Missile Warning System
Missile Warning System
Missile Warning System
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The MWS (Missile Warning System) is a passive defence warning system aiming at
detecting, tracking and giving warning of missile threats approaching the protected flying
platform.
It is employed against SAM (Surface-to-Air Missile) or AAM (Air-to-Air Missile) threats of
which it is able to detect the plume and the body emission.
MWS detects incoming missile threat(s) and automatically cue the counter measure systems
composing EO/IR SPS (Self-Protection Suite), such as Directed Infrared Counter Measure
(DIRCM) system and/or Counter Measure Dispensing System (CMDS).
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MWS are based on passive sensor technology operating in solar blind Ultra Violet (UV)
spectral band or Mid-Wave Infra-Red (MWIR) bands on which there is an intensive emission
from missile’s solid fuel rocket motor plume.
Figure 1 shows the launch of a Surface to Air Missile (SAM) in which is possible to note the
plume emission which is detected by a MWS.
Figure 1: A Patriot surface-to-air missile system undergoing testing at White Sands Missile
Range, New Mexico, 1987. Image: Frank Trevino/U.S. Department of Defense.
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This leads to a much higher false-alarm rate, which has thus far prevented the deployment of
infrared sensors in a missile warning system.
One way of reducing false-alarms levels is to make use of the spectral difference between
missile plumes and the background.
Dual band infrared based MWS, in combination with high resolution and high frame rate
sensors, will improve system performance.
A MWS is composed of a set of sensors installed onto the aircraft skin in order to be able to
detect missiles approaching from any direction of arrivals. A typical FoV (Field of View) for
each sensor is a cone of about 100°.
For this reason, a network of sensor heads is required to guarantee the complete platform
coverage: four sensors cover 360° in azimuth; one or two additional sensors, depending on
the installation, can be used to complete the spatial coverage in elevation too.
The processing unit has in charge the analysis of the data acquired from the detector in
order to elaborate the AOA (Angle of Arrival) of the approaching missile threat and all the
information the MWS has to provide as output, including multiple threats management.
Image processing algorithms, depending on the technology the sensor is based on, are
implemented to filter and elaborate the frames received by the detector with the aim of
maximizing the POW (Probability of Warning) and minimizing the FAR (False Alarm Rate).
In some cases, data received from an IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit) can be processed in
order to reduce the false alarm too, by taking into account the platform movements while
filtering the missile tracks.
The AoA accuracy plays an important role for the effectiveness of the countermeasure
process. An evasive manoeuvre performed by the pilot and/or the ejection direction of a
decoy must be evaluated in function of the direction the missile threat is incoming from.
This is even more important if the MWS has in charge the threat designation for a DIRCM
system.
In this case, the angular accuracy must be such as to guarantee that the DIRCM tracking
system acquires the threat steering to the direction communicated by the MWS.
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Figure 2: Example of MWS network Pod installation and their conical fields of view.
Figure 1 shows a typical example of MWSs Pod installation in which the warning system
provide a 360-degree coordinated coverage of the platform.
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