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Can China Track US carriers?

Can China Track US carriers?

findings: China has rapidly improved its ability to reliably locate and to attack U.S. carrier-strike groups at distances of up to 2,000 km from its coast.

Can aircraft carriers be tracked by satellite?

As noted earlier, commercial satellites are unlikely any time soon to offer the resolution, coverage or immediacy necessary to track a carrier. One day, unmanned aerial vehicles may offer an alternative to orbital platforms for the deployment of electro-optical sensors that can monitor carriers.

How many active aircraft carriers does China have?

2
Numbers of aircraft carriers by country

Country In service Total
China 2 4
France 1 16
Germany 0 7
India 1 5

Will China Drive US aircraft carriers away from the sea?

Critics of U.S. aircraft carriers have been arguing for decades that the survival of the world’s biggest warships will increasingly be at risk in an era of long-range, precision-guided anti-ship missiles. In recent years, China has typically been identified as the military power most likely to drive U.S. carriers from the sea.

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How many satellites does China need to survey the ocean?

The Navy figures that in order to continuously surveil ocean areas near China, Beijing would need to establish three parallel north-south tracks in low-earth orbit, and populate each of those tracks with dozens of satellites spaced to assure continuous coverage.

Does China have a find-and-fix strategy to defend its carriers?

The third find-and-fix option China has would be manned or unmanned radar planes. But U.S. carrier strike groups maintain a dense defensive perimeter in the air around their locations that includes interceptor aircraft, networked surface-to-air missiles, surveillance planes and airborne jammers.

How long does it take to detect a Chinese aircraft carrier?

At 35 miles per hour, the carriers can be anywhere in an area measuring over 700 square miles within 30 minutes. That area grows to over 6,000 square miles after 90 minutes, which is the more likely time elapsed between detecting a carrier and launching a missile from the Chinese mainland.