Missile Guidance
Missile Guidance
Missile Guidance
• Guided Missile:
– A military rocket that can be directed to change
its path
• Ballistic missile
– A missile, which, after boost stage, follows
trajectory mainly determined by ballistics;
guidance is mainly for effecting relatively small
deviations from the ballistic trajectory.
Ballistic Missiles
• Strategic deterrents
• ICBMs
Cruise Missiles
• Now obsolete
Short Rage Missiles
• Successful missiles
• E.g. Tomahawk
Missiles Guidance System - Types
• Passive systems
– Use signals generated by the target itself as a signal on
which to home in.
– Sound – torpedoes
– Infra red (heat) – air to air missiles
• Active systems
– Use some input signal. A controller watches the missile
and sends a corrective signal
• Preset systems
– Used to attack targets of fixed location such as cities
• Semi active radar homing
– Homing passively on a reflected radar signal
generated by some other system
• Command guided
– Active systems. Tracking and guidance are
ground based.
• MCLOS
– Manually Controlled Line Of Sight: The
operator watches the missile flight and uses
some sort of signaling system to command the
missile back into the straight line between the
operator and the target (the "line of sight").
Typically useful only for slower targets where
significant "lead" is not required.
• SACLOS
• Semi-Automatic Command To Line Of Sight: is
similar to MCLOS but some automatic system
positions the missile in the line of sight while the
operator simply tracks the target. SACLOS has the
advantage of allowing the missile to start in a
position invisible to the user, as well as generally
being considerable easier to operate. SACLOS is
the most common form of guidance against
ground targets such as tanks and bunkers.
• Beam riding
– a "beam" of some sort, typically radio or laser,
is pointed at the target and detectors on the rear
of the missile keep it centered in the beam.
– Beam riding systems are often SACLOS, but
don't have to be, in other systems the beam is
part of an automated radar tracking system.
• Active radar homing
– uses a radar on the missile to provide a
guidance signal. Typically electronics in the
missile keep the radar pointed directly at the
target, and the missile then looks at this "angle
off" its own centerline to guide itself.
• SARH (Semi Active Radar Homing) systems
– combine a radar receiver on the missile with a radar
broadcaster located "elsewhere". Since the missile is
typically being launched after the target was detected
using a powerful radar system, it makes sense to use
that same radar system to track the target, thereby
avoiding problems with resolution or power.
– SARH is by far the most common "all weather"
guidance solution for anti-aircraft systems, both ground
and air launched.
– SALH is a similar system using a laser as a signal.
• Infra red homing / heat seeking
– a passive system in which heat generated by the
target is detected and homed on. Typically used
in the anti- aircraft role to track the heat of jet
engines, it has also been used in the anti-vehicle
role with some success.
Inertial Guidance