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俄军引入光纤制导无人机,威胁乌克兰后勤
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乌克兰官员证实,俄罗斯已开始在战场上使用射程达50公里的光纤制导无人机。这些无人机因其不受电子战干扰的特性,对乌克兰的后勤补给构成了严峻挑战。这一先进的无人机技术似乎超越了目前已知的大多数同类产品的作战能力。乌克兰方面表示,正积极研发反制技术,并已开始在部分作战部队中进行测试,以应对这一新型威胁。光纤无人机的出现标志着战场技术持续演进,双方都在不断寻求技术优势。

🇷🇺 俄罗斯部署新型光纤制导无人机:乌克兰方面首次确认,俄罗斯已在战场上使用射程可达50公里的光纤制导无人机。这一技术突破意味着俄军在无人机领域获得了新的作战能力。

💡 电子战免疫与后勤威胁:与传统的射频制导无人机不同,光纤无人机通过长距离光缆与操作员保持连接,使其能够有效规避电子战干扰。这使得它们能够更安全地对乌克兰的后勤补给线进行侦察和打击,对乌军的物资运输构成严重威胁。

🔬 乌克兰的应对与未来展望:面对这一新型威胁,乌克兰方面表示正在积极研发相关的反制技术,包括开发“命中即摧毁”的拦截器、设置伏击以及尝试切断无人机的光缆。乌克兰认为,光纤无人机的出现是“改变游戏规则”的因素,并预示着未来战场将向更自主的无人机技术发展。

⚠️ 操作挑战与局限性:尽管光纤无人机在电子战方面具有优势,但其操作也面临挑战。由于需要携带较长的光缆卷轴,这些无人机相对“迟钝”,易受风力影响,且容易受到物理障碍物的阻碍。此外,较长的光缆也可能增加重量,迫使开发者减小弹头尺寸,或采用更大的机身,从而影响其战场灵活性。

Russia has introduced long-range fiber-optic drones to the battlefield, a top Ukrainian official said.

Russia has begun using long-range, jam-proof drones controlled by fiber-optic cables to threaten Ukraine's logistics, a senior government official told Business Insider.

Mykhailo Fedorov, the first deputy prime minister of Ukraine and its minister of digital transformation, said that Russia is now fielding fiber-optic drones with a range of 50 kilometers (31 miles), which appears to be the first official confirmation from Kyiv that Moscow is using these weapons in combat.

That 50-kilometer range exceeds what most known fiber-optic drones can achieve on the battlefield.

Fedorov, speaking through a translator, said in an interview this week that the development "really impacts our logistics." He added that Ukraine is developing technology to counter fiber-optic drones and is testing these concepts with several brigades.

First-person-view (FPV) drone pilots once flew using only radio frequency links. Now, electronic warfare dominates, and signals are being jammed across the battlefield.

Fiber-optic drones use spools of long, thin cables that maintain a steady link with the pilot, making them effectively immune to electronic warfare tactics — and, thus, more dangerous in combat.

Fiber-optic drones are connected to their operators by spools of long, thin cables.

Typically, the best chance that a soldier has to intercept a fiber-optic FPV drone is by shooting it down with a shotgun. But the kill requires awareness, a quick reaction, precision, and a lot of luck.

"Fiber-optic drones have shown us that drones immune to electronic warfare are, indeed, a very considerable threat to logistics and personnel," Fedorov said.

In some sectors of the front line, drones have become such a threat to critical supply routes that Ukrainian soldiers have covered them with netting to protect vehicles from incoming strikes.

Dangerous but 'sluggish'

Fiber-optic drones typically have short ranges, limited by the cables that can become entangled in the environment. The range is often anywhere between 10 and 25 kilometers (roughly 6 and 15 miles), but both Russian and Ukrainian defense industries have been pushing to extend their respective reaches.

Conflict analysts at the Institute for the Study of War, a US think tank, wrote in a battlefield assessment last month that Russian developers had reportedly introduced fiber-optic FPV drones with a 50-kilometer range, although the details were unconfirmed.

Fedorov said he first heard about Russia's 50-kilometer-range fiber-optic drone several weeks ago, with isolated cases mostly emerging out of eastern Ukraine's embattled Donetsk region.

He said that this drone is not used often because it is relatively difficult to operate; "it's prone to wind, it's heavy, and then there are physical obstacles that it needs to cross."

Fiber-optic drones are immune to electronic warfare tactics.

The spool of fiber-optic cable that the drone carries is also quite large, making it rather "sluggish," Fedorov said. "So, although it's not simple to do, they are doing it — including in Pokrovsk," the war-torn city in the Donetsk region that has become the center of some of the most intense and brutal fighting of the war.

Drone experts have said that fiber-optic drones with ranges beyond 40 kilometers (25 miles) are possible, but there are definitely challenges.

Beyond the risk of environmental tangling, the weight of the spool can force developers to reduce the warhead size. And if drone makers build larger frames to support extra weight, the end result is potentially something less nimble in combat.

Russia's deployment of longer-range fiber-optic drones underscores how the war continues to serve as a testing ground for new defense technology — specifically, drone innovation — as both sides attempt to stay one step ahead of the enemy.

Fedorov said that Ukraine is adapting to the threat of fiber-optic drones — which he said have been a "game changer" — by developing hit-to-kill interceptors, staging ambushes, and even trying to sever the cables that keep the aircraft in flight.

"We are looking for a counter-adaptation, and that will push the battlefield probably more toward autonomous drones, which we expect and anticipate to be the next stage in this war," he said.

Autonomous drones don't necessarily require pilots, instead relying on artificial intelligence for navigation and decision-making. In an effort to stay ahead in the ongoing arms race with Russia, Ukraine is heavily investing in the development of this technology.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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光纤无人机 电子战 乌克兰战争 俄军 后勤 无人机技术 Fiber-optic drones Electronic warfare War in Ukraine Russian military Logistics Drone technology
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