anti aircraft guns
Aircraft carriers are a long range striking arm of a naval air force. Used properly they can decimate enemy fleets as the US carrier fleet did at Midway to the Japanese. In the Atlantic, British aircraft carriers were decisive to hunting down German ships. Not having aircraft carriers was possibly one of the biggest mistakes for the German navy.
Carriers could deliver ordnance at longer ranges and with more accuracy than a battleship. Example: A carrier could sink an enemy warship at well over 100 miles away. A battleship could sink an enemy warship at 20 miles (a little longer if lucky). A carrier (pilot) can sink an enemy vessel with less ordnance; a battleship would have to fire dozens or hundreds of shells to sink a target at long range (because the battleship's guns would have to adjust their fire based upon the splash of the shells). Although cruisers (not battleships), at the Battle of the Komindorski Islands in WWII, USN and IJN cruisers EACH fired nearly 1,000 large caliber shells at each other and each cruiser scored only a dozen hits each on one another neither side sinking anybody!
Any aircraft flown by opposition forces was the enemy aircraft. Without knowing which country you are refering to, it is not possible to list the airplanes.
Radar is used. it locates all, not just enemy aircraft.
We attacked them with aircraft carriers, marines and the rest of the Pacific Fleet. We uses our marines to invade key islands in a sort of chain action all the way to Japan. We used our aircraft carriers as floating air bases to house our aircraft that we used to attack Japanese controled island bases and to cripple their navy. And we used our other surface vessels to defend the carriers and landing forces. And last, we uses our submarines to destroy enemy shipping lanes and other surface vessels. Theres your answer.
Pearl Harbor is generally regarded as an extraordinary event in American history, remembered as the first time that the America attack by the other country…JAPAN. It has become synonymous with "surprise attack" ever since in the U.S. Unfortunately, the mistakes of intelligence collection, sharing, and analysis leading to the Japanese success at Pearl Harbor did not, in the end, lead to lessons.
In a war, that is aircraft owned by the country you are fighting against.
Talking large-scale, the pacific war was fought mainly by naval encounters, with aircraft carriers deploying fighter-bombers to sink enemy ships and fighter aircraft to destroy enemy aircraft. Much of the land conflict was done by American infantry, deployed by sea, assaulting entrenched Japanese infantry and artillery positions in order to capture Japanese airfields. Overall, the dominant weapon was the airplane; the war was won, or lost, by who had air superiority, considering it was mostly naval battles or bunker-busting, two situations ideal for fighter-bombers.
The main reason for the u.s using aircraft carriers in WWII was the abillity to provide air support to ground, naval, and air attacks while still being in the ocean, this ability allowed for aircraft to be closer to the enemy and deal more powerful and deadly attacks. An example of this is the Doolittle raid, without aircraft carriers the b-25's involved in this operation would not have been able to reach tokyo.
Fighter aircraft are used to shoot down enemy aircraft.
It locks onto enemy aircraft. Aim it at an enemy aircraft, and wait until you hear it beep rapidly, then shoot it. The missle with go towards the aircraft.