Hi
@The Deterrent
i am all open for discussions based on hard and concrete research literature. I would love to know the source of your (~300kg/20kT) device.What i am simply asking is,has this figure been released by any of pakistan's research labs or by mubarakmand himself?
Here are couple of seminar pics that i attended,this one was on phased array radars and the speaker is none other than Dr ATRE ex DG DRDO
View attachment 193583
I understand your fondness for published literature, I really do. But there are somethings that have to be assumed or derived from various sources. For example, the source for ~300kg | 20kt device:
In late November 2008, Pakistan's Defence Export Promotion Organization (DEPO) held the biennial International Defence Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS). During this exhibition, Pakistan's Army Strategic Forces Command (ASFC) displayed 6 strategic weapons systems (Ghaznavi, Ghauri, Shaheen-I, Shaheen-II, Babur, Ra'ad) for technological demonstration. The features of the weapons were also displayed alongside. Babur's poster showed a figure of "300 Kg" alongside the title "PAYLOAD".
Regarding yield, in '98 Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission test-detonated 6 nuclear devices. Varying yields were achieved, of which the highest was claimed as 45 kilotons equivalent of TNT. Assuming that the weapon designs under testing were to be later produced and deployed on delivery platforms, the heaviest warhead would be of around 907kg / 2000lbs (as a gravity bomb for fighter aircrafts) or a maximum of 1050 kg / 2315lbs (mass of Shaheen-II's Re-entry Vehicle, as stated by the ASFC during IDEAS 2008). Furthermore, Pakistan's Khushab Reactor Complex now produces enough plutonium to be used in considerable amounts for nuclear weapons. Adding to it, Professor Dr. Pervaiz Hoodbhoy has stated that development of composite cores of modern delivery systems is highly likely. Moreover, substantial information is available online about Pakistan producing considerable amount of Tritium in the Khushab Complex for boosting the yield of newer warheads, however since limited quantity is available, it can be assumed that the boosted-fission warheads may have been considered only for longer ranged strategic systems.
In the light of the above information, I have claimed that the 300kg warhead aboard Babur & Ra'ad cruise missiles would have a yield of around 20 kilotons equivalent of TNT at least, if not more.
It is sad to see that a person like mubarakmand who heads pakistani design agency chooses to remain so utterly ignorant of indian developments and worse under rates them!.I have personally attended a lot of seminars my friend and have interacted with a lot of research engineers- they all seem pretty aware of the chinese developments!
Dr. Samar Mubarakmand retired in 2007. He was a part of the older military-industrial complex that developed strategic weapons and their delivery systems in the 90s, and he had the status of a public figure portraying Pakistan's advancement in military (nuclear & missile) technology. So a bit of propaganda from his side here and there is understandable.
The current Chairman NESCOM and everyone working in the organization is pretty well-aware of the recent developments made by DRDO, I'm sure.
When i referred to "throw weight" i meant the payload carrying capacity of the rocket which is the SUM of all the masses including RV,MEMS based sensors/actuators,your bus and all other allied systems- hope i have myself clear?Now my point is,you may very well come up with some fancy number that suits you,since i am a control engineer,all i am interested in is,how do you ARRIVE at those numbers? BASED on What kind of literature?I mean what kind of research literature do you subscribe to my friend?
Well, since
aap ki sui waheen atki hui hai, may I recommend waiting for a while for Pakistan to introduce such a system? I hope photographic proof would be better than any
fancy number, right?
You forgot the nose cone, thats the heaviest after the nuclear device.
Oh and lets not brag about our qualifications, shall we? I have read enough about US cold-war developments to know that miniaturization is a matter of preference, not a technological limitation.
My friend i am afraid you're terribly mistaken here,MEMS based sensors and actuators occupy a huge portion of control systems engineering.You see the major challenge associated with any MEMS based system is it's "packaging",like you have DIP,ball packaging for ICs,similarly you have for MEMS- and that requires some decent FABs!
It can be fabricated in a lot of ways,like etching,deposition etc and then comes your packaging (which require FABs my friend),i.e you integrate your sensor/actuator in an electronic circuit on an IC- most common example is MEMS based accelerometer.
My bad, I meant that they can be integrated anywhere, not fabricated.
Off. The. Shelf. Try to understand, Pakistan does not have the resources to invest into FABs.
One more intriguing aspect of MEMS based actuators is,that magnetic fields cant be easily realized on micro level (for instance in a very small micro motor/gear arrangement) hence they use electric field in a micro motor- not many people are aware of this!
I didn't know that, thanks for sharing.
We call it frugal gandhian engineering,However thats not my point ,my point,is,for these multi-billion dollar projects which require some really technologically intensive systems,how would pakistan achieve it- given it's multi-disciplinary nature .I strictly go by the published literature or proven experiments/demonstration of the capability- for instance ex DG DRDO have hinted to the possible development of anti ship ballistic missile ,you see,while india might have all the components and the requisite resources but i wouldnt believe unless and until have read a research paper or any simulation analysis from DRDL/ASL or a live real test!- i hope you get my point!
Oh please don't compare DRDO with NESCOM, they consider it mandatory to share their pre-mature on-paper designs.
You are absolutely right, since there aren't any papers being published by Pakistani engineers & scientists, Pakistan won't develop anything more. It was a pleasure having a discussion with you.