- AIM-152 AAAM
The AIM-152 AAAM is an
air-to-air missile developed by theUnited States of America .Overview
The AIM-152 originated in a
U.S. Navy requirement for an advanced air-to-airmissile to replace theAIM-54 Phoenix . By the mid 1980s the Phoenix was becoming rather long in the tooth, and the Navy wanted a long range missile to counter the Soviet Tu-22M Backfire and Tu-160 Blackjack long-rangesupersonic bomber s. The goal was to produce a weapon which was smaller and lighter than the Phoenix, with equal or better range at a flight speed ofMach 3 or more.Some of the systems considered for the missile had already been evaluated by the China Lake Naval Weapons Center in the early 1980s as part of the Advanced Common Intercept Missile Demonstration (ACIMD) program. ACIMD missiles had been built but none had flown by the time the project was cancelled. In 1987, Hughes/
Raytheon andGeneral Dynamics /Westinghouse were selected to produce competing designs for the AIM-152.The Hughes/Raytheon design was largely based on the ACIMD missile, with a hybrid
ramjet /solid rocket engine which offered high speeds. The missile would use aninertial guidance system with terminal guidance provided byactive radar - a mode of flight that would later be employed in theAIM-120 AMRAAM . Aninfrared terminal homing seeker was also planned, which would allow the missile to engage without any emissions which would alert the target.The GD/Westinghouse design was even smaller, with a multiple-pulse pure
solid rocket motor. It also had aninertial guidance system, but midcourse updating was provided via a dual-band semi-activeradar . Terminal guidance was via an electro-optical sensor, with a backup infrared seeker also included. One flaw of semi-active radar homing is that the launch aircraft must illuminate the target with its radar during flight, meaning that it must fly towards the enemy and so expose itself to greater danger. GD/Westinghouse planned to avoid this by equipping the launching aircraft with a radar pod which could illuminate the target from both forward and aft, allowing it to turn and escape whilst still providing a target for the missile.With the fall of the
Soviet Union the threat from Russian bombers effectively ended, and since no other nation could match the previous threat the AAAM was left without an enemy to defend against. The project was cancelled in 1992, shortly after the YAIM-152A designation had been given to the two prototypes.With the phasing out of the Phoenix missile the US Navy lost its long range AAM capability, relying instead on the medium range AIM-120 AMRAAM. Longer range versions of the AMRAAM are in development to restore some of this capability.
pecifications
(Note that the YAIM-152A missiles were never built, and as a result any specifications are somewhat speculative.)
Hughes/Raytheon :
*"Length" : 3.66 m (12 ft)
*"Diameter" : 231 mm (9 in)
*"Weight" : Less than 300 kg (660 lb)
*"Speed" : Mach 3+
*"Range" : 185 km+ (115 miles)
*"Propulsion" : Rocket/ramjet engine
*"Warhead" : 14 to 23 kg (30 to 50 lb)blast-fragmentation GD/Westinghouse :
*"Length" : 3.66 m (12 ft)
*"Diameter" : 140 mm (5.5 in)
*"Weight" : 172 kg (380 lb)
*"Speed" : Mach 3+
*"Range" : > 185 km (100 nm)
*"Propulsion" : Multiple-pulsesolid-propellant rocket
*"Warhead" : 14 to 23 kg (30 to 50 lb) blast-fragmentationExternal links
* [http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/m-152.html AIM-152 AAAM - Designation Systems]
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