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INDIA'S SECRET MISSILE: SAGARIKA

Well war is the ultimate test for any weapon isnt it?If not there would ve been kargil war and siachin occupation IA/IAF would have never known about their weapons' deficiencies.

There are lots of weapons which countries produce and upgrade which will never see any action during its life time..

Weapon deficiencies are known not only during war times, Ever heard of military exercises??
 
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Sure ignorance is bliss....only if u wud ve read carefully before beginning ur verbal diarrhea.

If only u could read,

It has only been tested from submerged pontoon?Has it been ever tested from any submarine platform?

NO.

India on Tuesday proved that it had the capability to launch missiles from underwater by test-firing successfully the Sagarika missile from a pontoon off the coast of Visakhapatnam. The pontoon simulated the conditions of a submarine.

The missile named Sagarika has been test fired successfully on Feb 26 this year and last year too from a submerged pontoon.

Sagarika has already been tested successfully three times and completes the third leg of the strategic triad giving India the capability to launch missiles from land, air and now from under the sea.

Read the links provided b4 you open your gab
 
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Well war is the ultimate test for any weapon isnt it?If not there would ve been kargil war and siachin occupation IA/IAF would have never known about their weapons' deficiencies.

so in that sense nation's like China,Germany and UK r fighting with obsolete weapon's since they had not faced a war in many yrs.
 
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so in that sense nation's like China,Germany and UK r fighting with obsolete weapon's since they had not faced a war in many yrs.
buddy they r a part of NATO ISF and in case you didnt know, they r involved in afghanistan as they previously were in iraq. china is the only exception, but the chinese hold live fire drills with other countries every now and than
 
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so in that sense nation's like China,Germany and UK r fighting with obsolete weapon's since they had not faced a war in many yrs.
buddy they r a part of NATO ISF and in case you didnt know, they r involved in afghanistan as they previously were in iraq. china is the only exception, but the chinese hold live fire drills with other countries every now and than

That's the same point i am making,u not need to go on war for testing weapons,drills and exercises r enough.

About other's,playing shooting,shooting with some talibani guys does not actually amount to war,the actual war is already over,mainly fought by US.
 
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you have a good point, but war is where its at. in such scenario, all your needs and concerns are put aside and winning the war becomes your only priority. war basically creates a state of panic with everyone's emotions running high. [errors are made]. no matter how many drills and exercises you do, it will not prepare you for the real thing
 
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so in that sense nation's like China,Germany and UK r fighting with obsolete weapon's since they had not faced a war in many yrs.
buddy they r a part of NATO ISF and in case you didnt know, they r involved in afghanistan as they previously were in iraq. china is the only exception, but the chinese hold live fire drills with other countries every now and than
Regarding the thread subject..
U don't fire Ballistc missile from Subs to kill Talibans hiding in caves in afghanistan...

Even India-US,India-Russia and India-French(navy)

hold exercises...

every country does this...
 
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Well the most secret missile of them is the K-X, B-05, AK-3 and right now I dont know what designation is used right now. This is one of the most secret missiles that is being constructed and designed right now. This is going inside the second line of the SSBN whose first hull has almost completed construction and the second hull is also being constructed.

Nothing is know about the characteristic of this missile..and the navy is tight lipped about it.

And Arihant is going to join the western fleet it seems.

going by precedence, arihant will join indian navy and will be deployed in eastern waters for testing and operationalsiation. onlu then she will be inducted into western fleet.
 
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Shourya and Sagarika is a new common missile that can be launched from multiple platforms, i.e. ground, submarine and mobile launcher. The naval version is called Sagarika, while the land based version is called Shourya1. The Indian doctrine of Minimum Credible Nuclear Deterrence envisages “No First Use” (NFU) policy and a triad of nuclear counterstrike capability. The land based Agni-2 missile range is limited to about 3,300 km, and the longer range Agni-3 will enter service soon.

Shourya-and-its-relative-si.jpg


The sea leg of the triad based on blue water naval assets dispersed across the world’s oceans is most survivable and thus a critical part of the triad. The ability to reach all corners of a potential challenger requires a range of 5,000 to 8,000 km. DRDO is developing sub-surface launched long range Agni-3SL with heavy MIRV payload and ABM countermeasures.

Indian nuclear powered ATV due for sea trial in 2009 will reportedly carry 12 launch tubes2 of 2.4m diameter. Launch tubes can be flexibly configured to either carry a two meter diameter Agni-3SL or three wooden rounds3 of 0.74m diameter K15-Sagarika missile. Shourya and Sagarika fills the short to medium range gap that is below Agni-3’s minimum range.

At operational level these missiles provide for range of warheads necessary for graduated nuclear escalation as enunciated by Indian staff and military warfare collages.4

This multifunction missile made in large quantities would fulfill India’s immediate requirements. The missile optimally matches latest types of strategic weapons tested at Pokhran-II in 1998. The missile will most likely takeover the strategic weapons role of Prithvi and Agni-1 missiles, and make them unambiguously dedicated for conventional roles thus stabilizing nuclear deterrence. Shourya and its counterpart Sagarika has been tested six times5 till date. The missile is expected to enter service in 2010. Sagarika will be deployed on submarines and very likely on ‘Sukanya’ class naval vessels too.

Dense_smoke_Shourya.jpg


Shourya is a compact, slender, two-stage, solid fuel missile designed as a wooden round. The missile development was initiated as project K15 and was first flight tested6 on 27 October 2004 in the guise of solid fueled Prithvi-III.7 It is stored, deployed and launched in a fiberglass composite canister, which is easy to handle mobile and can be flexibly deployed on different types of surface and sub-surface platforms. Shourya and Sagarika share a common design. The missile is sealed and can be launched from a moving submarine at 50 meter depth.

The 6.2 tonne Shourya is 10 meters long, and has two solid fuel stages of 0.74 meters diameter. The first stage booster is about two meters long and the second about six meters long. The missile supports a range of unitary warhead configurations, weighing 180 to 1,000 kg. High missile accuracy and ability to fly in a highly depressed trajectory well within atmosphere indicates that it is a weapon for choice to interdict Command & Control (C&C) and preemptive tactics.

The sixth test flight on November 12th, 2008 was a depressed trajectory flight (at Mach 6 and 50 km altitude) with continuous rolling to dissipate heat over a larger surface demonstrated the mastery of difficult aspects of rocketry involving sustained hypersonic flight.

The wooden round design sealed in a fiber glass canister with the aero fins folded inside in a clean & controlled environment makes it maintenance free and tamper proof. The missile is launched by a hot gas generator developing 15-200 bar pressure using high burn rate HTBP based composite propellant. The thick dark gas cloud greatly reduces the thermal signature of the missile.

Once out of the launch tube, the first stage booster motor ignites, taking the missile to five km altitude, when, the main second stage motor takes over. The booster debris reaches a maximum altitude of six km, well below the horizon of radars beyond 330 km. The clean and small diameter missile presents a tiny RCS (radar cross-section).

Shourya-on-mobile-launcher.jpg


ATV.jpg


second stage air fins provide necessary in-flight trajectory control. The main motor is typically expended at 33 km altitude well within the atmosphere; however the air fins remain effective beyond post boost phase. The air fins also allow the missile to fly in a depressed trajectory as well as a cruise and glide in sustained hypersonic regime at 50 km altitude. The payload separation can be done much later after using aerodynamics for trajectory modification during ascent or descent. The missile is resistant to ABM defense.8

Table1.jpg


Re-entry-vehicle-options.jpg


Shourya Re-entry Vehicle (RV) supports a wide range of weapons, with total payload mass ranging from 180 to 1,000 kg. The missile range is a function of payload mass (see graph below).

The November 2008 test unveiled the new generation RV that is designed and optimized for newer boosted fission and thermonuclear weapon (including those awaiting confirmatory test). The sharp nose high ‘âeta’ (Ballistic coefficient9) RV design employs 16 cm diameter blunt nose and half angle of 12° that is mounted on a payload adapter to interface with the 0.74m diameter mission control module atop the upper stage. The high ‘âeta’ RV in combination with an all carbon composite body enables higher re-entry speed even with a light weight payload.10

•Mk-4: For light weight 17Kt Fusion Boosted Fission (FBF) warhead11. Mass12: ~180 Kg13.
•Mk-5: For 50Kt FBF or 200Kt Thermo Nuclear (TN) warhead14. Mass: ~340 Kg
•Mk-6: For 150Kt FBF warhead15. Mass: ~550 Kg.


The all carbon composite re-entry heat shields with multi-directional ablative carbon-carbon re-entry nose tip make it very light and tough.16 This very light RV mass enables scalable payload and range tradeoff especially for lightweight warhead.
 
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And some more Info

Propulsion

The Shourya has two solid fueled stages of 0.74m diameter. This diameter is compatible with a recently tested Indian sub-surface launch system that has a 2.4 meter diameter launch tube17

Second-stage-motor.jpg


First Stage: The first stage solid fuel booster is approximately two meter long and weighs about 1,300 kg including 1,000 kg high density fuel. The booster lifts the missile to an altitude of five km so that the second stage can operate more efficiently at low atmospheric pressure. It uses hot gas reaction control for initial control of yaw, pitch and roll before the air fins unfold and missile gains sufficient velocity for aerodynamic control surfaces.

Second Stage: This six meter long stage weighs about 3.6 tonne and generates 16 tonne thrust. Case-bonded HTPB-based composite propellant with low burn rate is ignited by a small pyrogen ignition motor.

The case is made of 250 grade maraging steel to maximize fuel mass fraction that is critical for scalable payload versus range flexibility. Its nozzle is made of composite material with metallic backup and carbon phenolic liners. The interstage coupling uses a soft-stage separation mechanism and retro rockets for reliable and safe stage separation

Navigation & Accuracy

Shourya largely carries the proven avionics set of Agni-3. However, for more extensive aerodynamic maneuvering, it is augmented by new sensors and flight control system. Shourya will also benefit form Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS)23 expected to be ready by 2012, to ensure guaranteed national access to precision navigation. These systems enable high accuracy required for precision strike.

Table1.jpg



Range versus Payload

Missile range and payload mass are inversely related. It is interesting to note that press reports the Shourya’s range for 1,000 kg and 500 kg payload. The former corresponding to 1980 vintage 200Kt FBF warhead and the latter corresponding to 150Kt FBF that is yet to be field validated.

The official reporting obfuscates the missile’s much higher range corresponding to field tested 17Kt FBF warhead that is the mainstay of Indian deterrence

Conclusion

Shourya class of missile is truly a multi-service missile that has desirable attributes of small size, mobility, stealth, rich set of warhead options, robustness and cost that could make it the most mass produced Indian missile. It complements the long range Agni class missiles to provide the Indian military commanders the global range necessary to secure Indian interests.
 
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It has only been tested from submerged pontoon?Has it been ever tested from any submarine platform?

NO.

It has to go long before it has been successfully tested from sub repeatedly.

YOU IDIOT , WHEN U DON KNOW **** ABOUT ANYTHING THEN U SHUD NOT OPEN UR MOUTH IN PUBLIC. ALL AROUND THE WORLD ALL SUBMARINE LAUNCHED MISSILES ARE TESTED FROM A 30 TO 50 FT UNDERWATER SUBMERGED PONTOONS ONLY. AND INDIA ALSO TESTED SAGRIKA MISSILE SUCCESSFULLY FROM UNDERWATER 8 TIMES. ARIHANT CLASS NUCLEAR SUBMARINE IS ALREADY COMPLETED AND IS GOING SEA TRIALS . ALSO WORK ON 2ND AND 3RD ARIHANT CLASS NUCLEAR SUBMARINE IS ALREADY STARTED PARALLEL SO INDIA IS WAY AHEAD IN KICKING UR **** ***.
JUST BECAUSE PAKISTAN COPIES MISSILES FROM CHINA N NORTH KOREA THAT DOESNT MEAN THAT WE COPIED IT FROM RUSSIA. WE HAVE OUR OWN MISSILE PROGRAMS AND THERE IS NO SIMILARITY BETWEEN SAGRIKA N ANY DAMN RUSSIAN MISSILE.
AND YOU PAKIS JUST RETEST SAME GHAURI N SHAHEEN N HATF MISSLIE N GIVE THEM NEW NAMES BUT THE MISSILES R SAME COPIED ONES. HATF 1, 2 ,3,4,5,6 AND SO ON DOESNT MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE IS ONE N D SAME **** COPY OF NORTH KOREAN NADONG MISSILE WHICH IS FROM THE 1970s

whats so secret about this... it might get IOC after 2010 but it wont be deployed until Arihant becomes fully operational.

YOU IDIOT , WHEN U DON KNOW **** ABOUT ANYTHING THEN U SHUD NOT OPEN UR MOUTH IN PUBLIC. ALL AROUND THE WORLD ALL SUBMARINE LAUNCHED MISSILES ARE TESTED FROM A 30 TO 50 FT UNDERWATER SUBMERGED PONTOONS ONLY. AND INDIA ALSO TESTED SAGRIKA MISSILE SUCCESSFULLY FROM UNDERWATER 8 TIMES. ARIHANT CLASS NUCLEAR SUBMARINE IS ALREADY COMPLETED AND IS GOING SEA TRIALS . ALSO WORK ON 2ND AND 3RD ARIHANT CLASS NUCLEAR SUBMARINE IS ALREADY STARTED PARALLEL SO INDIA IS WAY AHEAD IN KICKING UR **** ***.
JUST BECAUSE PAKISTAN COPIES MISSILES FROM CHINA N NORTH KOREA THAT DOESNT MEAN THAT WE COPIED IT FROM RUSSIA. WE HAVE OUR OWN MISSILE PROGRAMS AND THERE IS NO SIMILARITY BETWEEN SAGRIKA N ANY DAMN RUSSIAN MISSILE.
AND YOU PAKIS JUST RETEST SAME GHAURI N SHAHEEN N HATF MISSLIE N GIVE THEM NEW NAMES BUT THE MISSILES R SAME COPIED ONES. HATF 1, 2 ,3,4,5,6 AND SO ON DOESNT MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE IS ONE N D SAME **** COPY OF NORTH KOREAN NADONG MISSILE WHICH IS FROM THE 1970s
 
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It would take 2 more decades to complete our nuclear triad . Being a hybrid missile , it will be almost impossible to intercept the missile .
 
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