
From foreground to background: , ,
and
An
aircraft carrier is a
warship designed with a primary mission of deploying
and recovering
aircraft, acting as a
seagoing
airbase. Aircraft carriers thus
allow a
naval force to project
air power great distances without having to depend
on local bases for staging aircraft operations. They have evolved
from wooden vessels, used to deploy
balloons, into
nuclear
powered warships that carry dozens of
fixed and
rotary wing
aircraft.
Brief history
Balloon carriers were the first
ships to deploy manned aircraft, used during the 19th and early
20th century, mainly for observation purposes. The 1903 advent of
fixed wing airplanes was followed in 1910 by the first flight of
such an aircraft from the deck of a US Navy
cruiser.
Seaplanes and
seaplane tender support ships, such
as , followed. The development of flat top vessels produced the
first large fleet ships. This evolution was well underway by the
mid 1920s, resulting in ships such as ,
Hōshō, and
the s.
World War II saw the first large-scale
use and further refinement of the aircraft carrier, spawning
several types.
Escort aircraft
carriers, such as , were built only during World War II.
Although some were purpose-built, most were converted from merchant
ships as a stop-gap measure to provide air support for convoys and
amphibious invasions.
Light
aircraft carriers, such as , represented a larger, more
"militarized" version of the escort carrier concept. Although the
light carriers usually carried the same size
air groups as escort carriers, they had the
advantage of higher speed as they had been converted from cruisers
under construction.
Wartime
emergencies also saw the creation
or conversion of unconventional aircraft carriers.
CAM ships, like , were cargo-carrying merchant
ships which could launch but not retrieve fighter aircraft from a
catapult. These vessels were an emergency measure during World War
II as were
Merchant aircraft
carriers (MACs), such as , another emergency measure which saw
cargo-carrying merchant ships equipped with flight decks.
Battlecarriers were created by the Imperial Japanese Navy to partially
compensate for the loss of carrier strength at Midway
. Two
of them were made from s during late 1943. The aft turrets were
removed and replaced with a hangar, deck and catapult. The heavy
cruiser
Mogami concurrently
received a similar conversion. This "half and half" design was an
unsuccessful compromise, being neither one thing nor the other.
Submarine aircraft carriers, such
as the French Surcouf and the Japanese
I-400 class submarine, which
was capable of carrying three Aichi
M6A Seiran aircraft, were first built in
the 1920s, but were generally unsuccessful at war.

The
Tripoli, a US Navy
Iwo Jima class helicopter carrier
Modern navies that operate such ships treat aircraft carriers as
the
capital ship of the fleet, a role
previously played by the
battleship. The
change, part of the growth of air power as a significant factor in
warfare, took place during World War II. This change was driven by
the superior range, flexibility and effectiveness of
carrier-launched aircraft. Following the war, carrier operations
continued to increase in size and importance.
Supercarriers, typically displacing
75,000 tonnes or greater, have become the pinnacle of carrier
development. Most are powered by
nuclear
reactors and form the core of a fleet designed to operate far
from home.
Amphibious assault
ships, such as and , serve the purpose of carrying and landing
Marines, and operate a large contingent of helicopters for that
purpose. Also known as "commando carriers" or "helicopter
carriers", many have a secondary capability to operate
VSTOL aircraft.
Lacking the firepower of other warships, carriers by themselves are
considered vulnerable to attack by other ships, aircraft,
submarines, or missiles. Therefore, aircraft carriers are generally
accompanied by a number of other ships, to provide protection for
the relatively unwieldy carrier, to carry supplies, and to provide
additional offensive capabilities. This is often termed a battle
group or carrier group, sometimes a
carrier battle group.
Before World War II international naval treaties of
1922,
1930 and
1936 limited the size of capital
ships including carriers. Aircraft carrier designs since World War
II have been effectively unlimited by any consideration save
budgetary, and the ships have increased in size to handle the
larger aircraft. The large, modern of United States Navy carriers
has a displacement nearly four times that of the World War II–era ,
yet its complement of aircraft is roughly the same—a consequence of
the steadily increasing size and weight of military aircraft over
the years.
Types of aircraft carriers
By role
By configuration
There are three main configurations of aircraft carrier in service
in the worlds navies:
- Catapult Assisted Take-Off But Arrested Recovery (CATOBAR)
- Short Take-Off But Arrested Recovery (STOBAR)
- Short Take-Off Vertical Landing (STOVL)
Flight deck

The ski-jump on Royal Navy
carrier
As "runways at sea," modern aircraft carriers have a flat-top deck
design that serves as a
flight deck for
take-off and
landing
of aircraft. Aircraft take off to the front, into the wind, and
land from the rear. Carriers steam at speed, for example up to ( ),
into the wind during take-off in order to increase the
apparent wind speed over the deck, thereby
reducing the speed of the aircraft relative to the ship. On some
ships, a steam-powered
catapult is
used to propel the aircraft forward, assisting the power of its
engines and allowing it to take off in a shorter distance than
would otherwise be required. On other carriers, aircraft do not
require assistance for take off—the requirement for assistance
relates to aircraft design and performance. Conversely, when
landing on a carrier, conventional aircraft rely upon a
tailhook that catches on
arrestor wires stretched across the deck to
bring them to a stop in a shorter distance than normal. Other
aircraft—
helicopters and
V/STOL (Vertical/Short Take-Off and Landing)
designs—utilize their hover capability to land vertically and so
require no assistance in speed reduction upon landing.
Conventional ("tailhook") aircraft rely upon a
landing signal officer (LSO,
sometimes called "paddles") to control the plane's landing
approach, visually gauge altitude, attitude, and speed, and
transmit that data to the pilot. Before the angled deck emerged in
the 1950s, LSOs used colored paddles to signal corrections to the
pilot (hence the nickname). From the late 1950s onward, visual
landing aids such as
mirrors
provided information on proper
glide
slope, but LSOs still transmit voice calls to landing pilots by
radio.
To facilitate working on the flight deck of a U.S. aircraft
carrier, the sailors wear colored shirts that designate their
responsibilities. White shirts are responsible for safety, red
shirts handle munitions, purple shirts (grapes) handle jet fuel,
and green shirts handle the catapult and arresting gear. Yellow
shirts are responsible for directing aircraft.
Key personnel involved in the flight deck include the Shooters, the
Handler, and the Air Boss. Shooters are
naval aviators or
Naval Flight Officers and are
responsible for launching aircraft. The Handler works just inside
the island from the flight deck and is responsible for the movement
of aircraft before launching and after landing. The Air Boss
(usually a
commander) occupies the top
bridge (Primary Flight Control, also called "primary" or "the
tower") and has the overall responsibility for controlling
takeoffs, landings, "those aircraft in the air near the ship, and
the movement of planes on the flight deck, which itself resembles a
well-choreographed ballet". The captain of the ship spends most of
his time one level below Primary on the Navigation Bridge. Below
this is the Flag Bridge, designated for the embarked admiral and
his staff.
Since the early 1950s it has been common to direct the landing
recovery area off to port at an angle to the line of the ship. The
primary function of the angled deck landing area is to allow
aircraft that miss the arresting wires, referred to as a "bolter",
to become airborne again without the risk of hitting aircraft
parked on the forward parts of the deck. The angled deck also
allows launching of aircraft at the same time as others land.
The above deck areas of the warship (such as the
bridge, flight
control tower) are concentrated to the
starboard side of the deck in a relatively
small area called an "island". Very few carriers have been designed
or built without an island and such a configuration has not been
seen in a fleet-sized carrier. The "flush deck" configuration
proved to have very significant drawbacks, complicating navigation,
air traffic control and numerous other factors.
A more recent configuration, originally developed by the Royal Navy
but since adopted by many navies for smaller carriers, has a
ski-jump ramp at the forward end of the flight deck. This was first
developed to help launch
VTOL (or
STOVL) aircraft (aircraft that are able to take off
and land with little or no forward movement), such as the
Sea Harrier. Although these aircraft are
capable of taking off vertically from the deck, using the ramp is
more fuel efficient and permits a heavier launch weight. As
catapults and arrestor cables are unnecessary, carriers with this
arrangement reduce weight, complexity, and space needed for
equipment. Russian and future Indian carriers include a ski-jump
ramp for launching conventional aircraft. The disadvantage of the
ski-jump—and the reason this configuration has not appeared on
American supercarriers—is the penalty it exacts on aircraft size,
payload, and fuel load (and thus range): large, slow planes such as
the
E-2 Hawkeye and heavily laden strike
fighters like the
F/A-18E/F Super
Hornet and
Sukhoi Su-33 cannot
successfully launch using a ski-jump because their high loaded
weight requires either a longer takeoff roll than is possible on a
carrier deck, or catapult assistance, although the Su-33 does
launch with a light fuel and weapons load from a ski jump.
Aircraft carriers in service
Aircraft carriers are generally the largest ships operated by
navies; a
Nimitz-class carrier
powered by two
nuclear reactors and
four
steam turbines is ( ) long and
costs about $4.5 billion. The United States Navy has the
world's largest carrier fleet, with eleven in service and one under
construction (all of them
supercarriers). It is also the only navy to
possess operational supercarriers. The U.S. Navy's aircraft
carriers are a cornerstone of American power projection
capability.
A total of 22 aircraft carriers in active service are maintained by
nine navies.
In addition, the People's
Republic of China
's People's
Liberation Army Navy possesses the former Soviet
aircraft carrier Varyag
. The Netherlands, the United States, Brazil,
South Korea, United Kingdom, the People's Republic of China, India,
Japan, Australia, and France also operate vessels capable of
carrying and operating multiple helicopters.
Classes currently in service:
- Brazil (1)
- France (1)
- Charles de
Gaulle : 42,000-ton nuclear-powered aircraft carrier,
commissioned in 2001.
- India (1)
- INS Viraat: 28,700-ton
ex-British carrier HMS
Hermes (launched 1953), purchased in 1986 and
commissioned in 1987, scheduled to be decommissioned in 2019.
- Italy (2)
- Japan (1)
- Hyūga
class: two helicopter destroyers (ASW carriers) planned, of
which one is already in commission.
- Russia (1)
- Spain (1)
- Thailand (1)
- HTMS Chakri
Naruebet: 11,400-ton carrier based on Spanish Principe
De Asturias design. Commissioned in 1997, though remains
predominantly inactive due to lack of funds.
- United Kingdom (2)
- Invincible class:
Three STOVL carriers were originally commissioned, of which two are
in active service and a third in reserve.
- United States (11)
- USS Enterprise
: 93,500-ton nuclear-powered supercarrier
commissioned in 1961. First nuclear-powered aircraft
carrier. Due for decommissioning in 2013.
- Nimitz
class: ten 101,000-ton nuclear-powered supercarriers, the first
of which was commissioned in 1975.
Future aircraft carriers
Several nations which currently possess aircraft carriers are in
the process of planning new classes to replace current ones. The
world's navies still generally see the aircraft carrier as the main
future capital ship, with developments such as the
arsenal ship, which have been promoted as an
alternative, seen as too limited in terms of flexibility.
China
China
bought the unfinished Soviet aircraft carrier Varyag
in 2001 from Ukraine
, supposedly
to turn it into a floating casino. Pictures taken while in
port suggest this plan has been abandoned and show that work is
being carried out to maintain its military function. There is no
conclusive evidence as to what role it would play in the
Chinese Navy.
In late December 2008 and early January 2009, there were multiple
reports of China building
two conventionally powered
aircraft carriers displacing 50,000–60,000 tonnes, possibly to
be launched in 2015, and there have been press reports suggesting
China's intention to build aircraft carriers.
France
The
French Navy has set in motion
possible plans for a
second CTOL aircraft carrier,
to supplement
Charles de
Gaulle. The design would be much larger, in the range of
65–74,000 tonnes, and would not be nuclear-powered like
Charles
de Gaulle. There are plans to base the carrier on the current
Royal Navy design for
CATOBAR operations.
(The Thales/BAE Systems
design for the Royal Navy is for a STOVL carrier
which is reconfigurable to CATOBAR operations.)
On 21 June 2008, French President
Nicolas Sarkozy decided to place France's
participation in the project on hold. He stated that a final
decision on the future of the French carrier would be taken in 2011
or 2012. British plans for two aircraft carriers will go ahead as
planned and were in no way conditional on French
participation.
India
India started the construction of a 40,000 tonne,
260 m-long
Vikrant-class
aircraft carrier in April 2005. The new carrier will cost US$762
million and will operate
MiG-29K, Naval
HAL Tejas and Sea Harrier aircraft along
with the Indian-made helicopter
HAL Dhruv.
The ship will be powered by four turbine engines and will have a
range of 8,000 nautical miles (14,000 km), carrying 160
officers, 1,400 sailors, and 30 aircraft. The carrier is being
constructed by a state-run shipyard in Cochin. The ship is
scheduled for commissioning in 2015.
India has indicated that at least two further carriers of the same
or similar designs to INS
Vikrant are planned. The first
of these, to be named INS
Viraat, is scheduled to begin
construction in 2011 and be commissioned in 2017.
In 2004, India agreed to buy the
Admiral
Gorshkov from Russia for US$1.5 billion.
It is named INS
Vikramaditya
, and was
expected to join the Indian Navy in 2008
after a refit. However, delays in the refit were announced
in July 2007.
In July 2008, Russia increased the total price to US$3.4 billion
because of unexpected cost overuns due to the deteriorated
condition of the ship. In December 2008, India finally decided in
favour of purchasing
Admiral Gorshkov as the best option
available. In February 2009, Russia asked for an additional $700
million payment for the completion of the reconstruction of the
Admiral Gorshkov, bringing the total price requested by
the Russians to $2.9 billion, more than three times the originally
contracted price.
Italy
.jpg/180px-Cavour_(550).jpg)
The Italian aircraft carrier
Cavour
The construction of the conventionally powered
Marina Militare STOVL aircraft carrier
Cavour began in 2001. The ship
of nearly 30,000 tons is being built by
Fincantieri of Italy and has been officially
commissioned to the
Italian Navy since
summer 2008. The ship can operate with
AV-8B,
F-35B,
AW101,
NH-90,
and
SH-3 Sea King. After some delay
due to additional enlargements,
Cavour is expected to be
in full operational capability (FOC) in 2009 to complement the
Marina Militare aircraft carrier
Giuseppe Garibaldi. The
ship is designed to combine fixed wing V/STOL and helicopter air
operations with the transport of military or civil personnel and
heavy vehicles.
Russia
Russian Navy Commander-in-Chief
Admiral Vladimir
Masorin officially stated on June 23, 2007, that the Navy was
considering the specifications of a new nuclear aircraft carrier
design for the class that was first announced about a month
earlier.
Production of the carriers is expected to
start around 2010 at the Zvezdochka plant in Severodvinsk
, where a large drydock,
capable of launching vessels with more than 100,000 ton
displacement, is now being built. In his statement, Admiral
Masorin said that the general dimensions of the project have
already been determined. The projected carrier is to have nuclear
propulsion, to displace about 50,000 tons and to carry an air
wing of 30–50 air superiority aircraft and helicopters, which makes
her roughly comparable with the French
Charles de Gaulle. "The
giants that the US Navy builds, those that carry 100–130 aircraft,
we won't build anything like that", said
Admiral Masorin. The
planned specifications reflect the role, traditional in the Russian
Navy, of the aircraft carrier as an air support platform for guided
missile cruisers and submarines.
The
Russian naval establishment had long agreed, since the
decommissioning of the Kiev-class carriers,
that the only operational carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov
, was insufficient, and that three or four carriers
were necessary to meet the Navy's air support requirements.
However, financial and organisational turmoil in the 1990s made
even the maintenance of
Admiral Kuznetsov a difficult
undertaking. The improvement in Russia's economic situation after
the year 2000 has allowed a major increase in defence spending.
Admiral
Vladimir
Vysotsky announced on
Navy Day 2008
that Russia plans to build five or six carriers of the new design
for deployment in the
Northern and
Pacific fleets, starting around
2012–2013. The new carrier groups are planned to be at full
strength around 2050–2060. According to sources from the
United Shipbuilding
Corporation the new carriers will carry new fifth-generation
fighters as well as
unmanned
aerial vehicles and have a displacement of up to 60,000 metric
tons.
Spain
The 231 meter-long, 27,000 tonne
Juan Carlos I for the
Spanish Navy was approved in 2003, and its
construction started in August 2005, with the shipbuilding firm
Navantia in charge of the project. The ship was launched on 10
March 2008, and is due to be commissioned in 2011.
Juan Carlos
I is designed to operate both as an amphibious assault ship
and as
STOVL aircraft carrier, depending on
the mission assigned. The design was made keeping in mind the
low-intensity conflicts in which the Spanish Navy is likely to be
involved in the future. When configured for air operations the ship
will displace 24,660 tonnes and will be able to carry a mixed force
of up to 30 aircraft comprising AV-8B+ Matadors, F-35s and
helicopters. The ship is provided with a ski-jump and a
three-dimensional radar-based combat system.
United Kingdom
The
Royal Navy has signed a deal to build
two new larger STOVL aircraft carriers, the
Queen Elizabeth
class, to replace the three
Invincible-class
carriers. The ships are to be named and . They will be able to
operate up to 40 aircraft, and will have a displacement of around
65,000 tonnes. The two ships are due to enter service in 2014
and 2016 respectively. Their primary aircraft complement will be
made up of
F-35B Lightning IIs,
and their ship's company will number around 600. The two ships will
be the largest warships ever built for the Royal Navy. Initially to
be configured for STOVL operations, the carriers are to be
adaptable to STOBAR or CATOBAR configurations to allow any type of
future generation of aircraft to operate from them.
United States
The current US fleet of
Nimitz-class carriers
are to be followed into service (and in some cases replaced) by the
Gerald
R. Ford-class.
It is expected that the ships will be larger than the , and will
also be designed to be less detectable by radar. The
United States Navy is also looking to
make these new carriers more automated in an effort to reduce the
amount of funding required to maintain and operate its
supercarriers. The main new features are
implementation of
EMALS (which replace the old
steam catapults) and
unmanned
aerial vehicles. Each squadron of three UAVs would be
controlled by one remote pilot.
With the decommissioning of the in March 2007, the U.S. fleet has
been reduced to 11 supercarriers; thus creating major discussions
between the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Congress. The
House Armed Services Seapower subcommittee on July 24, 2007,
recommended seven or maybe eight new carriers (one every four
years). However, the debate has deepened over budgeting for the
$12–14.5 billion (plus $12 billion for development and research)
for the 100,000-ton
Gerald Ford-class carrier (estimated
service 2015) compared to the smaller $2 billion 45,000-ton
America-class
amphibious assault ships able to deploy squadrons of
F-35B.
See also
Other aircraft carriers
Related lists
References
Notes
- [1]
- > Russian aircraft carrier ready in 2012 if India
pays $2 bln more
- [2]
- [3]
- Lenta. Ru newssite Google translation – English 23 June 2007
- Lenta. Ru newssite Google translation – English 4 July 2006
- RIA Novosti. 2008, 27 July. "Russia to have 5-6 aircraft carriers in Northern, Pacific
Fleets".
- RIA Novosti. 2008, 4 April. "Russia to have 5-6 aircraft carriers by 2060 - Navy
commander".
- http://en.rian.ru/russia/20090227/120342249.html
- " Queen Elizabeth class Future Aircraft
Carrier CVF (002)." Pike, J. GlobalSecurity.org.
Bibliography
- Francillon, René J, Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club US Carrier
Operations off Vietnam, (1988) ISBN 0-87021-696-1
- Nordeen, Lon, Air Warfare in the Missile Age, (1985)
ISBN 1-58834-083-X
- Ader, Clement, "Military Aviation", 1909, Edited and translated
by Lee Kennett, Air University Press, Maxwell Air Force Base
Alabama, 2003, ISBN 1-58566-118-X
- Friedman, Norman, U. S. Aircraft
Carriers: an Illustrated Design History, Naval Institute
Press, 1983 – ISBN 0870217399. Contains many detailed ship
plans.
External links