[quote name='Arun_S' date='19 March 2010 - 03:15 AM' timestamp='1268948246' post='105271']
Shiv Aroor is referring to 3 D rendering of Agni -2 m dia missile and warheads, that were generated from my 2 D drawing dimensions (I had the same 3 D renderings from one of the BRFite who generated it for me, to put on-line) I never got change to incorporate the 3 D rending in my web article, before I left BR in disgust. The person has since then given teh rending to SHiv Aroor for wider dissemination.
[/quote]
I never saw these drawing before, neither on BR nor anywhere else, until I came across SHIV AROORôs site.
SHIV AROOR is connected with inner circle of DRDO....
I have noticed those slits on the nosecones of all Indian missiles. I have seen a Dhanush up close, and it had those in the nosecone.
Any suggestions as to what their function is?
That hole at the bottom of the RV seems to be a guidance / stabilizing exhaust of some kind right? Apparently the RV needs to be maneuvered late in the ascent phase so that the nose tip points in the right direction during descent.
03-20-2010, 05:58 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-20-2010, 06:07 AM by Arun_S.)
03-20-2010, 05:59 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-20-2010, 06:17 AM by Arun_S.)
part-2
Agni-3B MIRV
Agni-3B MIRV
Agni-3 SUM firing with MIRVs
Agni-3B MIRV
Agni-3B MIRV
Agni-3C MIRV
Agni-3C MIRV
Agni-3SL MIRV
Agni-3SL MIRV
03-20-2010, 06:38 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-20-2010, 06:40 AM by Arun_S.)
Having access to above images do not have any bearing on possibility if I have or do not have deep source in DRDO, or my technical ability to be able to connect the dots from public source material.
Source: NASA
03-21-2010, 06:52 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-21-2010, 06:55 PM by sai_k.)
Arun_S, On your Agni-3-SL analysis (from your link photos), could you please let know why its weapons configuration do not carry 6 estimated MIRV payload and it has only 2?
[quote name='sai_k' date='21 March 2010 - 08:30 AM' timestamp='1269177774' post='105323']
Arun_S, On your Agni-3-SL analysis (from your link photos), could you please let know why its weapons configuration do not carry 6 estimated MIRV payload and it has only 2?
[/quote]
Cos the other 4 were already dropped on chinks <img src='http://www.india-forum.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/tongue.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=' ' />
Range issues on the SL version? So that perhaps the SL version can still hit Harbin from the Bay of Bengal?
03-22-2010, 05:54 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-22-2010, 05:56 AM by Arun_S.)
[quote name='sai_k' date='21 March 2010 - 07:00 PM' timestamp='1269177774' post='105323']
Arun_S, On your Agni-3-SL analysis (from your link photos), could you please let know why its weapons configuration do not carry 6 estimated MIRV payload and it has only 2?
[/quote]
The number of petals carried in the flower pod depends on end user to trade off range V.s. net destructive effect AND reliability of warhead (you know that bug fixed TD design that has not been tested is of certain confidence level onlee {courtesy R Chidambaram and his BARC crew})
The line diagram drew 2 payload to show a confign that is optimized for longer end of the range (given Agni-3SL is limited on volume and thus stage fuel. 4 or 6 petals are very much possible. but pls also consider decoys that will be carried on board.
[quote name='Gagan' date='22 March 2010 - 03:27 AM' timestamp='1269208179' post='105335']
Range issues on the SL version? So that perhaps the SL version can still hit Harbin from the Bay of Bengal?
[/quote] Correct.
[url="http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/BrahMos-cruise-missile-test-fired-successfully/articleshow/5709080.cms"] BrahMos cruise missile test-fired successfully[/url]
Quote:TNN, Mar 22, 2010,
NEW DELHI: India on Sunday again tested the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, which the armed forces are already inducting as a `precision' strike weapon, from a moving warship INS Ranvir off the Orissa coast.
"The missile was launched from the vertical launcher fitted on INS Ranvir at a decommissioned target ship, INS Meen, and hit it perfectly. The launch met all mission requirements and was 100% successful," BrahMos Aerospace chief A S Pillai told TOI.
"The test was important since the missile, which flies at speeds of 2.8 Mach, performed supersonic maneuvering after being launched from the vertical launcher and homed on to the target successfully," he added.
The Navy has already inducted the 290-km range BrahMos missiles on some warships, having earlier placed orders worth Rs 711 crore for 49 firing units in `inclined launcher configurations'. It's now gearing up to induct these air-breathing missiles in the `vertical launcher configuration as well'.
This is significant since `vertical launchers' are fitted under the warship's deck, protecting them from the atmospheric conditions and imparting some stealth to the weapon system. It also allows the missile to be fired in any direction.
"With vertical launchers, the missile can be fired at any target in the entire 360 degree spectrum," said Pillai. Two such modules, with 16 missiles, are to be fitted in each of the three Kolkata-class P-15A destroyers being built at Mazagon Docks at a cost of Rs 11,662 crore. BrahMos will also arm the three more Talwar-class `stealth' frigates being built at Yantar shipyard in Kaliningrad (Russia) under a Rs 5,514 crore project.
The Army, on its part, is on course to induct two more regiments of the BrahMos Block-II land-attack cruise missiles (LACM), which have been designed as `precision strike weapons' capable of hitting small targets in cluttered urban environments, as first reported by TOI earlier.
Swift induction of BrahMos Block-II is necessary because Pakistan army is inducting its nuclear-capable Babur LACM, developed with China's help to have a 500-km strike range, in large numbers. BrahMos-II can potentially be used for `surgical strikes' at terror training camps across the border without causing collateral damage.
One regiment of the 290-km range BrahMos-I variant, which consists of 67 missiles, five mobile autonomous launchers on 12x12 Tatra vehicles and two mobile command posts, among other equipment, is already operational in the Army. It had earlier ordered two BrahMos regiments in the first phase at a cost of Rs 8,352 crore.
The BrahMos Block-II variant has been developed to take out a specific small target, with a low radar cross-section, in a multi-target environment.
But the work on submarine and air-launched versions of BrahMos is still going quite slow. While talks with Russia are now in the final stages for BrahMos' integration with Sukhoi-30MKI fighters, the missile will be tested for the first time from submersible pontoon launchers this year in preparation for their induction on submarines.
Incidentally, India and Russia have also begun preliminary work on a `hypersonic' BrahMos-2 missile capable of flying at a speed between 5 and 7 Mach, as reported earlier.
The armed forces' eventual plan is to have nuclear-tipped LACMs, with strike ranges over 1,500 km. Unlike ballistic missiles like Agni, cruise missiles do not leave the atmosphere and are powered and guided throughout their flight path.
Cruise missiles, which can evade enemy radars and air defence systems since they fly at low altitudes, are also much cheaper as well as more accurate and easier to operate than ballistic missiles.
[size="4"][color="blue"][/color][/size][url="http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=2010032260770100.htm&date=2010/03/22/&prd=th&"][size="4"][color="blue"] Vertical launch of BrahMos missile successful [/color][/size][/url]
Quote:T.S. Subramanian
It smashes into Navy's decommissioned vessel, 290 km away, in Bay of Bengal
A file photo of the BrahMos missile.
CHENNAI: BrahMos, the supersonic cruise missile, lifted off vertically from Naval destroyer INS Ranvir and punched a hole in a decommissioned vessel 290 km away in the Bay of Bengal off the Orissa coast on Sunday.
The missile, which was fired at 11.30 a.m. from INS Ranvir, climbed 200 metres vertically, then manoeuvred at supersonic speeds to cruise horizontally before smashing into the vessel INS Meen.
This is the 22nd launch of BrahMos, which has already been inducted into the Army and the Navy. It has been jointly developed by India and Russia.
According to A. Sivathanu Pillai, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, BrahMos Aerospace Private Limited, it was ââ¬Åa perfect missionââ¬Â with the missile hitting the target precisely. Helicopters, which flew over the site of the target, had confirmed that INS Meen had been hit and damaged. It was taking in water.
Dr. Pillai said there were several advantages when the missile was launched vertically from a ship. It provided 360 degrees coverage of the target. In a vertical mode, the space it occupied in the ship was less. The missile could be totally hidden. This vertical launch was uniquely designed.
ââ¬ÅNo equivalentââ¬Â
He called BrahMos ââ¬Åa formidable weaponââ¬Â, which had ââ¬Åno equivalent.ââ¬Â It had a successful track record. The missile is nine-metre long and weighs three tonnes. It can fly at almost three times the speed of sound and can reach targets 290 km away. It is essentially an anti-ship missile.
Pat for engineers
President Pratibha Patil and Defence Minister A.K. Antony congratulated the missile engineers and the Naval personnel on the successful launch, Dr. Pillai said.
March 22, 2010
[url="http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article261220.ece?css=print"]First phase of ballistic missile shield to be deployed in 2012[/url]
Quote: HYDERABAD, March 22, 2010
Y. Mallikarjun
Notwithstanding the recent failure of the interceptor missile test, the first phase of the indigenous Ballistic Missile Defence System to intercept and destroy incoming enemy missiles of less than 2,000-km range is expected to be deployed in two years.Disclosing this to The Hindu recently, V.K. Saraswat, Director-General, Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) and Scientific Adviser to Defence Minister, said the first phase would be made operational through the new concept of ââ¬Ëcapability-based deployment.' The Air Defence Programme has been divided into two parts ââ¬â depending upon the threat perception. While the first category of threats pertains to enemy missiles with less than 2,000-km range, the second type belongs to those with more than 2,000 km. Both the phases will have two layers. The aim of the two-tier system is to first destroy an incoming missile, at a higher altitude, in the exo-atmosphere above 50 km. If that does not happen, the endo-atmospheric interception will take place up at the height of 30 km from the earth.
The DRDO has developed the Prithvi Air Defence (PAD) missile for exo-atmospheric interception and the Advanced Air Defence (AAD) system for endo-atmosphere interception.
With a fresh interceptor missile test in the endo-atmosphere planned in a couple of months, some more trials were planned for 2010-11 and 2011-12 to ensure reliability, repeatability and suitability for deploying phase-1assets, Dr. Saraswat said.
Simultaneously, DRDO scientists have started work on phase-II solutions. It requires radars of longer range and new hypersonic interceptor missiles flying at Mach 6 with agility and the capability to discriminate against ballistic missile defence counter measures. ââ¬ÅOur effort is to have interception at very high altitudes, and the entire system will be able to handle multiple, simultaneous attacks,ââ¬Â he said.
A crucial requirement for the second phase is a floating test-range ââ¬â a complete launch station from which interceptors will be fired. Scientists have started designing the ship and associated systems such as radar, mission control centre, launch control centre, communication network and many other equipment needed for phase-II trials.
The ââ¬Ëcapability-based deployment,' under which a system would be put to use, as it got perfected, had paid rich dividends for some countries, Dr. Saraswat said. The entire work on the two phases was planned to be completed by 2016.
it sounds an aegis kind of system is being put in place, any chance that a scramjet powered AAD will see light once the hypersonic brahmos-2 succeeds?
hopefully existing ship designs with IN with VLS can support aegis role
once PDV comes to light then we would know if its close to Dhanush or smaller sized Shaurya, while,
Shaurya is yet to be ship launched
Dhanush is yet to be canister launched from a ship
[quote name='Arun_S' date='20 March 2010 - 06:46 AM' timestamp='1269047296' post='105295']
Having access to above images do not have any bearing on possibility if I have or do not have deep source in DRDO, or my technical ability to be able to connect the dots from public source material.
[/quote]
The guy (Shiv Aroor) is well connected with defense institutions! several times you find stuff from him not available in mainstream media.
Just got off the phone with BrahMos CEO Dr A Sivathanu Pillai.....
http://livefist.blogspot.com/2010/03/nav...sonic.html
[quote name='vasu_ray' date='22 March 2010 - 01:22 PM' timestamp='1269243880' post='105352']
it sounds an aegis kind of system is being put in place, any chance that a scramjet powered AAD will see light once the hypersonic brahmos-2 succeeds?
hopefully existing ship designs with IN with VLS can support aegis role
once PDV comes to light then we would know if its close to Dhanush or smaller sized Shaurya, while,
Shaurya is yet to be ship launched
Dhanush is yet to be canister launched from a ship
[/quote]
IIRC Shoura's twin Sagarika has been tested quite a few time from submerged depths, much easier to launch those canisters from surface vessels.
Fro ABM purposes range is not the issue (so SCRAM jet is less interesting), acceleration is (aka solid fuel & high thrust engines).
Given Our current threat scenarios, will we need a Aegis type sea-based missile defence system?
Indian nuclear deterrence involves scenario implicit with pre-emptive attack on India by forces far and near, and Indian response posture is also omni directional.
So ABM defense sensors and interceptors have to circle around Indian borders. Sea gives the element of unpredictability of unknown ABM formation location, thus is advantageous. apart from providing more space to bring down aggressor missile.
Thanks for the petal config answer Arun ji. I didn't think about decoys when I asked ( assuming our petals are so advanced and stealthy enough to dodge the re-entry to target. Of course mid-course engagement against long ranged ABMs is another aspect I missed).
--
http://www.hindu.com/2010/03/22/stories/...061300.htm
2016 time frame. Very interesting to note the longer range ABM shield for missiles >2K, wouldn't our strategy to hit the enemy missile in the mid-course in space?
Both ABMs and our petal config should keep us safe for the future.
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