Incredible footage of a fighter aircraft ‘activating its cloaking device’ has resurfaced and people can’t believe it’s real.
The aircraft seen in the footage is the F-22 Raptor, which is known in full as the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor.
The ‘cloaking device’ explained The jets can hit speeds of 1,500 mph – 2.2 times the speed of sound – and burn around 5,000 pounds of fuel every hour.
However, despite what it might look like, the jet doesn’t come equipped with a ‘cloaking device’.
The clip left social-media users floored when it was shared online, with one person posting the video on Twitter and writing: “Mark Fingar captured an F-22 Raptor activating its cloaking device.”
People are incredulous about the resurfacing footage of a fighter plane “activating its cloaking device.”.
Despite the fact that it looks like something from a Top Gun movie, this footage is real and should be seen by all flight enthusiasts.
The Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor, or F-22 Raptor, is the aircraft that can be seen in the video.
The video, which was posted online by photographer and videographer Mark Fingar, features the amazing footage of the F-22 just before it breaks the sound barrier before being engulfed by what some have referred to as its “cloaking device.”.
Let us first examine the F-22’s historical significance in aviation.
The stunning history of the F-22.
When the F-22 was first developed for the US Air Force, it was arguably one of the most sophisticated fighter jets ever made.
The F-22 was developed for six years before making its first flight in Georgia, USA, in 1997. However, a former chief of staff of the Air Force stated in 2021 that he believed the aircraft would be completely retired by the end of the decade.
Later on, though, the agency made the decision to upgrade the jets, which should extend their lifespan into the 2030s.
An explanation of the “cloaking device.”.
The jets can reach 1,500 mph, which is two to two times the speed of sound, and they consume about 5,000 pounds of fuel per hour. The jet does not, however, have a “cloaking device,” despite appearances to the contrary.
Instead, just before it breaks the sound barrier, the plane produces what is called a vapor cone, which some people have compared to a “cloaking device” online, with some degree of accuracy.
To the unaided eye, one of the planes in Fingar’s video appears to be being swallowed by a vapor cone.
When the video was shared online, social media users were shocked. One user shared the video on Twitter with the caption, “Mark Fingar captured an F-22 Raptor activating its cloaking device. “.
Another person, meanwhile, likened it to a scene from a Harry Potter film.
Another person jokingly said, “It’s how they play peekaboo in the clouds.”.
What leads to vapor cones?
When an object moves quickly through moist air, condensed water can occasionally form around it, causing vapor cones.
The temperature of an object, such as an F-22 Raptor, decreases when the localized air pressure around it decreases. Afterward, a cloud will form if the temperature falls below saturation temperature, which is the temperature at which a liquid boils into its vapor phase for a given saturation pressure.
A shockwave may also result from the temperature shift.
The chairman of the aerodynamics group of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Rod Irvine, told the BBC: “If you see a vapor cone, you have a shockwave because there is a change in temperature and pressure.
“The air passing over the wing is accelerated and locally breaks the sound barrier, but the aircraft isn’t necessarily moving faster than sound. “..”.