AIM-132 ASRAAM
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AIM-132 ASRAAM | |
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AIM-132 ASRAAM | |
Basic data | |
Function | short-range air-to-air missile |
Manufacturer | MBDA |
Unit cost | > £200,000 |
Entered service | 1998 |
General characteristics | |
Engine | solid rocket motor |
Launch mass | 88 kg |
Length | 2.90 m |
Diameter | 166 mm |
Wingspan | 450 mm |
Speed | Mach 3.5 |
Range | 300 m – 18 km |
Flying altitude | N/A |
Warhead | 10 kg blast/fragmentation |
Guidance | Imaging infra-red, 128×128 element focal plane array, with lock-on after launch (LOAL) |
Fuzes | laser proximity and impact |
Launch platform | Aircraft: |
The AIM-132 Advanced Short Range Air-to-Air Missile is a British infrared homing ("heat seeking") air-to-air missile.
Contents |
[edit] History
In the 1980s, NATO countries had a Family of Weapons Memorandum of Agreement that the United States would develop a medium-range air-to-air missile (the AIM-120 AMRAAM) to replace the AIM-7 Sparrow, and Britain and Germany would develop a short-range air-to-air missile (the ASRAAM) to replace the AIM-9 Sidewinder.
Germany left the ASRAAM project in the early 1990s after experiencing technical and funding issues, and in the spring of 1995 initiated a separate project, the IRIS-T. This decision was motivated by new insights into the performance of the Russian Vympel R-73 (AA-11 'Archer') missile carried by the MiG-29s which Germany inherited during reunification. Specifically, Germany wanted to redesign the ASRAAM to match or exceed the maneuverability of the Archer (which had been seriously underestimated by NATO), while Britain favored a high-speed, low-drag solution with relatively limited maneuverability but significantly extended range compared to the Sidewinder. As the two countries could not come to any agreement on this issue, Germany chose to terminate its involvement in the ASRAAM program and developed the completely new IRIS-T missile .
Due to the numerous developmental delays caused by the British-German bickering over ASRAAM design with no solution in sight and in light of threat of AA-11 Archer, the U.S. could not wait any longer and began development an improved version of the Sidewinder, the AIM-9X in 1990. The UK sought a new source for the ASRAAM seeker and selected a Hughes Focal Plane Array. Somewhat ironically, Hughes used the same technology in their winning submission for AIM-9X so the ASRAAM and the AIM-9X both use the same Hughes-developed imaging infrared seeker head. Raytheon also proposed a seeker for ASRAAM and submitted an AIM-9X proposal, but was not selected. However, Raytheon ultimately purchased Hughes and is now the producer of seekers for both ASRAAM and AIM-9X. After the ASRAAM program was revived, the US considered it as a candidate SRM, but did not agree with the British deemphasis on maneuverability after AA-11 Archer perfromance was better understood.
[edit] Characteristics
The main improvement, which was also made on the latest version of the AIM-9 Sidewinder, is a new focal plane array FPA (128x128 resolution imaging infrared) seeker developed by Hughes before they were acquired by Raytheon. This seeker has a long acquisition range, high countermeasures resistance, approx. 90 degrees off-boresight lock-on capability, and the possibility to designate specific parts of the targeted aircraft (like cockpit, engines, etc). The ASRAAM also has a LOAL (Lock-On After Launch) ability which is a distinct advantage when the missile is carried in an internal bay such as in the upcoming F-35 Lightning II.
[edit] ASRAAM P3I
In 1995, Hughes and British Aerospace collaborated on the "P3I ASRAAM" version of ASRAAM as a candidate for the AIM-9X program. The P3I would have been very much like the AIM-132, but with the addition of thrust vectoring to provide increased agility and to carry a larger warhead to meet the requirements expressed by the US Navy led AIM-9X program. The ultimate winner was the Hughes submission using the same seeker but utilizing the existing AIM-9M rocket motor, fuze and warhead, which was an US Air Force stipulation to ease the logistics burden and save by reutilizing the as much of the existing AIM-9 Sidwinder as possible as remaining assets in US inventory numbered well over 20,000.
[edit] Operators
United Kingdom: Royal Air Force
Australia: Royal Australian Air Force
India: Plans for upgrading 52 Dassault Mirage 2000 aircraft to carry the missile, beginning in 2007[1].
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ "Missile Mirage", Aviation Week & Space Technology, January 1, 2007.
- MBDA manufacturer ASRAAM page
- Royal Air Force ASRAAM
- Matra-BAe AIM-132 ASRAAM - The RAAF's New WVR AAM
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