Can China's most advanced fighter J 1 1 intercept the US strategic reconnaissance plane Leona?

Anonymous buddy is too pessimistic. Su -27 was born later than F 15, specifically f 15. Compared with the original F 15, most of the combat effectiveness is average, and a few are better (the result of American air combat is that Su -27 lost 1 frame, and F 15 1 frame was shot down. Probably1:1.16 ~1.17, because both of them were air-to-air fighters from the beginning, and they had almost no ability to attack the ground accurately. The only drawback is that they can only attack two targets at a time. I don't believe that after so many years, it is still equivalent to the initial level of f 15, and such great progress is equivalent to no progress.

It is said that Leona has a top speed of Mach 8 and a flying altitude of 865,438+million meters. If so, the altitude is 100 km, and there are no weapons to intercept at present. Including the current laser weapons.

Although China laid down a satellite in 2007, it has an orbit and is relatively stable. Besides, there is no air in outer space. If the laser hits Leona at a height of 100km, it will take at least 2 seconds of continuous irradiation to destroy the thermal insulation of Leona (not necessarily). Because Leona won't have an alarm and then move automatically. Moreover, Leona's extremely high speed may cause friction with the air-high heat-resulting in an ion layer wrapped in other positions except the tail wing, or it may produce a shock wave field, and the whole fuselage is in a "bubble". That is, there is a thin vacuum isolation layer between the car body and the surrounding air, and the air is compressed into a "waterline (just like the waterline on both sides of a high-speed ship)". If it wants to break through, it must spend more time staring at a place for continuous irradiation. Otherwise, the fault is difficult to solve. With the current laser technology in various countries, it is impossible to do this. Although in 1999, the United States and Israel tried to intercept Katyusha rockets with lasers, and Katyusha disintegrated in less than 0.5 seconds, there are three points to be noted: the range is too close, and the linear distance from the laser platform to Katyusha is only 10 km; Second, Katyusha is far from 8M velocity, and there is no ion layer around it, and there is no shock wave field; Third, Katyusha has no ability to induce laser irradiation, nor does she have the ability to maneuver to avoid it.

From this point of view, there is nothing the United States can do about Leona at present. Unless a country develops a super laser weapon with great power, it can continuously irradiate for nearly 10 second or even dozens of seconds (unlikely, a bit like a fable).

How to deal with Leona? Destroy its supply platform, or let it get hit when it returns in other ways. That's all we can do at present.