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海军航空兵

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海军航空兵
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海军航空兵英语naval aviationnaval air force)又称海军航空队或简称海航aeronaval),指归属于海军麾下指挥的军事航空军种,与独立的空军和归属于陆军指挥的陆军航空兵一起构成了军队的空中武装力量。海军航空兵以辅助舰队进行联合海战或对陆空袭攻击性作战为主要军事准则,同时也负责当地领海外地海军基地周围领空防卫,以及为执勤舰队提供空中预警后勤运输勤务支援

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俄罗斯海军航空兵Su-33战斗机
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美国海军日本海上自卫队加拿大海军澳大利亚皇家海军韩国海军统一停放在卡内奥赫湾陆战队机场机坪上的P-3C猎户座海上巡逻机
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中国人民解放军海军航空兵歼-35隐形战斗机
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巴西海军圣保罗号航空母舰(已除役)上的海军航空兵A-4天鹰式攻击机

海军航空兵的军用航空器通常会配置在航空母舰上做为远洋制空权超视距作战的主要战力(如美国海军中国人民解放军海军航母战斗群上的舰载机),或部署在两栖登陆舰上为登陆作战时提供空中突击近距离空中支援(如美国海军陆战队航空兵的各类V/STOL航空器[1][2]。在航母战力有限的国家(如俄罗斯日本澳大利亚等),其海军航空兵主要依赖沿岸的陆上军用机场,形态与普通空军无异,功能主要是海上巡逻侦察预警与强行驱离等防御性任务,虽然力量投射因此受限,但可以部署航母无法承载的中大型远程轰炸机预警机

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早期海军航空器

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南北战争时期的联邦军气球母舰
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英国1908年建造的飞艇“蜉蝣”号是最早被海军使用的有动力航空器

1849年,奥匈帝国海军外轮船“火神”号(SMS Vulcano)在镇压1848年革命反叛的威尼斯共和国时首次使用装配了燃烧弹热气球轰炸威尼斯[3][4][5],开创了海军舰艇通过航空器进行军事行动的先河[6][7][8]。然而因为风向的改变,绝大多数气球炸弹都没能命中目标,有些甚至被风吹回到了奥匈阵地和舰艇上空[9][10][11]

美国南北战争时期,北军大概从半岛会战开始使用气球来针对南军阵地进行侦察,其中内陆河流上的一些运煤的驳船被改装专门用来释放气球。同样,南军也将一些拖船改装成了气球母舰。

Early experiments on the use of kites for naval reconnaissance took place in 1903 at Woolwich Common for the Admiralty. Samuel Franklin Cody demonstrated the capabilities of his 8-foot-long black kite and it was proposed for use as either a mechanism to hold up wires for wireless communications or as a manned reconnaissance device that would give the viewer the advantage of considerable height.[12]

In 1908 Prime Minister H. H. Asquith approved the formation of an "Aerial Sub-Committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence" to investigate the potential for naval aviation. In 1909 this body accepted the proposal of Captain Reginald Bacon made to the First Sea Lord Sir John Fisher that rigid airships should be constructed for the Royal Navy to be used for reconnaissance. This resulted in the construction of Mayfly in 1909, the first air component of the navy to become operational, and the genesis of modern naval aviation.[13][14]

The first pilots for the Royal Navy were transferred from the Royal Aero Club in June 1910 along with two aircraft with which to train new pilots, and an airfield at Eastchurch became the Naval Flying School, the first such facility in the world.[15] Two hundred applications were received, and four were accepted: Lieutenant C R Samson, Lieutenant A M Longmore, Lieutenant A Gregory and Captain E L Gerrard, RMLI.[16]

The French also established a naval aviation capability in 1910 with the establishment of the Service Aeronautique and the first flight training schools.[17]

U.S. naval aviation began with pioneer aviator Glenn Curtiss who contracted with the United States Navy to demonstrate that airplanes could take off from and land aboard ships at sea. One of his pilots, Eugene Ely, took off from the cruiser “Birmingham”号CL-2 (6) anchored off the Virginia coast in November 1910. Two months later Ely landed aboard another cruiser, “Pennsylvania”号ACR-4 (6), in San Francisco Bay, proving the concept of shipboard operations. However, the platforms erected on those vessels were temporary measures. The U.S. Navy and Glenn Curtiss experienced two firsts during January 1911. On 27 January, Curtiss flew the first seaplane from the water at San Diego Bay and the next day U.S. Navy Lt. Theodore G. Ellyson, a student at the nearby Curtiss School, took off in a Curtiss "grass cutter" plane to become the first naval aviator.

$25,000 was appropriated for the Bureau of Navigation (United States Navy) to purchase three airplanes and in the spring of 1911 four additional officers were trained as pilots by the Wright brothers and Curtiss. A camp with a primitive landing field was established on the Severn River at Greenbury Point, near Annapolis, Maryland. The vision of the aerial fleet was for scouting. Each aircraft would have a pilot and observer. The observer would use the wireless radio technology to report on enemy ships. Some thoughts were given to deliver counterattacks on hostile aircraft using "explosives or other means". Using airplanes to bomb ships was seen as largely impractical at the time. CAPT Washington Irving Chambers felt it was much easier to defend against airplanes than mines or torpedoes. The wireless radio was cumbersome (greater than 50 pounds), but the technology was improving. Experiments were underway for the first ICS (pilot to observer comms) using headsets, as well as connecting the observer to the radio. The navy tested both telephones and voice tubes for ICS. As of August 1911, Italy was the only other navy known to be adapting hydroplanes for naval use.[18]

The group expanded with the addition of six aviators in 1912 and five in 1913, from both the Navy and Marine Corps, and conducted maneuvers with the Fleet from the battleship “Mississippi”号BB-23 (6), designated as the Navy's aviation ship. Meanwhile, Captain Henry C. Mustin successfully tested the concept of the catapult launch in August 1912, and in 1915 made the first catapult launching from a ship underway. The first permanent naval air station was established at Pensacola, Florida, in January 1914 with Mustin as its commanding officer. On April 24 of that year, and for a period of approximately 45 days afterward, five floatplanes and flying boats flown by ten aviators operated from Mississippi and the cruiser Birmingham off Veracruz and Tampico, Mexico, respectively, conducting reconnaissance for troops ashore in the wake of the Tampico Affair.

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Lieutenant Charles Samson's historic takeoff from “Hibernia”号1905 (2) in 1912.

In January 1912, the British battleship “Africa”号1905 (6) took part in aircraft experiments at Sheerness. She was fitted for flying off aircraft with a 100-呎(30-米) downward-sloping runway which was installed on her foredeck, running over her forward 12-吋(305-毫米) gun turret from her forebridge to her bow and equipped with rails to guide the aircraft. The Gnome-engined Short Improved S.27 "S.38", pusher seaplane piloted by Lieutenant Charles Samson become the first British aircraft to take-off from a ship while at anchor in the River Medway, on 10 January 1912. Africa then transferred her flight equipment to her sister ship “Hibernia”号1905 (2).

In May 1912, with Commander Samson again flying the "S.38", the first ever instance of an aircraft to take off from a ship which was under way occurred. Hibernia steamed at 10.5(19.4千米每小时;12.1哩每小时) at the Royal Fleet Review in Weymouth Bay, England. Hibernia then transferred her aviation equipment to battleship “London”号1899 (2). Based on these experiments, the Royal Navy concluded that aircraft were useful aboard ship for spotting and other purposes, but that interference with the firing of guns caused by the runway built over the foredeck and the danger and impracticality of recovering seaplanes that alighted in the water in anything but calm weather more than offset the desirability of having airplanes aboard. In 1912, the nascent naval air detachment in the United Kingdom was amalgamated to form the Royal Flying Corps[19] and in 1913 a seaplane base on the Isle of Grain, an airship base at Kingsnorth and eight new airfields were approved for construction.[20] The first aircraft participation in naval manoeuvres took place in 1913 with the cruiser “Hermes”号1898 (2) converted into a seaplane carrier.[21] In 1914, naval aviation was split again, and became the Royal Naval Air Service.[22] However, shipboard naval aviation had begun in the Royal Navy, and would become a major part of fleet operations by 1917.

In 1913 the Spanish engineer Leonardo Torres Quevedo designed a new type of boat called "Camp-Vessel", which allowed the transport of dirigible balloons attached to a mooring post. He offered the patent to the British Army, but the project was dismissed. In 1922, the Spanish Navy constructed an airship carrier called Dédalo, which served during the 里夫战争[23][24]

Other early operators of seaplanes were Germany, within its Marine-Fliegerabteilung naval aviation units within the Kaiserliche Marine, and Russia. In May 1913 Germany established a naval zeppelin detachment in Berlin-Johannisthal and an airplane squadron in Putzig (Puck, Poland).[25] The Japanese established the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service, modelled on the RNAS, in 1913. On 24 January 1913 came the first wartime naval aviation interservice cooperation mission. Greek pilots on a seaplane observed and drew a diagram of the positions of the Turkish fleet against which they dropped four bombs. This event was widely commented upon in the press, both Greek and international.[26]


第一次世界大战

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Japanese Maurice Farman seaplane from “Japanese seaplane carrier”号

At the outbreak of war the Royal Naval Air Service had 93 aircraft, six airships, two balloons and 727 personnel, making it larger than the Royal Flying Corps.[27] The main roles of the RNAS were fleet reconnaissance, patrolling coasts for enemy ships and submarines, attacking enemy coastal territory and defending Britain from enemy air-raids, along with deployment along the Western Front. In 1914 the first aerial torpedo was dropped in trials performed in a Short "Folder" by Lieutenant (later Air Chief Marshal Sir) Arthur Longmore,[28] and in August 1915, a Short Type 184 piloted by Flight Commander Charles Edmonds from “Ben-my-Chree”号 sank a Turkish supply ship in the Sea of Marmara with a 14-吋-diameter(360-毫米), 810-磅(370-千克) torpedo.[28][29]

The first strike from a seaplane carrier against a land target as well as a sea target took place in September 1914 when the Imperial Japanese Navy carrier “Japanese seaplane carrier”号 conducted ship-launched air raids[30] from Kiaochow Bay during the Battle of Tsingtao in China.[31] The four Maurice Farman seaplanes bombarded German-held land targets (communication centers and command centers) and damaged a German minelayer in the Tsingtao peninsula from September until 6 November 1914, when the Germans surrendered.[32] One Japanese plane was credited being shot down by the German aviator Gunther Plüschow in an Etrich Taube, using his pistol.

On the Western front the first naval air raid occurred on 25 December 1914 when twelve seaplanes from “Engadine”号1911 (6), “Riviera”号 (2) and “Empress”号1914 (2) (cross-channel steamers converted into seaplane carriers) attacked the Zeppelin base at Cuxhaven. The raid was not a complete success, owing to sub-optimal weather conditions, including fog and low cloud, but the raid was able to conclusively demonstrate the feasibility of air-to-land strikes from a naval platform. Two German airships were destroyed at the Tøndern base on July 19, 1918, by seven Sopwith Camels launched from the carrier “Furious”号47 (6).[33]

In August 1914 Germany operated 20 planes and one Zeppelin, another 15 planes were confiscated.[25] They operated from bases in Germany and Flanders (Belgium). On 19 August 1918 several British torpedo boats were sunk by 10 German planes near Heligoland. These are considered as the first naval units solely destroyed by airplanes.[34] During the war the German "Marineflieger" claimed the destruction of 270 enemy planes, 6 balloons, 2 airships, 1 Russian destroyer, 4 merchant ships, 3 submarines, 4 torpedo boats and 12 vehicles, for the loss of 170 German sea and land planes as well as 9 vehicles.[35] Notable Marineflieger aces were Gotthard Sachsenberg (31 victories), Alexander Zenzes (18 victories), Friedrich Christiansen (13 victories, 1 airship and 1 submarine), Karl Meyer (8 victories), Karl Scharon (8 victories), and Hans Goerth (7 victories).

航空母舰的发展

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Sqn. Cdr. E. H. Dunning makes the first landing of an aircraft on a moving ship, a Sopwith Pup on “Furious”号1916 (6), 2 August 1917

The need for a more mobile strike capacity led to the development of the aircraft carrier - the backbone of modern naval aviation. “Ark Royal”号1914 (6) was the first purpose-built seaplane carrier and was also arguably the first modern aircraft carrier.[36] She was originally laid down as a merchant ship, but was converted on the building stocks to be a hybrid airplane/seaplane carrier with a launch platform and the capacity to hold up to four wheeled aircraft. Launched on 5 September 1914, she served in the Dardanelles campaign and throughout World War I.

During World War I the Royal Navy also used HMS Furious to experiment with the use of wheeled aircraft on ships. This ship was reconstructed three times between 1915 and 1925: first, while still under construction, it was modified to receive a flight deck on the fore-deck; in 1917 it was reconstructed with separate flight decks fore and aft of the superstructure; then finally, after the war, it was heavily reconstructed with a three-quarter length main flight deck, and a lower-level take-off only flight deck on the fore-deck.

On 2 August 1917, Squadron Commander E.H. Dunning, Royal Navy, landed his Sopwith Pup aircraft on Furious in Scapa Flow, Orkney, becoming the first person to land a plane on a moving ship.[37] He was killed five days later during another landing on Furious.[37]

“Argus”号I49 (6) was converted from an ocean liner and became the first example of what is now the standard pattern of aircraft carrier, with a full-length flight deck that allowed wheeled aircraft to take off and land. After commissioning, the ship was heavily involved for several years in the development of the optimum design for other aircraft carriers. Argus also evaluated various types of arresting gear, general procedures needed to operate a number of aircraft in concert, and fleet tactics.

The Tondern raid, a British bombing raid against the Imperial German Navy's airship base at Tønder, Denmark was the first attack in history made by aircraft flying from a carrier flight deck, with seven Sopwith Camels launched from HMS Furious. For the loss of one man, the British destroyed two German zeppelins, L.54 and L.60 and a captive balloon.

两战间期

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The Grumman J2F Duck was an amphibious biplane used for patrol

Genuine aircraft carriers did not emerge beyond Britain until the early 1920s.[38]

The Japanese “Japanese aircraft carrier”号 (1921) was the world's first purpose-built aircraft carrier, although the initial plans and laying down for “Hermes”号95 (6) (1924) had begun earlier.[39] Both Hōshō and Hermes initially boasted the two most distinctive features of a modern aircraft carrier: a full-length flight deck and a starboard-side control tower island. Both continued to be adjusted in the light of further experimentation and experience, however: Hōshō even opted to remove its island entirely in favor of a less obstructed flight deck and improved pilot visibility.[40] Instead, Japanese carriers opted to control their flight operations from a platform extending from the side of the flight deck.[41]

In the United States, Admiral William Benson attempted to entirely dissolve the USN's Naval Aeronautics program in 1919. Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Roosevelt and others succeeded in maintaining it, but the service continued to support battleship-based doctrines. To counter Billy Mitchell's campaign to establish a separate Department of Aeronautics, Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels ordered a rigged test against “Indiana”号BB-1 (6) in 1920 which reached the conclusion that "the entire experiment pointed to the improbability of a modern battleship being either destroyed or completely put out of action by aerial bombs."[42] Investigation by the New-York Tribune that discovered the rigging led to Congressional resolutions compelling more honest studies. The sinking of “SMS”号Ostfriesland involved violating the Navy's rules of engagement but completely vindicated Mitchell to the public.[43] Some men, such as Captain (soon Rear Admiral) William A. Moffett, saw the publicity stunt as a means to increase funding and support for the Navy's aircraft carrier projects. Moffett was sure that he had to move decisively in order to avoid having his fleet air arm fall into the hands of a proposed combined Land/Sea Air Force which took care of all the United States's airpower needs. (That very fate had befallen the two air services of the United Kingdom in 1918: the Royal Flying Corps had been combined with the Royal Naval Air Service to become the Royal Air Force, a condition which would remain until 1937.) Moffett supervised the development of naval air tactics throughout the '20s. The first aircraft carrier entered the U.S. fleet with the conversion of the collier USS Jupiter and its recommissioning as “Langley”号CV-1 (6) in 1922.

Many British naval vessels carried float planes, seaplanes or amphibians for reconnaissance and spotting: two to four on battleships or battlecruisers and one on cruisers. The aircraft, a Fairey Seafox or later a Supermarine Walrus, were catapult-launched, and landed on the sea alongside for recovery by crane. Several submarine aircraft carriers were built by Japan, each carrying one floatplane, which did not prove effective in war. The French Navy built one large submarine, “French submarine”号, which also carried one floatplane, and was also not effective in war.

第二次世界大战

World War II saw the emergence of naval aviation as the decisive element in the war at sea. The principal users were Japan, United States (both with Pacific interests to protect) and Britain. Germany, the Soviet Union, France and Italy had a lesser involvement. Soviet Naval Aviation was mostly organised as land-based coastal defense force (apart from some scout floatplanes it consisted almost exclusively of land-based types also used by its air arms).

During the course of the war, seaborne aircraft were used in fleet actions at sea (Midway, “German battleship”号), strikes against naval units in port (Taranto, Pearl Harbor), support of ground forces (Okinawa, Allied invasion of Italy) and anti-submarine warfare (the Battle of the Atlantic). Carrier-based aircraft were specialised as dive bombers, torpedo bombers, and fighters. Surface-based aircraft such as the PBY Catalina helped finding submarines and surface fleets.

In World War II the aircraft carrier replaced the battleship as the most powerful naval offensive weapons system as battles between fleets were increasingly fought out of gun range by aircraft. The Japanese “Japanese battleship”号, the heaviest battleship ever built, was first turned back by light escort carrier aircraft and later sunk lacking its own air cover.

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The Douglas Dauntless SBD was used extensively during the Battle of Midway.

During the Doolittle Raid of 1942, 16 Army medium bombers were launched from the carrier Hornet on one-way missions to bomb Japan. All were lost to fuel exhaustion after bombing their targets and the experiment was not repeated. Smaller carriers were built in large numbers to escort slow cargo convoys or supplement fast carriers. Aircraft for observation or light raids were also carried by battleships and cruisers, while blimps were used to search for attack submarines.

Experience showed that there was a need for widespread use of aircraft which could not be met quickly enough by building new fleet aircraft carriers. This was particularly true in the North Atlantic, where convoys were highly vulnerable to U-boat attack. The British authorities used unorthodox, temporary, but effective means of giving air protection such as CAM ships and merchant aircraft carriers, merchant ships modified to carry a small number of aircraft. The solution to the problem were large numbers of mass-produced merchant hulls converted into escort aircraft carriers (also known as "jeep carriers"). These basic vessels, unsuited to fleet action by their capacity, speed and vulnerability, nevertheless provided air cover where it was needed.

The Royal Navy had observed the impact of naval aviation and, obliged to prioritise their use of resources, abandoned battleships as the mainstay of the fleet. “Vanguard”号23 (6) was therefore the last British battleship and her sisters were cancelled. The United States had already instigated a large construction programme (which was also cut short) but these large ships were mainly used as anti-aircraft batteries or for shore bombardment.

Other actions involving naval aviation included:

  • Battle of the Atlantic, aircraft carried by low-cost escort carriers were used for antisubmarine patrol, defense, and attack.
  • At the start of the Pacific War in 1941, Japanese carrier-based aircraft sank many US warships during the attack on Pearl Harbor and land-based aircraft sank two large British warships. Engagements between Japanese and American naval fleets were then conducted largely or entirely by aircraft - examples include the battles of Coral Sea, Midway, Bismarck Sea and Philippine Sea.[44]
  • Battle of Leyte Gulf, with the first appearance of kamikazes, perhaps the largest naval battle in history. Japan's last carriers and pilots are deliberately sacrificed, a battleship is sunk by aircraft.
  • Operation Ten-Go demonstrated U.S. air supremacy in the Pacific theater by this stage in the war and the vulnerability of surface ships without air cover to aerial attack.

二战后发展

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The ski-jump and a Sea Harrier on Royal Navy carrier “Invincible”号R05 (6).

Jet aircraft were used on aircraft carriers after the War. The first jet landing on a carrier was made by Lt Cdr Eric 'Winkle' Brown who landed on “Ocean”号R68 (6) in the specially modified de Havilland Vampire (registration LZ551/G) on 3 December 1945.[45] Following the introduction of angled flight decks, jets were regularly operating from carriers by the mid-1950s.[45]

An important development of the early 1950s was the British invention of the angled flight deck by Capt D.R.F. Campbell RN in conjunction with Lewis Boddington of the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Farnborough.[45] The runway was canted at an angle of a few degrees from the longitudinal axis of the ship. If an aircraft missed the arrestor cables (referred to as a "bolter"), the pilot only needed to increase engine power to maximum to get airborne again, and would not hit the parked aircraft because the angled deck pointed out over the sea. The angled flight deck was first tested on “Triumph”号R16 (6), by painting angled deck markings onto the centerline flight deck for touch and go landings.[46] The modern steam-powered catapult, powered by steam from a ship's boilers or reactors, was invented by Commander C.C. Mitchell of the Royal Naval Reserve.[45] It was widely adopted following trials on “Perseus”号R51 (6) between 1950 and 1952 which showed it to be more powerful and reliable than the hydraulic catapults which had been introduced in the 1940s.[45] The first Optical Landing System, the Mirror Landing Aid was invented by Lieutenant Commander H. C. N. Goodhart RN.[45] The first trials of a mirror landing sight were conducted on HMS Illustrious in 1952.[45]

The US Navy built the first aircraft carrier to be powered by nuclear reactors. “Enterprise”号CVN-65 (6) was powered by eight nuclear reactors and was the second surface warship (after “Long Beach”号CGN-9 (6)) to be powered in this way. The post-war years also saw the development of the helicopter, with a variety of useful roles and mission capability aboard aircraft carriers and other naval ships. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the United Kingdom and the United States converted some older carriers into Commando Carriers or Landing Platform Helicopters (LPH); seagoing helicopter airfields like “Bulwark”号R08 (6). To mitigate the expensive connotations of the term "aircraft carrier", the Invincibleaircraft carrier carriers were originally designated as "through deck cruisers" and were initially to operate as helicopter-only craft escort carriers.

The arrival of the Sea Harrier VTOL/STOVL fast jet meant that the Invincible-class could carry fixed-wing aircraft, despite their short flight decks. The British also introduced the ski-jump ramp as an alternative to contemporary catapult systems.[45] As the Royal Navy retired or sold the last of its World War II-era carriers, they were replaced with smaller ships designed to operate helicopters and the V/STOVL Sea Harrier jet. The ski-jump gave the Harriers an enhanced STOVL capability, allowing them to take off with heavier payloads.[47]

In 2013, the US Navy completed the first successful catapult launch and arrested landing of an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) aboard an aircraft carrier. After a decade of research and planning, the US Navy has been testing the integration of UAVs with carrier-based forces since 2013, using the experimental Northrop Grumman X-47B, and is working to procure a fleet of carrier-based UAVs, referred to as the Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) system.[48][49]

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各国海军航空兵

海基为主

这类海军航空兵主要通过搭载在航空母舰上的各种舰载机投射空中力量,陆地上的军用机场只用来进行海防维修训练和容纳盈余的飞行战力。

曾经的海基航空兵

陆基为主/海基为辅

这类海军航空兵的舰船主要搭载垂直起降(VTOL,如直升机)或垂直/短距起降航空器(V/STOL,如倾转旋翼机自转旋翼机推力矢量喷气机),但普通的固定翼飞机则主要依赖陆地上的机场进行

完全陆基

这类航空兵缺乏舰载飞行器的能力,因此完全依赖陆基机场。

参见

注解

  1. 航空兵被美国海军看作是联合作战能力的基础部分,因此并未被单独分出。
  2. 中国第一艘航空母舰“辽宁”号在2012年就已服役,2013年底就有宣称具备实战能力,但直至2019年“辽宁”号完成优化改造加上其改进版的姐妹舰“山东”号也在同年底服役后,进入“双航母”时代的中国人民解放军海军才被公认具有蓝水海军的性质。
  3. 俄罗斯唯一的现役航空母舰“库兹涅佐夫”号在2017年起就在停役维修状态,其间发生多次事故,至今无法完成维修升级,有谣传将被除役拆解。目前俄罗斯海军可用的舰载飞行器只包括直升机,固定翼舰载机完全依赖陆基机场起降。

参考文献

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