Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor
The world's most capable air superiority fighter, combining supercruise, supermaneuverability, and all-aspect stealth in a single airframe.

History & background.
The Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor is the most capable air superiority fighter ever to enter operational service. Developed under the Advanced Tactical Fighter programme that began in the early 1980s as a replacement for the F-15 Eagle, the Raptor introduced a combination of capabilities — stealth, supercruise, supermaneuverability, and advanced avionics — that no single aircraft had previously achieved simultaneously.
What sets the F-22 apart from every other operational fighter is supercruise: the ability to sustain supersonic flight at Mach 1.82 without using fuel-hungry afterburners. This means the Raptor can spend extended time above the speed of sound in combat — a capability that fundamentally changes the geometry of air combat by reducing reaction times and expanding the kinematic envelope available to the pilot. Most fighters, including the Su-57 and Eurofighter Typhoon, require afterburner to go supersonic and cannot sustain it.
The aircraft’s AN/APG-77 AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) radar operates in the X-band and can track dozens of targets simultaneously while maintaining a low probability of intercept — the radar itself is difficult for enemy systems to detect. Combined with the F-22’s stealth shaping, which reduces its radar cross-section to approximately that of a marble from head-on aspects, the aircraft is designed to see and kill adversaries before being detected itself.
Thrust-vectoring nozzles allow the F-22 to point its nose — and therefore its weapons — at targets regardless of its flight path, enabling it to maintain firing solutions during maneuvers that would cause a conventional fighter to lose its lock. In exercises, F-22 pilots routinely achieve exchange ratios of 10:1 or higher against non-stealth adversaries.
Production ended at 187 airframes in 2011 after Congress declined to fund additional aircraft, a decision the US Air Force has since described as a strategic mistake. A modernisation programme, Raptor Agility Programme, is underway to extend the aircraft’s service life beyond 2030.
Specifications & performance.
| combat radius | 759 km (internal fuel, hi-lo-hi) |
| engine | 2× Pratt & Whitney F119-PW-100 (156 kN each with afterburner) |
| ferry range | 2,960 km (with external tanks) |
| first flight | September 7, 1997 |
| internal weapons | 6× AIM-120 AMRAAM + 2× AIM-9 Sidewinder |
| introduced | December 15, 2005 |
| length | 18.92 m |
| max speed | Mach 2.25+ (2,410 km/h) at altitude |
| mtow | 38,000 kg |
| service ceiling | 19,812 m (65,000 ft) |
| status | In service (2005–present) |
| supercruise | Mach 1.82 (without afterburner) |
| units built | 187 (production aircraft) |
| wingspan | 13.56 m |