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Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global Hawk

The Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global Hawk is a high-altitude, remotely-piloted surveillance aircraft of the 1990s–2020s. It was initially designed by Ryan Aeronautical (now part of Northrop Grumman), and known as Tier II+ during development. The RQ-4 provides a broad overview and systematic surveillance using high-resolution synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) sensors with long loiter times over target areas. It can survey as much as 40,000 square miles (100,000 km2) of terrain per day, an area the size of South Korea or Iceland.

RQ-4 Global Hawk
An RQ-4 Global Hawk flying in 2007
Role Unmanned surveillance and reconnaissance aerial vehicle
National origin United States
Manufacturer Northrop Grumman
First flight 28 February 1998
Status In service
Primary users United States Air Force
NASA
NATO
Produced 1998–present
Number built 42 RQ-4Bs as of FY2013[1]
Developed into Northrop Grumman MQ-4C Triton

The Global Hawk is operated by the United States Air Force (USAF). It is used as a high-altitude long endurance (HALE) platform[2] covering the spectrum of intelligence collection capability to support forces in worldwide military operations. According to the USAF, the superior surveillance capabilities of the aircraft allow more precise weapons targeting and better protection of friendly forces.

Cost overruns led to the original plan to acquire 63 aircraft being cut to 45, and to a 2013 proposal to mothball the 21 Block 30 signals intelligence variants.[1] The initial flyaway cost of each of the first 10 aircraft was US$10 million in 1994.[3] By 2001, this had risen to US$60.9 million,[4] and then to $131.4 million (flyaway cost) in 2013.[1] The U.S. Navy has developed the Global Hawk into the MQ-4C Triton maritime surveillance platform. As of 2022, the U.S. Air Force plans to retire its Global Hawks in 2027.[5]

Development

Origins

In the 1990s, the Air Force was developing uncrewed aerial intelligence platforms. One was the stealthy Lockheed Martin RQ-3 DarkStar; another was the Global Hawk. Due to budget cuts, only one of the programs could survive. It was decided to proceed with the Global Hawk for its range and payload rather than go with the stealth Dark Star.[6]

The Global Hawk took its first flight on 28 February 1998.[7] The first seven aircraft were built under the Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration (ACTD) program, sponsored by DARPA,[8] in order to evaluate the design and demonstrate its capabilities. Demand for the RQ-4's abilities was high in the Middle East; thus, the prototype aircraft were actively operated by the USAF in the War in Afghanistan. In an unusual move, the aircraft entered initial low-rate production while still in engineering and manufacturing development. Nine production Block 10 aircraft, sometimes referred to as RQ-4A, were produced; of these, two were sold to the US Navy and an additional two were deployed to Iraq to support operations there. The final Block 10 aircraft was delivered on 26 June 2006.[9]

To increase the aircraft's capabilities, the airframe was redesigned, with the nose section and wings being stretched. The modified aircraft, designated RQ-4B Block 20,[10] can carry up to 3,000 lb (1,360 kg) of internal payload. These changes were introduced with the first Block 20 aircraft, the 17th Global Hawk produced, which was rolled out in a ceremony on 25 August 2006.[11] First flight of the Block 20 from the USAF Plant 42 in Palmdale, California to Edwards Air Force Base took place on 1 March 2007. Developmental testing of Block 20 took place in 2008.[12]

United States Navy version

 
The prototype MQ-4C on its first flight

The United States Navy took delivery of two of the Block 10 aircraft to evaluate their maritime surveillance capabilities, designated N-1 (BuNo 166509) and N-2 (BuNo 166510).[13] The initial navalised example was tested at Edwards Air Force Base briefly, before moving to Naval Air Station Patuxent River in March 2006 for the Global Hawk Maritime Demonstration (GHMD) program, operated by Navy squadron VX-20.[14][15]

In July 2006, the GHMD aircraft flew in the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC exercise) for the first time. Although it was in the vicinity of Hawaii, the aircraft was operated from NBVC Point Mugu, requiring flights of approximately 2,500 mi (4,000 km) each way to the area. Four flights were performed, resulting in over 24 hours of persistent maritime surveillance coordinated with the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and amphibious warfare ship USS Bonhomme Richard. For the GHMD program, the Global Hawk was tasked with maintaining maritime situational awareness, contact tracking, and imagery support of exercise operations. Images were transmitted to NAS Patuxent River for processing and then forwarded to the fleet off Hawaii.[16]

Northrop Grumman entered a RQ-4B variant in the US Navy's Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) UAV competition. On 22 April 2008, it was announced that Northrop Grumman's RQ-4N had won and that the Navy had awarded a US$1.16 billion contract.[17] In September 2010, the RQ-4N was officially designated the MQ-4C.[18]

The Navy MQ-4C differs from the Air Force RQ-4 mainly in its wing. While the Global Hawk remains at high altitude to conduct surveillance, the Triton climbs to 50,000 ft (15,000 m) to see a wide area and can drop to 10,000 ft (3,000 m) to get further identification of a target. The Triton's wings are specially designed to take the stresses of rapidly decreasing altitude. Though similar in appearance to the Global Hawk's wings, the Triton's internal wing structure is much stronger and has additional features including anti-icing capabilities and impact and lightning strike protection.[19]

On 17 June 2022, the Navy brought its last deployed RQ-4A BAMS-D back from the Middle East, ending what started as a six-month experiment but turned into a 13-year deployment. The Navy had acquired five Block 10 RQ-4As and since 2009 at least one had been kept on rotation in the Persian Gulf region. The aircraft accrued over 42,500 flight hours in 2,069 missions; one was lost in an accident and another was shot down by Iran. The BAMS-D was replaced in Navy service with the MQ-4C.[20]

Cost increases and procurement

Development cost overruns placed the Global Hawk at risk of cancellation. In mid-2006, per-unit costs were 25% over baseline estimates, caused by both the need to correct design deficiencies as well as to increase its capabilities. This caused concern over a possible congressional termination of the program if its national security benefits could not be justified.[21][22] However, in June 2006, the program was restructured. Completion of an operational assessment report by the USAF was delayed from 2005 to 2007 due to manufacturing and development delays. The operational assessment report was released in March 2007 and production of the 54 air vehicles planned was extended by two years to 2015.[23]

 
A maintenance crew preparing a Global Hawk at Beale Air Force Base

In February 2011, the USAF reduced its planned purchase of RQ-4 Block 40 aircraft from 22 to 11 in order to cut costs.[24] In June 2011, the U.S. Defense Department's Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) found the RQ-4B "not operationally effective" due to reliability issues.[25] In June 2011, the Global Hawk was certified by the Secretary of Defense as critical to national security following a breach of the Nunn-McCurdy Amendment; the Secretary stated: "The Global Hawk is essential to national security; there are no alternatives to Global Hawk which provide acceptable capability at less cost; Global Hawk costs $220M less per year than the Lockheed U-2 to operate on a comparable mission; the U-2 cannot simultaneously carry the same sensors as the Global Hawk; and if funding must be reduced, Global Hawk has a higher priority over other programs."[26]

On 26 January 2012, the Pentagon announced plans to end Global Hawk Block 30 procurement as the type was found to be more expensive to operate and with less capable sensors than the existing U-2.[27][28] Plans to increase procurement of the Block 40 variant were also announced.[29][30] The Air Force's fiscal year 2013 budget request said it had resolved to divest itself of the Block 30 variant; however, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 mandated operations of the Block 30 fleet through the end of 2014.[31] The USAF plans to procure 45 RQ-4B Global Hawks as of 2013.[1] Before retiring in 2014, ACC commander, General Mike Hostage said of the U-2's replacement by the drone that "The combatant commanders are going to suffer for eight years and the best they’re going to get is 90 percent".[32]

During 2010–2013, costs of flying the RQ-4 fell by more than 50%. In 2010, the cost per flight hour was $40,600, with contractor logistic support making up $25,000 per flight hour of this figure. By mid-2013, cost per flight hour dropped to $18,900, contractor logistic support having dropped to $11,000 per flight hour. This was in part due to higher usage, spreading logistics and support costs over a higher number of flight hours.[33]

In July 2022, the US Air Force announced that it plans to retire the Global Hawk in 2027.[5]

EuroHawk

 
EuroHawk at the ILA 2012

The German Air Force (Luftwaffe) ordered a variant of the RQ-4B, to be equipped with a customized sensor suite, designated "EuroHawk". The aircraft was based on the RQ-4B Block 20/30/40 and was to be equipped with an EADS-built signals intelligence (SIGINT) package; it was intended to fulfill Germany's requirement to replace their aging Dassault-Breguet Atlantique electronic surveillance aircraft of the Marineflieger (German Naval Air Arm). The EADS sensor package is composed of six wing-mounted pods;[34] reportedly these sensor pods could potentially be used on other platforms, including crewed aircraft.[35]

The EuroHawk was officially rolled out on 8 October 2009 and its first flight took place on 29 June 2010.[36] It underwent several months of flight testing at Edwards Air Force Base.[37] On 21 July 2011, the first EuroHawk arrived in Manching, Germany; after which it was scheduled to receive its SIGINT sensor package and undergo further testing and pilot training until the first quarter of 2012. The Luftwaffe planned to station the type with Taktisches Luftwaffengeschwader 51 ("Reconnaissance wing 51").[38] In 2011 the German Ministry of Defence was aware of difficulties with the certification for use within the European airspace.[39] During flight trials, problems with the EuroHawk's flight control system were found; the German certification process was also complicated by Northrop Grumman refusing to share technical data on the aircraft with which to perform evaluations.[35]

On 13 May 2013, German media reported that the EuroHawk would not be certifiable under ICAO rules without an anti-collision system; thus preventing any operations within European airspace or the airspace of any ICAO member.[40][41] The additional cost of certification was reported to be more than 600 million (US$780 million).[42] On 15 May 2013, the German government announced the immediate termination of the program, attributing the cancellation to the certification issue.[43] Reportedly, the additional cost to develop the EuroHawk to the standards needed for certification may not have guaranteed final approval for certification.[44]

German defense minister Thomas de Maizière stated EuroHawk was "very important" for Germany in 2012,[39] then referred to the project as being "a horror without end" in his 2013 statement to the Bundestag. The total cost of the project before it was canceled was €562 million.[45][46] Northrop Grumman and EADS have described reports of flight control problems and high costs for certification as "inaccurate"; they have stated their intention to provide an affordable plan to complete the first EuroHawk's flight testing and produce the remaining four aircraft.[47][48]

On 8 August 2013, the EuroHawk set an endurance record by flying continuously in European airspace for 25.3 hours, reaching an altitude of 58,600 feet (17,900 m). It was the longest flight by an unrefueled UAS weighing more than 30,000 lb (14,000 kg) in European skies.[49] On 5 October 2014, German Minister of Defence Ursula von der Leyen was reportedly considering reactivating the EuroHawk program to test its reconnaissance abilities over a long period at altitudes of up to 20,000 m (66,000 ft). Attempting to test the recon system on Airbus aircraft and an Israeli drone as alternate platforms had proven unsuccessful.[50]

The Bundeswehr would use it to detect, decrypt, and potentially interfere with enemy communications signals. If tests prove successful, a carrier would be purchased, likely "similar" to the U.S. Global Hawk.[50] Germany is considering installing the EuroHawk's SIGINT payloads onto the U.S. Navy MQ-4C Triton Global Hawk derivative, as the electronic and communications intelligence sensors would be more difficult to place on other substitute aircraft. It already has icing and lightning-strike protection, and was built with certification over civilian airspace in mind, meeting the STANAG 4671 requirements that had ended the EuroHawk program.[51]

As of March 2021, Germany plans to put the single RQ-4E aircraft on display in the Bundeswehr Military History Museum by 2022.[52]

Universal Payload Adapter and new payloads

In January 2014, President Obama signed a budget that included a $10 million study on adapting the U-2's superior sensors for the RQ-4.[53] In April 2015, Northrop Grumman reportedly installed the U-2's Optical Bar Camera (OBC) and Senior Year Electro-Optical Reconnaissance System (SYERS-2B/C) sensors onto the RQ-4 using a Universal Payload Adapter (UPA). Successful testing indicated that all RQ-4s could be similarly retrofitted.[54]

On 14 July 2015, Northrop Grumman and the USAF signed an agreement to demonstrate an RQ-4B fitted with the U-2's OBC and SYERS-2C sensors. Two Global Hawks are to be fitted with the UPA, involving the installation of 17 payload adapter fixtures and a new payload bay cover, as well as software and mission system changes for each sensor. The UPA can support 1,200 lb (540 kg) of sensors and will create a canoe-shaped sensor bay on the fuselage's underside.[55][56]

Northrop Grumman also expects to receive a contract to integrate the UTC Aerospace Systems MS-177 multispectral sensor used on the Northrop Grumman E-8C JSTARS onto the RQ-4.[55][56] The MS-177 will replace the SYERS-2 and includes modernized optronics and a gimbaled rotation device to increase field of view by 20 percent.[57] The RQ-4B flew with the SYERS-2 on 18 February 2016.[58]

Raytheon developed the AN/ALR-89 self-protection suite consisting of the AN/AVR-3 laser warning receiver, AN/APR-49 radar warning receiver, and jamming system, along with the ALE-50 towed decoy for the Global Hawk.[59][60][needs update]

Range Hawk

Although the Global Hawk is being retired from combat use, the Department of Defense's Test Resource Management Center (TRMC) is acquiring them to support the SkyRange program to test hypersonic missiles by 2024. Tests are currently monitored by ships, but it can take a ship 21 days to be positioned and outfitted for use, limiting flights to about a dozen airborne demonstrations a year. By using unmanned aircraft to track hypersonic systems, faster availability and deployment could support a test rate of up to one per week. To perform this new mission, the Global Hawk is retrofitted into the Range Hawk, which involves configuring it to look up rather than down by repositioning onboard avionics and installing new sensors and instrumentation suites to track an overhead hypersonic vehicle. The program will use four Block 20 and 20 Block 30 airframes retired from USAF service.[61]

Design

 
The Global Hawk has a high wing aspect ratio for efficiency, a single Rolls-Royce AE 3007 turbofan on top with the exhaust between its V-tail, and a front bulge housing its satellite antenna.

Overview

The Global Hawk UAV system comprises the RQ-4 air vehicle, which is outfitted with various equipment such as sensor packages and communication systems; and a ground element consisting of a Launch and Recovery Element (LRE), and a Mission Control Element (MCE) with ground communications equipment.[62] Each RQ-4 air vehicle is powered by an Allison Rolls-Royce AE3007H turbofan engine with 7,050 lbf (31.4 kN) thrust, and carries a payload of 2,000 pounds (910 kilograms). The fuselage uses aluminum, semi-monocoque construction with a V-tail; the wings are made of composite materials.[63]

There have been several iterations of the Global Hawk with different features and capabilities. The first version to be used operationally was the RQ-4A Block 10, which performed imagery intelligence (IMINT) with a 2,000 lb (910 kg) payload of a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) with electro-optical (EO) and infrared (IR) sensors. Seven A-model Block 10s were delivered and all were retired by 2011. The RQ-4B Block 20 was the first of the B-model Global Hawks, which has a greater 3,000 lb (1,400 kg) payload and employs upgraded SAR and EO/IR sensors. Four Block 20s were converted into communications relays with the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) payload.[10][64]

The RQ-4B Block 30 is capable of multi-intelligence (multi-INT) collecting with SAR and EO/IR sensors along with the Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload (ASIP), a wide-spectrum SIGINT sensor. The RQ-4B Block 40 is equipped with the multi-platform radar technology insertion program (MP-RTIP) active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, which provides SAR and moving target indication (MTI) data for wide-area surveillance of stationary and moving targets.[10][64]

Since the RQ-4 is capable of conducting sorties lasting up to 30 hours long, scheduled maintenance has to be performed sooner than on other aircraft with less endurance. However, since it flies at higher altitudes than normal aircraft, it experiences less wear during flight.[65]

System and ground facilities

Raytheon's Integrated Sensor Suite (ISS) consists of the following sensors:

Either the EO or the IR sensors can operate simultaneously with the SAR. Each sensor provides wide area search imagery and a high-resolution spot mode. The SAR has a ground moving target indicator (GMTI) mode, which can provide a text message providing the moving target's position and velocity. Both SAR and EO/IR imagery are transmitted from the aircraft to the MCE as individual frames, and reassembled during ground processing. An onboard inertial navigation system, supplemented by Global Positioning System updates, comprises the navigational suite.

The Global Hawk is capable of operating autonomously and "untethered". A military satellite system (X Band Satellite Communication) is used for sending data from the aircraft to the MCE. The common data link can also be used for direct down link of imagery when the UAV is within line-of-sight of compatible ground stations. For dense flight areas the autonomous navigation is switched off and the RQ-4 is remote controlled via the satellite link by pilots on the ground who are supplied with the same instrument data and who carry the same responsibilities as pilots in crewed planes.[66]

The ground segment consists of a Mission Control Element (MCE) and Launch and Recovery Element (LRE), provided by Raytheon. The MCE is used for mission planning, command and control, and image processing and dissemination; an LRE for controlling launch and recovery; and associated ground support equipment. The LRE provides precision Differential GPS corrections for navigational accuracy during takeoff and landings, while precision coded GPS supplemented with an inertial navigation system is used during mission execution. By having separable elements in the ground segment, the MCE and the LRE can operate in geographically separate locations, and the MCE can be deployed with the supported command's primary exploitation site. Both ground segments are contained in military shelters with external antennas for line-of-sight and satellite communications with the air vehicles.

Sensor packages

 
A photograph taken by US Navy Global Hawk with an aerial view of wildfires in Northern California, 2008

Radar

The Global Hawk carries the Hughes Integrated Surveillance & Reconnaissance (HISAR) sensor system.[67] HISAR is a lower-cost derivative of the ASARS-2 package that Hughes developed for the U-2. It is also fitted to the US Army's de Havilland Canada RC-7B Airborne Reconnaissance Low Multifunction (ARLM) crewed aircraft, and is being sold on the international market. HISAR integrates a SAR-MTI system, along with an optical and a thermography imager.

All three sensors are controlled and their outputs filtered by a common processor and transmitted in real time at up to 50 Mbit/s to a ground station. The SAR-MTI system operates in the X band in various operational modes; such as the wide-area MTI mode with a radius of 62 mi (100 km), combined SAR-MTI strip mode provides 20 ft (6.1 m) resolution over 23 mi (37 km) wide sections, and a SAR spot mode providing 6 ft (1.8 m) resolution over 3.8 square miles (9.8 square kilometers).

In July 2006, the USAF began testing the Global Hawk Block 30 upgrades in the Benefield Anechoic Facility at Edwards AFB. Upgrades include the Advanced Signals Intelligence Payload, an extremely sensitive SIGINT processor.[59] and a specialist AESA radar system, the Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program, or MP-RTIP. In 2010, Northrop disclosed the sensor capabilities of the new Block 40 aircraft, including the MP-RTIP radar, emphasising surveillance over reconnaissance.[68]

On 14 April 2014, a Block 40 Global Hawk completed the first Maritime Modes program risk-reduction flight to enhance the Air Force's maritime surveillance capabilities. Maritime Modes is made up of a Maritime Moving Target Indicator and a Maritime Inverse synthetic aperture radar (MISAR) that function together to provide ISR information on vessels traveling on the water's surface. During the 11.5-hour flight off of the California coast, the MISAR collected data on over 100 items of interest. Maritime Modes is planned to be integrated with the RQ-4B's existing MP-RTIP radar to detect and produce synthetic aperture radar imagery of ground vehicles.[69]

In November 2015, Northrop Grumman selected the Garmin International GSX 70 weather radar to be installed on Air Force Global Hawks. The GSX 70 is designed to provide operators with real-time weather information, offering horizontal scan angles of up to 120 degrees for better visibility into the strength and intensity of convective activity and a vertical scanning mode to analyze storm tops, gradients, and cell buildup activity. It also has a Turbulence Detection feature to identify turbulence in air containing precipitation and other airborne particulates and Ground Clutter Suppression that removes ground returns from the display so operators can focus on weather. Installation is expected to begin in early 2016.[70][unreliable source?] Installation of weather radars on the Global Hawk fleet completed in late 2019.[citation needed]

Visible light/infrared

The visible and infrared imagers share the same gimballed sensor package, and use common optics, providing a telescopic close-up capability. It can be optionally fitted with an auxiliary SIGINT package.[citation needed]

Operational history

U.S. Air Force

Following the September 11th attacks, the normal acquisition process was bypassed almost immediately and early developmental Global Hawk models were employed in overseas contingency operations beginning in November 2001.[65][71] Global Hawk ACTD prototypes were used in the War in Afghanistan and in the Iraq War. Since April 2010, they fly the Northern Route, from Beale Air Force Base over Canada to South-East Asia and back, reducing flight time and improving maintenance. While their data-collection capabilities have been praised, the program lost three prototype aircraft to accidents,[72][73][74] more than one quarter of the aircraft used in the wars.

The crashes were reported to be due to "technical failures or poor maintenance", with a failure rate per hour flown over 100 times higher than the F-16 fighter. Northrop Grumman stated that it was unfair to compare the failure rates of a mature design to that of a prototype aircraft. In June 2012, a media report described the Global Hawk, the General Atomics MQ-1 Predator and the MQ-9 Reapers "... the most accident-prone aircraft in the Air Force fleet."[75] On 11 February 2010, the Global Hawks deployed in the Central Command AOR accrued 30,000 combat hours and 1,500 plus sorties.[76]

Initial operational capability was declared for the RQ-4 Block 30 in August 2011.[10] The USAF did not plan to keep the RQ-4B Block 30 in service past 2014 due to the U-2 and other platforms being less expensive in the role.[77] Congress sought to keep it in service until December 2016.[78] The USAF had 18 RQ-4 Block 30s by the time of the passage of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, which directed a further three RQ-4s to be procured as part of Lot 11. The USAF felt that additional aircraft were "excess to need" and likely become backup or attrition reserve models.[79]

Despite the potential retirement of the Block 30 fleet due to low reliability, low mission readiness, and high costs, the USAF released a pre-solicitation notice in September 2013 for Lot 12 aircraft.[79] In planning the USAF's FY 2015 budget, the Pentagon reversed its previous decision, shifting $3 billion from the U-2 to the RQ-4 Block 30, which had become more competitive with the U-2 due to increased flying hours. Factors such as cost per flight hour (CPFH), information gathering rates, mission readiness, adverse weather operational capability, distance to targets, and onboard power still favored the U-2.[80][81]

After the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, RQ-4s flew 300 hours over the affected areas in Japan.[82] There were also plans to survey the No. 4 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.[83]

By November 2012, Northrop Grumman had delivered 37 Global Hawks to the USAF.[84] In March 2014, 42 Global Hawks are in use around the world, with 32 in use by the USAF.[85]

The USAF stated that U-2 pilot and altitude advantages allow better functionality in the stormy weather and airspace restrictions of the East Asia region and its altitude and sensor advantages allow it to see further into hostile territory.[86] In October 2013, the U.S. secured basing rights to deploy RQ-4s from Japan, the first time that basing rights for the type had been secured in Northeast Asia. RQ-4s are stationed at Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, but bad weather often curtailed flights. Basing in Japan as opposed to Guam enhances spying capabilities against North Korea by eliminating range as a factor.[87]

Two RQ-4s moved from Anderson AFB to Misawa Air Base in mid-2014 in the type's first deployment to Japan. They were speculated to have focused on maritime patrol missions.[88] The two RQ-4s successfully performed their missions from Misawa AB during a six-month deployment, with none cancelled due to poor weather. It was the first time that they had operated out of a civil-military airport, sharing airspace and runways with commercial aircraft safely without additional restrictions, usually taking off and landing during quieter periods of air traffic. Officials only stated that they had operated at "various places around the Pacific."[89]

On 19 September 2013, the RQ-4 Block 40 Global Hawk conducted its first wartime flight from Grand Forks Air Force Base.[90]

In November 2013, an USAF RQ-4 deployed to the Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan to assist in relief efforts. It flew from Andersen Air Force Base in Guam to relay imagery of afflicted areas to response personnel and ground commanders.[91]

In planning for the FY 2015 budget, the U-2 was to be retired in favor of the RQ-4, made possible by reductions of RQ-4 operating costs and would be the first time an uncrewed aircraft would completely replace a crewed aircraft.[92] The U-2 will continue to fly through 2018 without replacement.[93]

In May 2014, a U.S. Global Hawk conducted a surveillance mission over Nigeria as part of the search for the kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls. The Global Hawk joined MC-12 crewed aircraft in the search.[94]

The Global Hawk was used in Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). The aircraft provided real-time imagery and signals intelligence to identify friendly and enemy forces, do long-term target development, and track enemy equipment movement, enabling combatant commanders to act on better information and make key decisions. The BACN version allowed ground troops to contact aircraft when they were in need of assistance, such as close air support.[65]

On 11 November 2015, an EQ-4 became the first Global Hawk aircraft to reach 500 sorties. All three EQ-4s in operation supported OIR. Upon landing, maintainers could complete ground maintenance and make the aircraft mission ready again within five hours. Missions could last up to 30 hours, with each aircraft getting a "day off" in between combat flights.[95] On 1 April 2017, the EQ-4 program completed 1,000 continuous sorties, without incurring a single maintenance cancellation, while supporting OIR.[96]

On 4 April 2016, it was reported that a USAF Global Hawk had completed its third flight over Germany under an initiative (the European Reassurance Initiative) to reassure NATO members concerned over Russian involvement in the conflict in Ukraine. Germany opened its airspace for up to five Global Hawk flights a month until the middle of October 2016. The Naval Air Station Sigonella, Sicily-based Global Hawk flies over Italian and French airspace and an air corridor through Germany with its sensors switched off on its way to its area of operations over the Baltic Sea.[97]

In 2017, the USAF decided to begin the process of training enlisted airmen to fly the RQ-4 due to a shortage of pilots and an increased demand for the Global Hawk's capabilities. The RQ-4 is currently the only aircraft enlisted pilots are flying.[98][99]

On 16 August 2018, a Global Hawk, assigned to 12th Reconnaissance Squadron, took off from Beale AFB, California, and landed at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska for Red Flag – Alaska. This was the first time an RQ-4 had landed in Alaska during a simulated combat training exercise.[100]

On 21 April 2021, a Global Hawk was reported to have made a reconnaissance flight in an airspace off the coast of southern Crimea which Russia had temporarily closed up to 19,000 metres (62,000 ft) from Sevastopol to Feodosiya, issuing a relevant NOTAM.[101] The Global Hawk reportedly departed from Naval Air Station Sigonella on Sicily.[101]

On 22 February 2022, a Global Hawk was reported to have made a reconnaissance flight over Southeastern Ukraine coinciding with a NOTAM order by Ukrainian government and increased Russian military activity. The Global Hawk departed from Naval Air Station Sigonella on Sicily.[102][103]

Records

On 24 April 2001, a Global Hawk flew non-stop from Edwards AFB to RAAF Base Edinburgh in Australia, making history by being the first pilotless aircraft to cross the Pacific Ocean. The flight took 22 hours, and set a world record for absolute distance flown by a UAV, 13,219.86 kilometers (8,214.44 mi).[104]

On 22 March 2008, a Global Hawk set the endurance record for full-scale, operational uncrewed aircraft UAVs by flying for 33.1 hours at altitudes up to 60,000 feet over Edwards AFB.[105]

From its first flight in 1998 to 9 September 2013, the combined Global Hawk fleet flew 100,000 hours. 88 percent of flights were conducted by USAF RQ-4s, while the remaining hours were flown by NASA Global Hawks, the EuroHawk, the Navy BAMS demonstrator, and the MQ-4C Triton. Approximately 75 percent of flights were in combat zones; RQ-4s flew in operations over Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya; and supported disaster response efforts in Haiti, Japan, and California.[7][106]

From 10 to 16 September 2014, the RQ-4 fleet flew a total of 781 hours, the most hours flown by the type during a single week. 87 percent of flights were made by USAF RQ-4s, with the rest flown by the Navy BAMS-D and NASA hurricane research aircraft.[107]

The longest Global Hawk combat sortie lasted 32.5 hours.[65]

Downing by Iran

On 19 June 2019, a U.S. Navy BAMS-D RQ-4A from NAS Patuxent River flying over the Persian Gulf near the Strait of Hormuz was shot down by a 3rd Khordad surface-to-air missile fired from near Garuk, Iran.[108] Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that the drone had been in Iranian airspace,[109] while the United States maintained that the drone was in international airspace 18 nautical miles (34 km) away from Iran.[110][111]

NASA

 
A Global Hawk at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center

In December 2007, two Global Hawks were transferred from the USAF to NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards AFB. Initial research activities beginning in the second quarter of 2009 supported NASA's high-altitude, long-duration Earth science missions.[112][113] The two Global Hawks were the first and sixth aircraft built under the original DARPA Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration program, and were made available to NASA when the Air Force had no further need for them.[8] Northrop Grumman is an operational partner with NASA and will use the aircraft to demonstrate new technologies and to develop new markets for the aircraft, including possible civilian uses.[113]

It was reported in the March 2010 issue of Scientific American that NASA's Global Hawks were to begin scientific missions that month, and had been undergoing tests in late 2009. Initial science applications included measurements of the ozone layer and cross-Pacific transport of air pollutants and aerosols. The author of the Scientific American article speculates that it could be used for Antarctic exploration while being based in Chile. In August–September 2010, one of the two Global Hawks was loaned for NASA's GRIP (Genesis and Rapid Intensification Program) mission.[114]

Its long-term on station capabilities and long range made it a suitable aircraft for monitoring the development of Atlantic basin hurricanes. It was modified to equip weather sensors including Ku-band radar, lightning sensors and dropsondes.[115] It successfully flew into Hurricane Earl off the United States East Coast on 2 September 2010.[116]

NATO

In 2009, NATO announced that it expected to have a fleet of up to eight Global Hawks by 2012 to be equipped with MP-RTIP radar systems. NATO had budgeted US$1.4 billion (€1 billion) for the project, and a letter of intent was signed.[117] NATO signed a contract for five Block 40 Global Hawks in May 2012.[118] 12 NATO members are participating in the purchase. On 10 January 2014, Estonia revealed it wanted to participate in NATO Global Hawk usage.[citation needed] In July 2017, the USAF assigned the Mission Designation Series (MDS) of RQ-4D to the NATO AGS air vehicle.[119]

The first RQ-4D aircraft arrived at Sigonella Air Base on 21 November 2019. At that time, all five aircraft were undergoing developmental test flights. Initial operational capability was expected in the first half of 2020.[120]

In October 2018, Italy certified five of the drones for use in Sigonella, Sicily in 2020. However, by 23 December 2019, there were regulatory issues for the Global Hawks concerning shared space between Germany and Italy. German government officials criticized the new drones for their lack of technology to avoid collisions with other aircraft.[121]

South Korea

In 2011, South Korea's Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) expressed interest in acquiring at least four RQ-4Bs to increase intelligence capabilities following the exchange of the Wartime Operational Control from the U.S. to the Republic of Korea. Officials debated on the topic of the Global Hawks and domestic UAV programs.[122] In September 2011, the US and South Korea discussed aircraft deployments near its land border to view North Korea and the North Korea–China border.[123]

In January 2012, DAPA announced that it would not proceed with a purchase due to a price rise from US$442M to US$899M, and that other platforms such as the AeroVironment Global Observer or the Boeing Phantom Eye were being investigated.[124] However, in December 2012, South Korea notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale of 4 RQ-4 Block 30 (I) Global Hawks with the Enhanced Integrated Sensor Suite (EISS) at an estimated cost of $1.2 billion.[125] On 5 July 2013, the Korean National Assembly advised the government to re-evaluate the RQ-4 purchase, again citing high costs.[126]

On 17 December 2014, Northrop Grumman was awarded a $657 million contract by South Korea for four RQ-4B Block 30 Global Hawks.[127][128] The first RQ-4 arrived on 23 December 2019 at a base near Sacheon.[129] The second arrived on 19 April 2020, and the third by June. The fourth and final Global Hawk was delivered in September 2020.[130]

Japan

On 24 August 2013, Japan announced that the Japan Air Self-Defense Force planned to operate one Global Hawk jointly with the U.S. by 2015.[citation needed] On 21 November 2014, the Japanese Ministry of Defense officially decided to procure the Global Hawk instead of the General Atomics Guardian ER;[131] Japan has also been interested in the purchase of three aircraft.[132] The first Japanese Global Hawk landed at Misawa Air Base on 12 March 2022.[133]

Potential operators

Australia considered the purchase of a number of Global Hawks for maritime and land surveillance. The Global Hawk was to be assessed against the General Atomics MQ-9 Mariner in trials in 2007.[134] The Global Hawk aircraft would have operated in conjunction with crewed Boeing P-8 Poseidon aircraft, as a replacement of aging Lockheed AP-3C Orion aircraft. In the end, the Australian government decided not to proceed and canceled the order.[135] In 2012, a procurement effort for seven UAVs by 2019 was initiated.[136] In May 2013 the Australian government confirmed its interest in acquiring the MQ-4C Triton maritime surveillance variant.[137]

Canada has also been a potential customer, looking at the Global Hawk for maritime and land surveillance as either a replacement for its fleet of Lockheed CP-140 Aurora patrol aircraft or to supplement crewed patrols of remote Arctic and maritime environments, before withdrawing from the joint effort in August 2011.[138] Spain has a similar requirement, and has existing contacts with Northrop Grumman.[139]

The New Zealand Defence Force is studying the Global Hawk, which has the range to conduct surveillance in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica, and in the Pacific Islands. The acquisition process has not moved beyond an expression of interest.[140]

The Indian Navy has expressed interest in acquiring six to eight MQ-4C Maritime Surveillance Unmanned Aircraft Systems.[141][142]

In September 2018, Transport Canada was looking into buying a former German Air Force EuroHawk for surveillance missions in the Arctic. The EuroHawk cannot currently fly and has no equipment inside such as GPS and navigation tools.[143][144]

Variants

 
RQ-4A on display at the Museum of Aviation, Robins AFB
RQ-4A
Initial production version for the USAF, 16 built.[145]
RQ-4B
Improved version with increased payload, wingspan increased to 130.9 ft (39.9 m) and length increased to 47.7 ft (14.5 m). Due to the increased size and payload the range is reduced to 8,700 nmi (16,100 km).[146]
RQ-4D Phoenix
NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS).
RQ-4E Euro Hawk
Version for the Bundeswehr based on RQ-4B and equipped with an EADS reconnaissance payload for SIGINT. Germany canceled its order in May 2013; it received one of five Euro Hawks originally ordered.[43]
MQ-4C Triton
For USN Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) role; previously known as the RQ-4N; 4 ordered, 68 total planned.[147]
EQ-4B
Equipped with the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) system.[148]
KQ-X
Proposed autonomous tanker variant.[149][150]
Model 396
Scaled Composites and Northrop Grumman also offered an armed, 50% smaller version of the RQ-4A, known as the Scaled Composites Model 396, as part of the USAF Hunter-Killer program. The aircraft was rejected in favor of the MQ-9 Reaper.

Operators

 
A NASA Global Hawk in flight
  South Korea
  Japan
  NATO
  United States

Accidents

  • 29 March 1999: USAF RQ-4A 95-2002 crashed[157] at China Lake Naval Weapons Center.
  • 30 Dec 2001: USAF RQ-4A 98-2005 crashed[158] while returning to al-Dhafra Air Base, UAE.
  • 10 Jul 2002: USAF RQ-4A 98-2004 crashed[159] near Shamsi AB, Pakistan due to engine failure.
  • 21 August 2011: USAF EQ-4B crashed southeast of Jalalabad, Afghanistan.[160]
  • 11 June 2012: USN RQ-4A assigned to the Navy's BAMS program crashed near Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, US.[161]
  • 21 June 2017: USAF RQ-4B crashed near Lone Pine, California, US.[162]
  • 26 June 2018: USAF RQ-4B crashed into the sea off Naval Station Rota, Spain.[163]
  • August 2021: USAF RQ-4B crashed near Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota, US.[164]

Specifications (RQ-4B Block 30/40)

Data from Northrop Grumman[165] USAF[10]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 0 onboard (3 remote: Launch and Recovery Element (LRE) pilot; Mission Control Element (MCE) pilot and sensor operator)
  • Capacity: 3,000 lb (1,360 kg)
  • Length: 47 ft 7 in (14.5 m)
  • Wingspan: 130.9 ft (39.9 m)
  • Height: 15.3 ft (4.7 m)
  • Empty weight: 14,950 lb (6,781 kg)
  • Gross weight: 32,250 lb (14,628 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Rolls-Royce F137-RR-100 turbofan engine, 7,600 lbf (34 kN) thrust

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 391 mph (629 km/h, 340 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 357 mph (570 km/h, 310 kn)
  • Range: 14,200 mi (22,800 km, 12,300 nmi)
  • Endurance: 34+ hours
  • Service ceiling: 60,000 ft (18,000 m)
  • Lift-to-drag: 33[166]

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

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  • This article contains material that originally came from the web article by Greg Goebel, which is public domain.

External links

External image
Northrop Grumman RQ-4A Global Hawk Block 10 Cutaway
  Northrop Grumman RQ-4A Global Hawk Block 10 cutaway from Flightglobal.com

northrop, grumman, global, hawk, high, altitude, remotely, piloted, surveillance, aircraft, 1990s, 2020s, initially, designed, ryan, aeronautical, part, northrop, grumman, known, tier, during, development, provides, broad, overview, systematic, surveillance, u. The Northrop Grumman RQ 4 Global Hawk is a high altitude remotely piloted surveillance aircraft of the 1990s 2020s It was initially designed by Ryan Aeronautical now part of Northrop Grumman and known as Tier II during development The RQ 4 provides a broad overview and systematic surveillance using high resolution synthetic aperture radar SAR and electro optical infrared EO IR sensors with long loiter times over target areas It can survey as much as 40 000 square miles 100 000 km2 of terrain per day an area the size of South Korea or Iceland RQ 4 Global HawkAn RQ 4 Global Hawk flying in 2007Role Unmanned surveillance and reconnaissance aerial vehicleNational origin United StatesManufacturer Northrop GrummanFirst flight 28 February 1998Status In servicePrimary users United States Air ForceNASA NATOProduced 1998 presentNumber built 42 RQ 4Bs as of FY2013 1 Developed into Northrop Grumman MQ 4C TritonThe Global Hawk is operated by the United States Air Force USAF It is used as a high altitude long endurance HALE platform 2 covering the spectrum of intelligence collection capability to support forces in worldwide military operations According to the USAF the superior surveillance capabilities of the aircraft allow more precise weapons targeting and better protection of friendly forces Cost overruns led to the original plan to acquire 63 aircraft being cut to 45 and to a 2013 proposal to mothball the 21 Block 30 signals intelligence variants 1 The initial flyaway cost of each of the first 10 aircraft was US 10 million in 1994 3 By 2001 this had risen to US 60 9 million 4 and then to 131 4 million flyaway cost in 2013 1 The U S Navy has developed the Global Hawk into the MQ 4C Triton maritime surveillance platform As of 2022 the U S Air Force plans to retire its Global Hawks in 2027 5 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 United States Navy version 1 3 Cost increases and procurement 1 4 EuroHawk 1 5 Universal Payload Adapter and new payloads 1 6 Range Hawk 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 System and ground facilities 2 3 Sensor packages 2 3 1 Radar 2 3 2 Visible light infrared 3 Operational history 3 1 U S Air Force 3 1 1 Records 3 1 2 Downing by Iran 3 2 NASA 3 3 NATO 3 4 South Korea 3 5 Japan 3 6 Potential operators 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Accidents 7 Specifications RQ 4B Block 30 40 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksDevelopment EditOrigins Edit This section needs expansion with development context and history of the design this article is focused almost entirely on events after 2006 2008 You can help by adding to it July 2014 In the 1990s the Air Force was developing uncrewed aerial intelligence platforms One was the stealthy Lockheed Martin RQ 3 DarkStar another was the Global Hawk Due to budget cuts only one of the programs could survive It was decided to proceed with the Global Hawk for its range and payload rather than go with the stealth Dark Star 6 The Global Hawk took its first flight on 28 February 1998 7 The first seven aircraft were built under the Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration ACTD program sponsored by DARPA 8 in order to evaluate the design and demonstrate its capabilities Demand for the RQ 4 s abilities was high in the Middle East thus the prototype aircraft were actively operated by the USAF in the War in Afghanistan In an unusual move the aircraft entered initial low rate production while still in engineering and manufacturing development Nine production Block 10 aircraft sometimes referred to as RQ 4A were produced of these two were sold to the US Navy and an additional two were deployed to Iraq to support operations there The final Block 10 aircraft was delivered on 26 June 2006 9 To increase the aircraft s capabilities the airframe was redesigned with the nose section and wings being stretched The modified aircraft designated RQ 4B Block 20 10 can carry up to 3 000 lb 1 360 kg of internal payload These changes were introduced with the first Block 20 aircraft the 17th Global Hawk produced which was rolled out in a ceremony on 25 August 2006 11 First flight of the Block 20 from the USAF Plant 42 in Palmdale California to Edwards Air Force Base took place on 1 March 2007 Developmental testing of Block 20 took place in 2008 12 United States Navy version Edit Main article Northrop Grumman MQ 4C Triton The prototype MQ 4C on its first flight The United States Navy took delivery of two of the Block 10 aircraft to evaluate their maritime surveillance capabilities designated N 1 BuNo 166509 and N 2 BuNo 166510 13 The initial navalised example was tested at Edwards Air Force Base briefly before moving to Naval Air Station Patuxent River in March 2006 for the Global Hawk Maritime Demonstration GHMD program operated by Navy squadron VX 20 14 15 In July 2006 the GHMD aircraft flew in the Rim of the Pacific RIMPAC exercise for the first time Although it was in the vicinity of Hawaii the aircraft was operated from NBVC Point Mugu requiring flights of approximately 2 500 mi 4 000 km each way to the area Four flights were performed resulting in over 24 hours of persistent maritime surveillance coordinated with the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and amphibious warfare ship USS Bonhomme Richard For the GHMD program the Global Hawk was tasked with maintaining maritime situational awareness contact tracking and imagery support of exercise operations Images were transmitted to NAS Patuxent River for processing and then forwarded to the fleet off Hawaii 16 Northrop Grumman entered a RQ 4B variant in the US Navy s Broad Area Maritime Surveillance BAMS UAV competition On 22 April 2008 it was announced that Northrop Grumman s RQ 4N had won and that the Navy had awarded a US 1 16 billion contract 17 In September 2010 the RQ 4N was officially designated the MQ 4C 18 The Navy MQ 4C differs from the Air Force RQ 4 mainly in its wing While the Global Hawk remains at high altitude to conduct surveillance the Triton climbs to 50 000 ft 15 000 m to see a wide area and can drop to 10 000 ft 3 000 m to get further identification of a target The Triton s wings are specially designed to take the stresses of rapidly decreasing altitude Though similar in appearance to the Global Hawk s wings the Triton s internal wing structure is much stronger and has additional features including anti icing capabilities and impact and lightning strike protection 19 On 17 June 2022 the Navy brought its last deployed RQ 4A BAMS D back from the Middle East ending what started as a six month experiment but turned into a 13 year deployment The Navy had acquired five Block 10 RQ 4As and since 2009 at least one had been kept on rotation in the Persian Gulf region The aircraft accrued over 42 500 flight hours in 2 069 missions one was lost in an accident and another was shot down by Iran The BAMS D was replaced in Navy service with the MQ 4C 20 Cost increases and procurement Edit Development cost overruns placed the Global Hawk at risk of cancellation In mid 2006 per unit costs were 25 over baseline estimates caused by both the need to correct design deficiencies as well as to increase its capabilities This caused concern over a possible congressional termination of the program if its national security benefits could not be justified 21 22 However in June 2006 the program was restructured Completion of an operational assessment report by the USAF was delayed from 2005 to 2007 due to manufacturing and development delays The operational assessment report was released in March 2007 and production of the 54 air vehicles planned was extended by two years to 2015 23 A maintenance crew preparing a Global Hawk at Beale Air Force Base In February 2011 the USAF reduced its planned purchase of RQ 4 Block 40 aircraft from 22 to 11 in order to cut costs 24 In June 2011 the U S Defense Department s Director Operational Test and Evaluation DOT amp E found the RQ 4B not operationally effective due to reliability issues 25 In June 2011 the Global Hawk was certified by the Secretary of Defense as critical to national security following a breach of the Nunn McCurdy Amendment the Secretary stated The Global Hawk is essential to national security there are no alternatives to Global Hawk which provide acceptable capability at less cost Global Hawk costs 220M less per year than the Lockheed U 2 to operate on a comparable mission the U 2 cannot simultaneously carry the same sensors as the Global Hawk and if funding must be reduced Global Hawk has a higher priority over other programs 26 On 26 January 2012 the Pentagon announced plans to end Global Hawk Block 30 procurement as the type was found to be more expensive to operate and with less capable sensors than the existing U 2 27 28 Plans to increase procurement of the Block 40 variant were also announced 29 30 The Air Force s fiscal year 2013 budget request said it had resolved to divest itself of the Block 30 variant however the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 mandated operations of the Block 30 fleet through the end of 2014 31 The USAF plans to procure 45 RQ 4B Global Hawks as of 2013 1 Before retiring in 2014 ACC commander General Mike Hostage said of the U 2 s replacement by the drone that The combatant commanders are going to suffer for eight years and the best they re going to get is 90 percent 32 During 2010 2013 costs of flying the RQ 4 fell by more than 50 In 2010 the cost per flight hour was 40 600 with contractor logistic support making up 25 000 per flight hour of this figure By mid 2013 cost per flight hour dropped to 18 900 contractor logistic support having dropped to 11 000 per flight hour This was in part due to higher usage spreading logistics and support costs over a higher number of flight hours 33 In July 2022 the US Air Force announced that it plans to retire the Global Hawk in 2027 5 EuroHawk Edit EuroHawk at the ILA 2012 The German Air Force Luftwaffe ordered a variant of the RQ 4B to be equipped with a customized sensor suite designated EuroHawk The aircraft was based on the RQ 4B Block 20 30 40 and was to be equipped with an EADS built signals intelligence SIGINT package it was intended to fulfill Germany s requirement to replace their aging Dassault Breguet Atlantique electronic surveillance aircraft of the Marineflieger German Naval Air Arm The EADS sensor package is composed of six wing mounted pods 34 reportedly these sensor pods could potentially be used on other platforms including crewed aircraft 35 The EuroHawk was officially rolled out on 8 October 2009 and its first flight took place on 29 June 2010 36 It underwent several months of flight testing at Edwards Air Force Base 37 On 21 July 2011 the first EuroHawk arrived in Manching Germany after which it was scheduled to receive its SIGINT sensor package and undergo further testing and pilot training until the first quarter of 2012 The Luftwaffe planned to station the type with Taktisches Luftwaffengeschwader 51 Reconnaissance wing 51 38 In 2011 the German Ministry of Defence was aware of difficulties with the certification for use within the European airspace 39 During flight trials problems with the EuroHawk s flight control system were found the German certification process was also complicated by Northrop Grumman refusing to share technical data on the aircraft with which to perform evaluations 35 On 13 May 2013 German media reported that the EuroHawk would not be certifiable under ICAO rules without an anti collision system thus preventing any operations within European airspace or the airspace of any ICAO member 40 41 The additional cost of certification was reported to be more than 600 million US 780 million 42 On 15 May 2013 the German government announced the immediate termination of the program attributing the cancellation to the certification issue 43 Reportedly the additional cost to develop the EuroHawk to the standards needed for certification may not have guaranteed final approval for certification 44 German defense minister Thomas de Maiziere stated EuroHawk was very important for Germany in 2012 39 then referred to the project as being a horror without end in his 2013 statement to the Bundestag The total cost of the project before it was canceled was 562 million 45 46 Northrop Grumman and EADS have described reports of flight control problems and high costs for certification as inaccurate they have stated their intention to provide an affordable plan to complete the first EuroHawk s flight testing and produce the remaining four aircraft 47 48 On 8 August 2013 the EuroHawk set an endurance record by flying continuously in European airspace for 25 3 hours reaching an altitude of 58 600 feet 17 900 m It was the longest flight by an unrefueled UAS weighing more than 30 000 lb 14 000 kg in European skies 49 On 5 October 2014 German Minister of Defence Ursula von der Leyen was reportedly considering reactivating the EuroHawk program to test its reconnaissance abilities over a long period at altitudes of up to 20 000 m 66 000 ft Attempting to test the recon system on Airbus aircraft and an Israeli drone as alternate platforms had proven unsuccessful 50 The Bundeswehr would use it to detect decrypt and potentially interfere with enemy communications signals If tests prove successful a carrier would be purchased likely similar to the U S Global Hawk 50 Germany is considering installing the EuroHawk s SIGINT payloads onto the U S Navy MQ 4C Triton Global Hawk derivative as the electronic and communications intelligence sensors would be more difficult to place on other substitute aircraft It already has icing and lightning strike protection and was built with certification over civilian airspace in mind meeting the STANAG 4671 requirements that had ended the EuroHawk program 51 As of March 2021 Germany plans to put the single RQ 4E aircraft on display in the Bundeswehr Military History Museum by 2022 52 Universal Payload Adapter and new payloads Edit In January 2014 President Obama signed a budget that included a 10 million study on adapting the U 2 s superior sensors for the RQ 4 53 In April 2015 Northrop Grumman reportedly installed the U 2 s Optical Bar Camera OBC and Senior Year Electro Optical Reconnaissance System SYERS 2B C sensors onto the RQ 4 using a Universal Payload Adapter UPA Successful testing indicated that all RQ 4s could be similarly retrofitted 54 On 14 July 2015 Northrop Grumman and the USAF signed an agreement to demonstrate an RQ 4B fitted with the U 2 s OBC and SYERS 2C sensors Two Global Hawks are to be fitted with the UPA involving the installation of 17 payload adapter fixtures and a new payload bay cover as well as software and mission system changes for each sensor The UPA can support 1 200 lb 540 kg of sensors and will create a canoe shaped sensor bay on the fuselage s underside 55 56 Northrop Grumman also expects to receive a contract to integrate the UTC Aerospace Systems MS 177 multispectral sensor used on the Northrop Grumman E 8C JSTARS onto the RQ 4 55 56 The MS 177 will replace the SYERS 2 and includes modernized optronics and a gimbaled rotation device to increase field of view by 20 percent 57 The RQ 4B flew with the SYERS 2 on 18 February 2016 58 Raytheon developed the AN ALR 89 self protection suite consisting of the AN AVR 3 laser warning receiver AN APR 49 radar warning receiver and jamming system along with the ALE 50 towed decoy for the Global Hawk 59 60 needs update Range Hawk Edit Although the Global Hawk is being retired from combat use the Department of Defense s Test Resource Management Center TRMC is acquiring them to support the SkyRange program to test hypersonic missiles by 2024 Tests are currently monitored by ships but it can take a ship 21 days to be positioned and outfitted for use limiting flights to about a dozen airborne demonstrations a year By using unmanned aircraft to track hypersonic systems faster availability and deployment could support a test rate of up to one per week To perform this new mission the Global Hawk is retrofitted into the Range Hawk which involves configuring it to look up rather than down by repositioning onboard avionics and installing new sensors and instrumentation suites to track an overhead hypersonic vehicle The program will use four Block 20 and 20 Block 30 airframes retired from USAF service 61 Design Edit The Global Hawk has a high wing aspect ratio for efficiency a single Rolls Royce AE 3007 turbofan on top with the exhaust between its V tail and a front bulge housing its satellite antenna Overview Edit The Global Hawk UAV system comprises the RQ 4 air vehicle which is outfitted with various equipment such as sensor packages and communication systems and a ground element consisting of a Launch and Recovery Element LRE and a Mission Control Element MCE with ground communications equipment 62 Each RQ 4 air vehicle is powered by an Allison Rolls Royce AE3007H turbofan engine with 7 050 lbf 31 4 kN thrust and carries a payload of 2 000 pounds 910 kilograms The fuselage uses aluminum semi monocoque construction with a V tail the wings are made of composite materials 63 There have been several iterations of the Global Hawk with different features and capabilities The first version to be used operationally was the RQ 4A Block 10 which performed imagery intelligence IMINT with a 2 000 lb 910 kg payload of a synthetic aperture radar SAR with electro optical EO and infrared IR sensors Seven A model Block 10s were delivered and all were retired by 2011 The RQ 4B Block 20 was the first of the B model Global Hawks which has a greater 3 000 lb 1 400 kg payload and employs upgraded SAR and EO IR sensors Four Block 20s were converted into communications relays with the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node BACN payload 10 64 The RQ 4B Block 30 is capable of multi intelligence multi INT collecting with SAR and EO IR sensors along with the Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload ASIP a wide spectrum SIGINT sensor The RQ 4B Block 40 is equipped with the multi platform radar technology insertion program MP RTIP active electronically scanned array AESA radar which provides SAR and moving target indication MTI data for wide area surveillance of stationary and moving targets 10 64 Since the RQ 4 is capable of conducting sorties lasting up to 30 hours long scheduled maintenance has to be performed sooner than on other aircraft with less endurance However since it flies at higher altitudes than normal aircraft it experiences less wear during flight 65 System and ground facilities Edit Raytheon s Integrated Sensor Suite ISS consists of the following sensors a synthetic aperture radar SAR electro optical EO thermographic camera IR Either the EO or the IR sensors can operate simultaneously with the SAR Each sensor provides wide area search imagery and a high resolution spot mode The SAR has a ground moving target indicator GMTI mode which can provide a text message providing the moving target s position and velocity Both SAR and EO IR imagery are transmitted from the aircraft to the MCE as individual frames and reassembled during ground processing An onboard inertial navigation system supplemented by Global Positioning System updates comprises the navigational suite The Global Hawk is capable of operating autonomously and untethered A military satellite system X Band Satellite Communication is used for sending data from the aircraft to the MCE The common data link can also be used for direct down link of imagery when the UAV is within line of sight of compatible ground stations For dense flight areas the autonomous navigation is switched off and the RQ 4 is remote controlled via the satellite link by pilots on the ground who are supplied with the same instrument data and who carry the same responsibilities as pilots in crewed planes 66 The ground segment consists of a Mission Control Element MCE and Launch and Recovery Element LRE provided by Raytheon The MCE is used for mission planning command and control and image processing and dissemination an LRE for controlling launch and recovery and associated ground support equipment The LRE provides precision Differential GPS corrections for navigational accuracy during takeoff and landings while precision coded GPS supplemented with an inertial navigation system is used during mission execution By having separable elements in the ground segment the MCE and the LRE can operate in geographically separate locations and the MCE can be deployed with the supported command s primary exploitation site Both ground segments are contained in military shelters with external antennas for line of sight and satellite communications with the air vehicles Sensor packages Edit A photograph taken by US Navy Global Hawk with an aerial view of wildfires in Northern California 2008 Radar Edit Main article Airborne ground surveillance The Global Hawk carries the Hughes Integrated Surveillance amp Reconnaissance HISAR sensor system 67 HISAR is a lower cost derivative of the ASARS 2 package that Hughes developed for the U 2 It is also fitted to the US Army s de Havilland Canada RC 7B Airborne Reconnaissance Low Multifunction ARLM crewed aircraft and is being sold on the international market HISAR integrates a SAR MTI system along with an optical and a thermography imager All three sensors are controlled and their outputs filtered by a common processor and transmitted in real time at up to 50 Mbit s to a ground station The SAR MTI system operates in the X band in various operational modes such as the wide area MTI mode with a radius of 62 mi 100 km combined SAR MTI strip mode provides 20 ft 6 1 m resolution over 23 mi 37 km wide sections and a SAR spot mode providing 6 ft 1 8 m resolution over 3 8 square miles 9 8 square kilometers In July 2006 the USAF began testing the Global Hawk Block 30 upgrades in the Benefield Anechoic Facility at Edwards AFB Upgrades include the Advanced Signals Intelligence Payload an extremely sensitive SIGINT processor 59 and a specialist AESA radar system the Multi Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program or MP RTIP In 2010 Northrop disclosed the sensor capabilities of the new Block 40 aircraft including the MP RTIP radar emphasising surveillance over reconnaissance 68 On 14 April 2014 a Block 40 Global Hawk completed the first Maritime Modes program risk reduction flight to enhance the Air Force s maritime surveillance capabilities Maritime Modes is made up of a Maritime Moving Target Indicator and a Maritime Inverse synthetic aperture radar MISAR that function together to provide ISR information on vessels traveling on the water s surface During the 11 5 hour flight off of the California coast the MISAR collected data on over 100 items of interest Maritime Modes is planned to be integrated with the RQ 4B s existing MP RTIP radar to detect and produce synthetic aperture radar imagery of ground vehicles 69 In November 2015 Northrop Grumman selected the Garmin International GSX 70 weather radar to be installed on Air Force Global Hawks The GSX 70 is designed to provide operators with real time weather information offering horizontal scan angles of up to 120 degrees for better visibility into the strength and intensity of convective activity and a vertical scanning mode to analyze storm tops gradients and cell buildup activity It also has a Turbulence Detection feature to identify turbulence in air containing precipitation and other airborne particulates and Ground Clutter Suppression that removes ground returns from the display so operators can focus on weather Installation is expected to begin in early 2016 70 unreliable source Installation of weather radars on the Global Hawk fleet completed in late 2019 citation needed Visible light infrared Edit The visible and infrared imagers share the same gimballed sensor package and use common optics providing a telescopic close up capability It can be optionally fitted with an auxiliary SIGINT package citation needed Operational history EditU S Air Force Edit Following the September 11th attacks the normal acquisition process was bypassed almost immediately and early developmental Global Hawk models were employed in overseas contingency operations beginning in November 2001 65 71 Global Hawk ACTD prototypes were used in the War in Afghanistan and in the Iraq War Since April 2010 they fly the Northern Route from Beale Air Force Base over Canada to South East Asia and back reducing flight time and improving maintenance While their data collection capabilities have been praised the program lost three prototype aircraft to accidents 72 73 74 more than one quarter of the aircraft used in the wars The crashes were reported to be due to technical failures or poor maintenance with a failure rate per hour flown over 100 times higher than the F 16 fighter Northrop Grumman stated that it was unfair to compare the failure rates of a mature design to that of a prototype aircraft In June 2012 a media report described the Global Hawk the General Atomics MQ 1 Predator and the MQ 9 Reapers the most accident prone aircraft in the Air Force fleet 75 On 11 February 2010 the Global Hawks deployed in the Central Command AOR accrued 30 000 combat hours and 1 500 plus sorties 76 Initial operational capability was declared for the RQ 4 Block 30 in August 2011 10 The USAF did not plan to keep the RQ 4B Block 30 in service past 2014 due to the U 2 and other platforms being less expensive in the role 77 Congress sought to keep it in service until December 2016 78 The USAF had 18 RQ 4 Block 30s by the time of the passage of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 which directed a further three RQ 4s to be procured as part of Lot 11 The USAF felt that additional aircraft were excess to need and likely become backup or attrition reserve models 79 Despite the potential retirement of the Block 30 fleet due to low reliability low mission readiness and high costs the USAF released a pre solicitation notice in September 2013 for Lot 12 aircraft 79 In planning the USAF s FY 2015 budget the Pentagon reversed its previous decision shifting 3 billion from the U 2 to the RQ 4 Block 30 which had become more competitive with the U 2 due to increased flying hours Factors such as cost per flight hour CPFH information gathering rates mission readiness adverse weather operational capability distance to targets and onboard power still favored the U 2 80 81 After the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami RQ 4s flew 300 hours over the affected areas in Japan 82 There were also plans to survey the No 4 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant 83 By November 2012 Northrop Grumman had delivered 37 Global Hawks to the USAF 84 In March 2014 42 Global Hawks are in use around the world with 32 in use by the USAF 85 The USAF stated that U 2 pilot and altitude advantages allow better functionality in the stormy weather and airspace restrictions of the East Asia region and its altitude and sensor advantages allow it to see further into hostile territory 86 In October 2013 the U S secured basing rights to deploy RQ 4s from Japan the first time that basing rights for the type had been secured in Northeast Asia RQ 4s are stationed at Andersen Air Force Base in Guam but bad weather often curtailed flights Basing in Japan as opposed to Guam enhances spying capabilities against North Korea by eliminating range as a factor 87 Two RQ 4s moved from Anderson AFB to Misawa Air Base in mid 2014 in the type s first deployment to Japan They were speculated to have focused on maritime patrol missions 88 The two RQ 4s successfully performed their missions from Misawa AB during a six month deployment with none cancelled due to poor weather It was the first time that they had operated out of a civil military airport sharing airspace and runways with commercial aircraft safely without additional restrictions usually taking off and landing during quieter periods of air traffic Officials only stated that they had operated at various places around the Pacific 89 On 19 September 2013 the RQ 4 Block 40 Global Hawk conducted its first wartime flight from Grand Forks Air Force Base 90 In November 2013 an USAF RQ 4 deployed to the Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan to assist in relief efforts It flew from Andersen Air Force Base in Guam to relay imagery of afflicted areas to response personnel and ground commanders 91 In planning for the FY 2015 budget the U 2 was to be retired in favor of the RQ 4 made possible by reductions of RQ 4 operating costs and would be the first time an uncrewed aircraft would completely replace a crewed aircraft 92 The U 2 will continue to fly through 2018 without replacement 93 In May 2014 a U S Global Hawk conducted a surveillance mission over Nigeria as part of the search for the kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls The Global Hawk joined MC 12 crewed aircraft in the search 94 The Global Hawk was used in Operation Inherent Resolve OIR against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL The aircraft provided real time imagery and signals intelligence to identify friendly and enemy forces do long term target development and track enemy equipment movement enabling combatant commanders to act on better information and make key decisions The BACN version allowed ground troops to contact aircraft when they were in need of assistance such as close air support 65 On 11 November 2015 an EQ 4 became the first Global Hawk aircraft to reach 500 sorties All three EQ 4s in operation supported OIR Upon landing maintainers could complete ground maintenance and make the aircraft mission ready again within five hours Missions could last up to 30 hours with each aircraft getting a day off in between combat flights 95 On 1 April 2017 the EQ 4 program completed 1 000 continuous sorties without incurring a single maintenance cancellation while supporting OIR 96 On 4 April 2016 it was reported that a USAF Global Hawk had completed its third flight over Germany under an initiative the European Reassurance Initiative to reassure NATO members concerned over Russian involvement in the conflict in Ukraine Germany opened its airspace for up to five Global Hawk flights a month until the middle of October 2016 The Naval Air Station Sigonella Sicily based Global Hawk flies over Italian and French airspace and an air corridor through Germany with its sensors switched off on its way to its area of operations over the Baltic Sea 97 In 2017 the USAF decided to begin the process of training enlisted airmen to fly the RQ 4 due to a shortage of pilots and an increased demand for the Global Hawk s capabilities The RQ 4 is currently the only aircraft enlisted pilots are flying 98 99 On 16 August 2018 a Global Hawk assigned to 12th Reconnaissance Squadron took off from Beale AFB California and landed at Eielson Air Force Base Alaska for Red Flag Alaska This was the first time an RQ 4 had landed in Alaska during a simulated combat training exercise 100 On 21 April 2021 a Global Hawk was reported to have made a reconnaissance flight in an airspace off the coast of southern Crimea which Russia had temporarily closed up to 19 000 metres 62 000 ft from Sevastopol to Feodosiya issuing a relevant NOTAM 101 The Global Hawk reportedly departed from Naval Air Station Sigonella on Sicily 101 On 22 February 2022 a Global Hawk was reported to have made a reconnaissance flight over Southeastern Ukraine coinciding with a NOTAM order by Ukrainian government and increased Russian military activity The Global Hawk departed from Naval Air Station Sigonella on Sicily 102 103 Records Edit On 24 April 2001 a Global Hawk flew non stop from Edwards AFB to RAAF Base Edinburgh in Australia making history by being the first pilotless aircraft to cross the Pacific Ocean The flight took 22 hours and set a world record for absolute distance flown by a UAV 13 219 86 kilometers 8 214 44 mi 104 On 22 March 2008 a Global Hawk set the endurance record for full scale operational uncrewed aircraft UAVs by flying for 33 1 hours at altitudes up to 60 000 feet over Edwards AFB 105 From its first flight in 1998 to 9 September 2013 the combined Global Hawk fleet flew 100 000 hours 88 percent of flights were conducted by USAF RQ 4s while the remaining hours were flown by NASA Global Hawks the EuroHawk the Navy BAMS demonstrator and the MQ 4C Triton Approximately 75 percent of flights were in combat zones RQ 4s flew in operations over Afghanistan Iraq and Libya and supported disaster response efforts in Haiti Japan and California 7 106 From 10 to 16 September 2014 the RQ 4 fleet flew a total of 781 hours the most hours flown by the type during a single week 87 percent of flights were made by USAF RQ 4s with the rest flown by the Navy BAMS D and NASA hurricane research aircraft 107 The longest Global Hawk combat sortie lasted 32 5 hours 65 Downing by Iran Edit Main article 2019 Iranian shoot down of American drone On 19 June 2019 a U S Navy BAMS D RQ 4A from NAS Patuxent River flying over the Persian Gulf near the Strait of Hormuz was shot down by a 3rd Khordad surface to air missile fired from near Garuk Iran 108 Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that the drone had been in Iranian airspace 109 while the United States maintained that the drone was in international airspace 18 nautical miles 34 km away from Iran 110 111 NASA Edit A Global Hawk at NASA s Dryden Flight Research Center In December 2007 two Global Hawks were transferred from the USAF to NASA s Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards AFB Initial research activities beginning in the second quarter of 2009 supported NASA s high altitude long duration Earth science missions 112 113 The two Global Hawks were the first and sixth aircraft built under the original DARPA Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration program and were made available to NASA when the Air Force had no further need for them 8 Northrop Grumman is an operational partner with NASA and will use the aircraft to demonstrate new technologies and to develop new markets for the aircraft including possible civilian uses 113 It was reported in the March 2010 issue of Scientific American that NASA s Global Hawks were to begin scientific missions that month and had been undergoing tests in late 2009 Initial science applications included measurements of the ozone layer and cross Pacific transport of air pollutants and aerosols The author of the Scientific American article speculates that it could be used for Antarctic exploration while being based in Chile In August September 2010 one of the two Global Hawks was loaned for NASA s GRIP Genesis and Rapid Intensification Program mission 114 Its long term on station capabilities and long range made it a suitable aircraft for monitoring the development of Atlantic basin hurricanes It was modified to equip weather sensors including Ku band radar lightning sensors and dropsondes 115 It successfully flew into Hurricane Earl off the United States East Coast on 2 September 2010 116 NATO Edit Main article Alliance Ground Surveillance In 2009 NATO announced that it expected to have a fleet of up to eight Global Hawks by 2012 to be equipped with MP RTIP radar systems NATO had budgeted US 1 4 billion 1 billion for the project and a letter of intent was signed 117 NATO signed a contract for five Block 40 Global Hawks in May 2012 118 12 NATO members are participating in the purchase On 10 January 2014 Estonia revealed it wanted to participate in NATO Global Hawk usage citation needed In July 2017 the USAF assigned the Mission Designation Series MDS of RQ 4D to the NATO AGS air vehicle 119 The first RQ 4D aircraft arrived at Sigonella Air Base on 21 November 2019 At that time all five aircraft were undergoing developmental test flights Initial operational capability was expected in the first half of 2020 120 In October 2018 Italy certified five of the drones for use in Sigonella Sicily in 2020 However by 23 December 2019 there were regulatory issues for the Global Hawks concerning shared space between Germany and Italy German government officials criticized the new drones for their lack of technology to avoid collisions with other aircraft 121 South Korea Edit In 2011 South Korea s Defense Acquisition Program Administration DAPA expressed interest in acquiring at least four RQ 4Bs to increase intelligence capabilities following the exchange of the Wartime Operational Control from the U S to the Republic of Korea Officials debated on the topic of the Global Hawks and domestic UAV programs 122 In September 2011 the US and South Korea discussed aircraft deployments near its land border to view North Korea and the North Korea China border 123 In January 2012 DAPA announced that it would not proceed with a purchase due to a price rise from US 442M to US 899M and that other platforms such as the AeroVironment Global Observer or the Boeing Phantom Eye were being investigated 124 However in December 2012 South Korea notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale of 4 RQ 4 Block 30 I Global Hawks with the Enhanced Integrated Sensor Suite EISS at an estimated cost of 1 2 billion 125 On 5 July 2013 the Korean National Assembly advised the government to re evaluate the RQ 4 purchase again citing high costs 126 On 17 December 2014 Northrop Grumman was awarded a 657 million contract by South Korea for four RQ 4B Block 30 Global Hawks 127 128 The first RQ 4 arrived on 23 December 2019 at a base near Sacheon 129 The second arrived on 19 April 2020 and the third by June The fourth and final Global Hawk was delivered in September 2020 130 Japan Edit On 24 August 2013 Japan announced that the Japan Air Self Defense Force planned to operate one Global Hawk jointly with the U S by 2015 citation needed On 21 November 2014 the Japanese Ministry of Defense officially decided to procure the Global Hawk instead of the General Atomics Guardian ER 131 Japan has also been interested in the purchase of three aircraft 132 The first Japanese Global Hawk landed at Misawa Air Base on 12 March 2022 133 Potential operators Edit Australia considered the purchase of a number of Global Hawks for maritime and land surveillance The Global Hawk was to be assessed against the General Atomics MQ 9 Mariner in trials in 2007 134 The Global Hawk aircraft would have operated in conjunction with crewed Boeing P 8 Poseidon aircraft as a replacement of aging Lockheed AP 3C Orion aircraft In the end the Australian government decided not to proceed and canceled the order 135 In 2012 a procurement effort for seven UAVs by 2019 was initiated 136 In May 2013 the Australian government confirmed its interest in acquiring the MQ 4C Triton maritime surveillance variant 137 Canada has also been a potential customer looking at the Global Hawk for maritime and land surveillance as either a replacement for its fleet of Lockheed CP 140 Aurora patrol aircraft or to supplement crewed patrols of remote Arctic and maritime environments before withdrawing from the joint effort in August 2011 138 Spain has a similar requirement and has existing contacts with Northrop Grumman 139 The New Zealand Defence Force is studying the Global Hawk which has the range to conduct surveillance in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica and in the Pacific Islands The acquisition process has not moved beyond an expression of interest 140 The Indian Navy has expressed interest in acquiring six to eight MQ 4C Maritime Surveillance Unmanned Aircraft Systems 141 142 In September 2018 Transport Canada was looking into buying a former German Air Force EuroHawk for surveillance missions in the Arctic The EuroHawk cannot currently fly and has no equipment inside such as GPS and navigation tools 143 144 Variants Edit RQ 4A on display at the Museum of Aviation Robins AFB RQ 4A Initial production version for the USAF 16 built 145 RQ 4B Improved version with increased payload wingspan increased to 130 9 ft 39 9 m and length increased to 47 7 ft 14 5 m Due to the increased size and payload the range is reduced to 8 700 nmi 16 100 km 146 RQ 4D Phoenix NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance AGS RQ 4E Euro Hawk Version for the Bundeswehr based on RQ 4B and equipped with an EADS reconnaissance payload for SIGINT Germany canceled its order in May 2013 it received one of five Euro Hawks originally ordered 43 MQ 4C Triton For USN Broad Area Maritime Surveillance BAMS role previously known as the RQ 4N 4 ordered 68 total planned 147 EQ 4B Equipped with the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node BACN system 148 KQ X Proposed autonomous tanker variant 149 150 Model 396 Scaled Composites and Northrop Grumman also offered an armed 50 smaller version of the RQ 4A known as the Scaled Composites Model 396 as part of the USAF Hunter Killer program The aircraft was rejected in favor of the MQ 9 Reaper Operators EditFor operators of the naval variant see Northrop Grumman MQ 4C Triton A NASA Global Hawk in flight South KoreaRepublic of Korea Air Force Ordered 4 in 2014 151 152 First aircraft delivered on 23 December 2019 129 JapanJapan Air Self Defense Force Ordered 3 in November 2018 to be delivered by 1 September 2022 153 154 The purchase was made under a contract worth USD1 2 billion 155 NATOAlliance Ground Surveillance Ordered 5 aircraft first delivered 21 November 2019 120 United StatesUnited States Air Force Air Combat Command 156 specify 319th Reconnaissance Wing Grand Forks Air Force Base North Dakota 319th Operations Group 7th Reconnaissance Squadron Naval Air Station Sigonella Italy 12th Reconnaissance Squadron Beale Air Force Base California 319th OG Detachment 1 Andersen Air Force Base Guam 348th Reconnaissance Squadron Grand Forks Air Force Base North Dakota 53d Wing 53d Test and Evaluation Group 31st Test and Evaluation Squadron Edwards Air Force Base California Air Force Reserve Command 940th Wing Beale Air Force Base California 940th Operations Group 13th Reconnaissance Squadron Beale Air Force Base California 380th Expeditionary Operations Group Al Dhafra AB United Arab Emirates since early 2002 RQ 4B Block 30 RQ 4B Block 40 EQ 4B BACN RQ 4A BAMS D NASA Dryden Flight Research CenterAccidents Edit29 March 1999 USAF RQ 4A 95 2002 crashed 157 at China Lake Naval Weapons Center 30 Dec 2001 USAF RQ 4A 98 2005 crashed 158 while returning to al Dhafra Air Base UAE 10 Jul 2002 USAF RQ 4A 98 2004 crashed 159 near Shamsi AB Pakistan due to engine failure 21 August 2011 USAF EQ 4B crashed southeast of Jalalabad Afghanistan 160 11 June 2012 USN RQ 4A assigned to the Navy s BAMS program crashed near Naval Air Station Patuxent River Maryland US 161 21 June 2017 USAF RQ 4B crashed near Lone Pine California US 162 26 June 2018 USAF RQ 4B crashed into the sea off Naval Station Rota Spain 163 August 2021 USAF RQ 4B crashed near Grand Forks Air Force Base North Dakota US 164 Specifications RQ 4B Block 30 40 EditData from Northrop Grumman 165 USAF 10 General characteristicsCrew 0 onboard 3 remote Launch and Recovery Element LRE pilot Mission Control Element MCE pilot and sensor operator Capacity 3 000 lb 1 360 kg Length 47 ft 7 in 14 5 m Wingspan 130 9 ft 39 9 m Height 15 3 ft 4 7 m Empty weight 14 950 lb 6 781 kg Gross weight 32 250 lb 14 628 kg Powerplant 1 Rolls Royce F137 RR 100 turbofan engine 7 600 lbf 34 kN thrustPerformance Maximum speed 391 mph 629 km h 340 kn Cruise speed 357 mph 570 km h 310 kn Range 14 200 mi 22 800 km 12 300 nmi Endurance 34 hours Service ceiling 60 000 ft 18 000 m Lift to drag 33 166 See also Edit War portal Aviation portalKQ X Unmanned aerial vehicle Unmanned combat aerial vehicleRelated development Northrop Grumman MQ 4C TritonAircraft of comparable role configuration and era EADS Talarion General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper Lockheed Martin RQ 3 DarkStar WZ 7Related lists List of active United States military aircraftReferences Edit a b c d GAO 13 294SP Defense Acquisitions Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs PDF US Government Accountability Office March 2013 pp 113 14 Archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Global Hawk Enterprise Northrop Grumman US GAO April 2000 Progress of the Global Hawk Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Soaring Costs Not Likely to Slow Down Global Hawk National Defence Magazine May 2006 a b Air Force s RQ 4 Global Hawk drones headed for the boneyard in FY27 Breaking Defense retrieved 27 July 2022 DarkStar Tier III Minus irp fas org a b Northrop Grumman Unmanned Aircraft Systems Achieve 100 000 Flight Hours Defensemedianetwork com 13 September 2013 a b NASA Dryden Receives Two Early Global Hawk Aircraft spaceref com 20 December 2007 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Last Block 10 Global Hawk Arrives For Check Flights spacewar com a b c d e RQ 4 Global Hawk fact sheet US Air Force Retrieved 26 July 2014 Northrop unveils next generation Global Hawk Aerotech News and Review 1 September 2006 McGee Chris Global Hawk in demand passes 10 000 flight hours milestone Aerotech News and Review 11 August 2006 Northrop Grumman Press Release 13 June 2005 Selinger M U S Navy To Receive First Global Hawk Next Week Aviation Week amp Space Technology 1 October 2004 Copeland Phillip E First Unmanned Global Hawk Delivered to U S Navy defenselink mil U S Department of Defense Transformation News Story Retrieved 1 April 2015 Navy Global Hawk Performs in RIMPAC Aerotech News and Review 18 August 2006 Defense gov News Release Navy Awards Northrop Grumman Unmanned Aircraft System Contract defenselink mil Retrieved 1 April 2015 BAMS given MQ 4C designation Triton Testing Ahead of Schedule News USNI org 21 February 2014 Navy s RQ 4A BAMS D UAVs End 13 Year Mideast Deployment Seapower Magazine 22 June 2022 Archived from the original on 3 August 2022 Cost overruns put Global Hawk at risk FlightGlobal Washington DC 18 April 2006 Retrieved 22 October 2006 Cost overruns put Global Hawk at risk SBAC 20 April 2006 archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Global Hawk costs soar to 10bn FlightGlobal 21 November 2006 Retrieved 22 November 2006 Putrich Gayle Northrop Global Hawk not slowing down even with cuts Flight International 22 February 2011 Pentagon Says Northrop Drone Isn t Effective Bloomberg News 6 June 2011 Nunn McCurdy Certification Acquisition Decision Memorandum for the Restructured RQ 4A B Unmanned Aircraft System Global Hawk Memorandum for Secretary of the Air Force 14 June 2011 Defense Budget Priorities and Choices p 11 Archived 29 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine US DoD January 2012 Clark Colin Air Force To Cut 10 000 Global Hawks Get Warehoused Archived 30 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Aol Defense 27 January 2012 Stephen Trimble Pentagon slashes fighter squadrons airlifters in new budget proposal FlightGlobal Retrieved 30 January 2012 USAF Cancels Block 30 RQ 4 Global Hawk Defense Update 29 January 2012 Global Hawk Program Manager Plans For Early Deliveries Budget Cuts InsideDefense 22 January 2013 Whittle Richard 17 September 2014 A Freed Hostage ACC Commander s Parting Shots breakingdefense com Breaking Media Inc Retrieved 22 October 2014 Cost of flying Northrop s Global Hawk down over 50 suasnews com 14 September 2013 RQ 4 Euro Hawk UAV Readying for Takeoff Defense Industry Daily 15 May 2013 a b Gubisch Michael 16 May 2013 Germany pulls plug on Euro Hawk UAV programme Flight International Northrop Grumman and EADS Defence amp Security s Euro Hawk Unmanned Aircraft Completes Successful First Flight GlobeNewswire 30 June 2010 Archived from the original on 22 July 2010 Norris Guy 12 October 2009 Northrop Grumman Unveils Euro Hawk Aerospace Daily and Defense Report Euro Hawk landet in Manching Flug Revue 21 July 2011 Retrieved 1 April 2015 a b Hickmann Christoph 23 May 2013 De Maiziere forderte Drohnenprojekt noch 2012 Suddeutsche Zeitung in German Seliger Marco 13 May 2013 Euro Hawk wird nicht zugelassen Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German Retrieved 14 May 2013 German government culls costly Euro Hawk drone project Deutsche Welle 15 May 2013 Germany axes Euro Hawk drone program Defense News 14 May 2013 a b De Maiziere defends Bundeswehr reforms and Euro Hawk halt Deutsche Welle 15 May 2013 Germany will not buy Euro Hawk drones Reuters 14 May 2013 Euro Hawk in German German Air Force Luftwaffe 15 May 2013 Retrieved 16 May 2013 Gubisch Michael Germany pulls plug on Euro Hawk UAV programme Flight International 16 May 2013 EADS to continue to work with Germany on scrapped drone deal Reuters 27 May 2013 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Metha Aaron Euro Hawk Team Remains Hopeful Defense News 28 May 2013 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Euro Hawk Sets Record With 25 Hour Nonstop Flight in Germany sUASNews com 3 September 2013 a b Germany s Euro Hawk drone may take flight again Airrecognition com 5 October 2014 Germany May Revive Euro Hawk Using MQ 4C Aviation Week amp Space Technology 12 January 2015 Germany s Unwanted Euro Hawk Drone Has Finally Become A Very Costly Museum 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Fukushima Reactors 17 March 2011 Northrop Grumman Delivers 37th Global Hawk to US Air Force Deagel com Press release San Diego 7 January 2013 Northrop Grumman Delivers Global Hawk Early and On Cost The Wall Street Journal 19 March 2014 Will Congress Let the Air Force Abandon the Global Hawk Defense News Archived from the original on 28 June 2013 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Agreement will allow U S to fly long range surveillance drones from base in Japan sUASNews com 4 October 2013 Global Hawk to deploy to Japan for first time Militarytimes com 22 March 2014 USAF Global Hawks touch down after Japan deployment Shephardmedia com 20 October 2014 Block 40 Global Hawk goes to war USAF FlightGlobal 21 November 2013 Northrop Global Hawk UAV Deployed to Assist Philippine Typhoon Relief sUASNews com 10 January 2014 How Hagel spending plan will transform US military FlightGlobal 26 February 2014 2016 Budget To Bring U 2 Stay Of Execution Aviation Week amp Space Technology 14 January 2015 U S Global 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Retrieved 26 February 2012 Indian Navy Interested in Northrop Grumman MQ 4C Maritime Surveillance Unmanned Aircraft Systems India Defence 8 February 2011 India will purchase the MQ 4C BAMS drone aircraft 2 April 2012 Germany Plans to Sell Euro Hawk Surveillance Drone without Core Components to Canada defenseworld net Brewster Murray 25 September 2018 Transport Canada looking at used German drone to patrol Arctic CBC News List of UAV serial numbers MuckRock 1 October 2012 Factsheets RQ 4 Global Hawk Unmanned Aircraft System RQ 4 Global Hawk Unmanned Aircraft System af mil Archived from the original on 28 October 2008 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Roll out of a marine UAV Global Hawk will be held in June Automatically translated into English by Google U S Air Force Officially Designates Aircraft Flying Battlefield Airborne Communications Node System irconnect com Retrieved 1 April 2015 DARPA Testing Global Hawk Drones As Aerial Tankers defensetech org 9 March 2011 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Unstaffed drone refuelling test successful BBC News Technology Hoyle Craig 17 December 2014 Seoul finalises 657 million Global Hawk purchase FlightGlobal Northrop Grumman to Start Production on Republic of Korea Global Hawks Northrop Grumman Newsroom Carlson Stephen 20 November 2018 Japan issues contract to purchaser RQ 4 Global Hawk surveillance drones United Press International Archived from the original on 20 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Jennings Gareth 20 November 2018 Japan signs for three Global Hawk UAVs IHS Jane s 360 London Archived from the original on 20 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Indo Pacific UAV Directory 2021 Asian Military Review 12 August 2021 Retrieved 22 February 2022 Units acc af mil Retrieved 11 February 2022 Ranter Harro Incident RQ 4A Global Hawk 95 2002 29 Mar 1999 aviation safety net Ranter Harro Incident Northrop Grumman RQ 4A Global Hawk Block 10 pro 98 2005 30 Dec 2001 aviation safety net Ranter Harro Incident Northrop Grumman RQ 4A Global Hawk 98 2004 10 Jul 2002 aviation safety net ISAF confirms 2011 Global Hawk crash Flight International 14 February 2012 Retrieved 11 September 2018 Navy drone crashes in Maryland CNN 11 June 2012 Retrieved 11 September 2018 Northrop Grumman RQ 4B Global Hawk 21 Jun 2017 Aviation Safety Network 21 June 2017 Retrieved 11 September 2018 Exclusive Photo Crashed 123M RQ 4 Air Force Drone Fished Out of the Atlantic USNI News 6 September 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2018 RQ 4 Global Hawk Drone Crashes in North Dakota Air Force Magazine 6 August 2021 Retrieved 16 August 2021 Global Hawk northropgrumman com Retrieved 15 April 2017 Unmanned Air Vehicles Global leader FlightGlobal 2001 This article contains material that originally came from the web articleUnmanned Aerial Vehiclesby Greg Goebel which is public domain External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northrop Grumman RQ 4 Global Hawk External imageNorthrop Grumman RQ 4A Global Hawk Block 10 Cutaway Northrop Grumman RQ 4A Global Hawk Block 10 cutaway from Flightglobal comRQ 4 Global Hawk U S Air Force fact sheet RQ 4A Global Hawk Tier II HAE UAV Federation of American Scientists Global Hawk RQ 4A B High Altitude Long Endurance UAV Defense Update Raytheon product page on the Global Hawk Integrated Sensor Suite Luftwaffe Euro Hawk page Bundeswehr Euro Hawk page Results of Global Hawk accident investigation board Archived 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine RQ 4 Global Hawk profile on Air Attack Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northrop Grumman RQ 4 Global Hawk amp oldid 1130680325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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