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  2. Ballistic missile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_missile

    Ballistic missiles vary widely in range and use, and are often divided into categories based on range. Various schemes are used by different countries to categorize the ranges of ballistic missiles: Tactical ballistic missile (TBM): Range less than 300 km; Short-range ballistic missile (SRBM): Range from 300 to 1,000 kilometres (190 to 620 mi)

  3. Ballistic missile flight phases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_missile_flight...

    The boost phase is the portion of the flight of a ballistic missile or space vehicle during which the booster and sustainer engines operate until it reaches peak velocity. . This phase can take 3 to 4 minutes for a solid rocket (shorter for a liquid-propellant rocket), the altitude at the end of this phase is 150–200 km, and the typical burn-out speed is 7 k

  4. Hardpoint (missile defense) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardpoint_(missile_defense)

    Hardpoint was a proposed short-range anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system conceived by ARPA and developed by the US Army under ARPA's Project Defender program. Hardpoint was designed to exploit the relatively low accuracy of Soviet ICBMs, which would make destroying US missile silos difficult. The idea was to only shoot at warheads which would ...

  5. Surface-to-surface missile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface-to-surface_missile

    An unguided surface-to-surface missile is usually referred to as a rocket (for example, an RPG-7 or M72 LAW is an anti-tank rocket), whereas a BGM-71 TOW or AT-2 Swatter is an anti-tank guided missile. Examples of surface-to-surface missile include the MGM-140 ATACMS [2] and the Scud family of missiles. [3]

  6. Ballistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistics

    A ballistic missile is a missile that is guided only during the relatively brief initial phase of powered flight, with the trajectory subsequently governed by the laws of classical mechanics, in contrast to (for example) a cruise missile, which is aerodynamically guided in powered flight like a fixed-wing aircraft.

  7. We Might Have Just Seen the World's First Anti-Ship Ballistic ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/might-just-seen-worlds...

    By the late 20 th century, new ballistic missiles began approaching the ‘within-a-few-meters’ level of precision needed to reliably hit ship-sized targets. But the moving problem was still ...

  8. The Navy Test-Fired a Powerful Supersonic Missile From ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/navy-test-fired-powerful...

    The U.S. Navy test-launched a powerful SM-6 supersonic missile from a container mounted on its smallest type of surface warship: the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS).

  9. Missile guidance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missile_guidance

    In World War II, guided missiles were first developed, as part of the German V-weapons program. [2] Project Pigeon was American behaviorist B.F. Skinner's attempt to develop a pigeon-guided bomb. The first U.S. ballistic missile with a highly accurate inertial guidance system was the short-range PGM-11 Redstone. [3]