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SEMINAR ON “GUIDED MISSILES”. SUBMITTED BY:-. NAME :- SHANKHADEEP BHATTACHARYA REGD. N O. :- 0901223305 ROLL NO. :- 09ME050. DEPART MENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING KRUPAJAL ENGINEERING COLLEGE PUBASASAN KAUSALYAGANGA BHUBANESWAR. INTRODUCTION.
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SEMINAR ON “GUIDED MISSILES” SUBMITTED BY:- NAME:- SHANKHADEEP BHATTACHARYA REGD. NO.:- 0901223305 ROLL NO.:- 09ME050 DEPART MENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING KRUPAJAL ENGINEERING COLLEGE PUBASASAN KAUSALYAGANGA BHUBANESWAR
INTRODUCTION Guided Missiles, usually containing conventional or nuclear explosives, guiding flight towards a target either by remote control or by internal mechanisms. Guided missiles vary widely in size and type, ranging from large strategic ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads to small, portable rockets carried by foot soldiers. Principle of operation:- Tracking Guidance Flight
TYPESOFMISSILES V1 & V2 A)SURFACE TO SURFACE MISSILE 1. V-1 & V-2. 2. LAND BASED STRATEGIC MISSILE. 3.SEA BASED STRATEGICAL MISSILE. 4.CRUISE MISSILE. 5.TACTICAL MISSILE. B)AIR LAUNCHED MISSILE C)SURFACE TO AIR MISSILE Land Based Sea Based Cruise Tactical SAM ALM
GUIDANCE SYSTEM TYPES OF GUIDANCE SYSTEMS MAJOR GUIDANCESYSTEMS REMOTE CONTROL BEAM RIDING LASER GUIDANCE ACTIVE RADAR HOMING WIRE GUIDED MISSILE INFRARED HOMING LONG RANGE NAVIGATION (LORAN) GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM OPTICAL GUIDANCE
TRACKING SYSTEM • TOW TRACKING SYSTEM • TVM TRACKING SYSTEM
TOW TRACKING SYSTEM Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire command-link Guided Missile System MISSILE WEIGHT: TOW 2A: 47.1 lbs; TOW 2B: 49.8lbs MISSILE LENGTH: 46.1 in MIN. RANGE: TOW 2A: 65 m; TOW 2B: 200 m MAX. RANGE: 3,750 m LAUNCHER WEIGHT : 204.6 lb CREW: 2
TVM TRACKING SYSTEM Track-via-missile System
FLIGHT SYSTEMS • Vectored Thrust (For missiles that are powered throughout the guidance phase of their flight). • Aerodynamic Maneuvering (wings, fins, canards, etc.).
MOST COMMON TYPES OF WARHEAD MISSILES • Anti-Satellite Missile • Anti-Ship Missile • Anti-Tank Missile • Fire & Forget Missile • Ballistic Missile • Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
ANTI-SATELLITE MISSILE Anti-satellite weapons (ASATs) are weapons designed to be used against artificial satellites. U.S. ASM-135 ASAT missile
ANTI-SHIP MISSILE An Anti-ship missile(AShM) is a militarymissile designed for use against navalsurface ships. RGM-84 Harpoon
ANTI-TANK MISSILE An Anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) is a missile primarily designed to hit and destroy tanks. An alternative name is Anti-tank guided weapon (ATGW). FGM-148 Javelin
FIRE & FORGET MISSILE Fire and forget is the military term for a type of missile which does not require further guidance after launch such as illumination of the target, and can hit its target without the launcher being in line of sight of the target. Nag missileof the Indian Armed Forces
BALLISTIC MISSILE A ballistic missile is a missile, usually with no wings or fins, with a prescribed course that cannot be altered after the missile has burn edits fuel, whereafter its course is governed by the laws of ballistics. Trident II SLBM
Intercontinental Ballistic Missile An intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, is a long-range ballistic missile using a ballistic trajectory involving a significant ascent and descent, including sub-orbital flight. LGM- 25C Titan II
ADVANTAGES OF GUIDED MISSILES • Missile combat employment is completely autonomous (“fire and forget”) • Missile flexible flight trajectories • High supersonic speed at a whole trajectory • High effectiveness in case of strong electronic and fire counter measures • High level of mobility • Minimal crew
DISADVANTAGES OF GUIDED MISSILES • Missiles can be destroyed in flight (either with Defender missiles or with a well-timed smart bomb detonation) • Missiles have to rely on the ground-based radar for guidance • Nuclear missiles make plants, soil and rain radioactive
CONCLUSION • The growth in the technological know-how of guided missiles has been spurred by an international race for strategic supremacy and commercial aspects. The decreasing gap between the launching of missiles and satellites, the military warfare has assumed a new dimension in the form of electronic and push-button warfare. With the present advancement of technology, the possibility of 'offsetting' the 'monopoly' of the Western countries in the arms trade appears not too distant when the poorer Third world nations would turn to countries like India in the weapons market which India can gladly afford at reduced prices.