No issue. Although it is quite common for antiship missiles to fly a preprogrammed flightpath, including twists and turns, I'm a bit puzzled by the use of the term 'manoeuvers' as this suggest something other than a preprogrammed (waypoint using) path and rather something reactive.
We have to note that BrahMos takes around 5 minutes to strike its target, therefore a realtime guidance system like GPS and an active radar et cetera is employed in it.
Air Weapons: BrahMos
It was noted that
""The Block II BrahMos missile was successfully launched at 1030 hours this morning," said an official of Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO).
The vertically launched missile took two-and-a half-minutes to strike its target in the Pokhran firing range in Rajasthan."
Brahmos Missile Tests - IDP Sentinel
We exactly don't know the parameters at which it was fired, but the gist of it all is that a real time guidance system is present in the BrahMos.
This is confirmed by the fact that BrahMos Block-2 had to
identify a building among a cluster of buildings in an urban environment which it did.
This must mean a real time guidance software is used, coz I doubt DSMAC or TERCOM will be able to attack with this acuity, BrahMos is a fire and forget missile after all.
Which means yes BrahMos can act as per the situation and can react independently as per the guidance data.
BRAHMOS Mark II is ready for induction :: BrahMos.com
The new Brahmos variant poses a serious threat to any aircraft carrier being targeted, not just because it can dive down vertically with very high kinetic energy, but also because it can be fired in a salvo and has the ability to pick the carrier in a carrier group and perform a co-ordinated attack on it!
The Pravda had earlier reported that "the missiles are so clever that they not only detect a target but develop a plan of attack based on the enemy's air defense. They know exactly which target is the primary one, which of them is an attacker and which is a defender. When the main target is destroyed, they re-prioritize and continue with the attack. Now even more advanced missile is on the way."
Deadly Brahmos Variant with Co-ordinated Aircraft Carrier Attack Capability Developed
We commonly categorize weapons by their function and capability. Everything else is detail (this discussion is not about one missile or another being 'common' > what does that mean in this context: used by many navies, 'ordinary?)
What I meant to say was that an Exocet or a Tomahawk will not be able to maneuver like the BrahMos and neither will their trajectories be the same as BrahMos'.
So comparing BrahMos in a traditional sense won't exactly yield a rational explanation.
How so? To keep a launching aircraft safe it should preferbly stay outside of SAM range. This can be done either by employing a long range missile (horizontal plane) or by flying at high altitude (vertical plane). Recall SM2 block II/III roughly 120km range to 25km altitude, for example. When launching closer in but from altitude, high diving is the logical missile flight path. If you surface launch and your missile is not a sea skimmer, it first has to climb on its own to altitude and then dive (i.e. pop up manoeuvre). This applies for a sub-, ship- or landlaunched antiship missile. It would seem logical if it also applies to a landlaunched land-attack missile
Well that is what your link said.
The High-Diver maneuver is the typical pattern of the missile from an aircraft to a ship.
http://www.ijcas.org/admin/paper/files/IJCAS_v5_n4_pp.456-462.pdf
And since we have gone there, BrahMos unlike Tomahawk or any other subsonic cruise missile can accelerate faster, this is proved by the fact that it reaches its target in less than 5 minutes, which is to say that it remains supersonic for the majority of the flight.
Therefore BrahMos has a faster rate of climb, cruise phase and decent.
Actually its quite possible that a cruise missile sea skims during the cruise phase in a pop-up maneuver and then at the necessary distance rises up to acquire momentum and dive down to perform the kill.
The initial position of the missile is at
about 9 km distance apart from the origin. During
ship-to-ship engagement, the trajectory of the antiship missile consists of the cruising phase and the
final phase. It is assumed in simulation that the popup maneuver happens in the final phase with 4 km
distance after the sea-skimming flight is maintained in
the cruising phase with 5 km distance.
http://www.ijcas.org/admin/paper/files/IJCAS_v5_n4_pp.456-462.pdf
Figure 2 shows a graph of a pop-up maneuver where the ASCM sea-skims a height of less than 20m in the cruise phase and after 4km rises up to acquire momentum and dives down to perform the kill.
And actually a vertical diving variant will be offered to the navy ...
Actually the latest test(33rd) of the BrahMos from the stealth frigate INS Teg, featured a supersonic steep diving variant, which probably means the navy has inducted it.
So you suggest ARMY but .... your article is says
True.
Though as we know it BrahMos aerospace is striving for a universal cruise missile system.
So the steep diving variant will be available for both Indian Navy and the Army.
The article I posted also said this,
"We have achieved the capability to attack aircraft carriers using the supersonic vertical diving variant of the missile and after demonstrating the capability recently with high precision, we will now offer this to the Indian Navy," BrahMos chief A Sivathanu Pillai said here today.
He was asked to comment on the recent two successful test firings of the missile.
Pillai said the test firing for the steep dive variant was done for the army and after its success the path is clear for the induction of the
fourth regiment of the missile for mountain warfare.
BrahMos develops anti-aircraft carrier variant of the missile :: BrahMos.com