and amphibious assault. Each can embark up to ten helicopters, including SH-60 anti-submarine helicopters, MCH-101 minehunters, AH-64 Apache attack helicopters, MV-22 Ospreys, and CH-47 transport choppers.
More recently, Japan launched the helicopter carrier Izumo (pictured), which will enter service sometime in 2018. Approximately 30 percent larger than the older vessels, Izumo is 814 feet long and displaces 27,000 tons. A second ship in the class, Kaga, is currently fitting out.

Australia

Australia has a long tradition of operating aircraft carriers, from seaplane carriers of the 1920s to the last full-deck Australian carrier, HMAS Melbourne, which retired in 1982. After a three-decade hiatus, the Canberra-class amphibious ships mark the return of Australian carrier aviation.
Technically amphibious ships, HMAS Canberra and her sister ship HMAS Adelaide (pictured) are each 757 feet long and displace 27,830 tons when fully loaded. Their hulls, built in Spain, are based on the Spanish Navy's Juan Carlos I-class amphibious ships.
The Canberra class is designed to carry amphibious troops, and to that end the vessels have a full-length flight deck, a hangar, and elevators to move aircraft back and forth between the two. Each can support up to 12 aircraft, including Australian Navy Sea King and Sea Hawk helicopters and Australian Army Tiger attack helicopters, MRH-90 transports, and CH-47 Chinook heavy transports.
The Juan Carlos-class was built to accommodate vertical takeoff and landing fighters. However, the Australian government has downplayed the possibility of F-35s operating from the decks of these twin carriers.

Italy

The Cavour (pictured) is one of a pair of Italian carriers; the other is the Giuseppe Garabaldi. Cavour is 774 feet long and displaces 27,100 tons, while the smaller Garabaldi is 590 feet long and displaces just 13,850 tons. Both are conventionally powered, using General Electric LM2500 gas turbine engines for propulsion.
Cavour and Garabaldi are equipped with Harrier fighters and helicopters. Both carriers can send 12 helicopters or 10 Harriers into action, but only Cavour features a 12-degree angle ski ramp to assist Harriers on takeoffs. Cavour will be modified to accommodate the Italian Navy's planned force of 15 F-35B Joint Strike Fighters.
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South Korea

The ROKS Dokdo is a an amphibious ship capable of launching air and naval assaults. Measuring 653 feet long and displacing 18,800 tons, Dokdo is the largest warship ever built for the Republic of Korea Navy.
ROKS Dokdo's full-length flight deck can handle up to five helicopters at once. She has a internal hangar bay just under the flight deck and two large elevators for shuttling helicopters back and forth. The ship can send up to ten UH-60 Blackhawk troop-carrying helicopters into action at a time.
In addition to operating as a helicopter carrier, Dokdo can act as a command ship, too. Two more ships of this class are currently planned.

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