Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Command guidance
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{Short description|Type of missile guidance}} {{More citations needed|date=January 2015}} '''Command guidance''' is a type of [[missile guidance]] in which a ground station or aircraft relay signals to a [[guided missile]] via [[radio control]] or through [[wire-guided missile|a wire connecting the missile to the launcher]] and tell the missile where to steer to intercept its target. This control may also command the missile to detonate, even if the missile has a [[fuze]]. Typically, the system giving the guidance commands is tracking both the target and the missile or missiles via [[radar]]. It determines the positions and velocities of a target and a missile, and calculates whether their paths will intersect. If not, the guidance system will relay commands to a missile, telling it to move the fins in a way that steers in the direction needed to maneuver to an intercept course with the target. If the target maneuvers, the guidance system can sense this and update the missiles' course continuously to counteract such maneuvering. If the missile passes close to the target, either its own [[proximity fuze|proximity]] or [[contact fuze]] will detonate the warhead, or the guidance system can estimate when the missile will pass near a target and send a detonation signal. On some systems there is a dedicated [[radio antenna]] or antennas to communicate with a missile. On others, the radar can send coded pulses which a missile can sense and interpret as guidance commands. Sometimes to aid the tracking station, a missile will contain a radio transmitter, making it easier to track. Also, sometimes a tracking station has two or more radar antennas: one dedicated to track a missile and one or more dedicated to track targets. These types of systems are most likely to be able to communicate with a missile via the same radar energy used to track it. ==Command to line of sight (CLOS)== The CLOS system uses only the angular coordinates between the missile and the target to ensure the collision. The missile is made to be in the line of sight between the launcher and the target (LOS), and any deviation of the missile from this line is corrected. Since so many types of missile use this guidance system, they are usually subdivided into four groups: A particular type of command guidance and navigation where the missile is always commanded to lie on the line of sight (LOS) between the tracking unit and the aircraft is known as command to line of sight (CLOS) or three-point guidance. That is, the missile is controlled to stay as close as possible on the LOS to the target. More specifically, if the beam acceleration is taken into account and added to the nominal acceleration generated by the beam-rider equations, then CLOS guidance results. Thus, the beam rider acceleration command is modified to include an extra term. The beam-riding performance described above can thus be significantly improved by taking the beam motion into account. CLOS guidance is used mostly in shortrange air defense and antitank systems. ===Manual command to line of sight (MCLOS)=== {{Main|Manual command to line of sight}} Both target tracking and missile tracking and control are performed manually. The operator watches the missile flight, and uses a signaling system to command the missile back into the straight line between operator and target (the "line of sight"). This is typically useful only for slower targets, where significant "lead" is not required. MCLOS is a subtype of command guided systems. In the case of glide bombs or missiles against ships or the supersonic [[Wasserfall]] against slow-moving [[B-17 Flying Fortress]] bombers this system worked, but as speeds increased MCLOS was quickly rendered useless for most roles. ===Semi-manual command to line of sight (SMCLOS)=== Target tracking is automatic, while missile tracking and control is manual. ===Semi-automatic command to line of sight (SACLOS)=== {{Main|Semi-automatic command to line of sight}} Target tracking is manual, but missile tracking and control is automatic. 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, and is generally far easier to operate. SACLOS is the most common form of guidance against ground targets such as tanks and bunkers. ===Automatic command to line of sight (ACLOS)=== Target tracking, missile tracking and control are automatic. ====Command off line of sight (COLOS)==== This guidance system was one of the first to be used and still is in service, mainly in anti-aircraft missiles. In this system, the target tracker and the missile tracker can be oriented in different directions. The guidance system ensures the interception of the target by the missile by locating both in space. This means that they will not rely on the angular coordinates like in CLOS systems. They will need another coordinate which is distance. To make it possible, both target and missile trackers have to be active. They are always automatic and the radar has been used as the only sensor in these systems. The [[RIM-66 Standard | SM-2MR]] Standard is inertially guided during its mid-course phase, but it is assisted by a COLOS system via radar link provided by the AN/SPY-1 radar installed in the launching platform. ====Line of sight beam riding guidance (LOSBR)==== {{Main|Beam riding}} LOSBR uses a ''beam'' of some sort, typically [[radio]], [[radar]] or [[laser]], which is aimed at a target and detectors on the rear of the missile keep it centered in the beam. Beam riding systems are often [[SACLOS]], but do not need to be; in other systems the beam is part of an automated radar tracking system. An example is later versions of the [[RIM-8 Talos]] missile as used in Vietnam: the radar beam was used to take the missile on a high arcing flight and then gradually brought down in the vertical plane of the target aircraft, the more accurate [[semi-active radar homing]] (SARH) being used at the last moment for the terminal homing and strike. This gave an enemy pilot the least possible warning that the aircraft was being illuminated by missile guidance radar, in contrast to search radar. This is an important distinction, as the properties of the signal differ, and are used as a cue for evasive action. LOSBR suffers from the inherent weakness of inaccuracy with increasing range as the beam spreads out. Laser beam riders are more accurate because beams of lasers spread less than of radars, but are all short-range, and a laser can be degraded by bad weather. In contrast, SARH becomes more accurate with decreasing distance to a target, so the two systems are complementary. ==== Track-via-missile ==== [[Track-via-missile]] is a variant of command guidance. The main difference is that the missile sends target tracking information back to the guidance system to aid it to calculate an intercept. This negates much of the accuracy disadvantage of pure command guidance. == Examples == Examples of missiles which use command guidance include: * Russian: [[S-25 Berkut]], [[S-75 Dvina]], [[S-125 Neva/Pechora]], [[Tor missile system|9K330 Tor]], [[2K11 Krug]] * American: [[MIM-3 Nike Ajax|Nike Ajax]], [[Nike Hercules]], [[Nike Zeus]] * Indian: [[Akash (missile)|Akash]] Older western missiles tend to use pure [[semi-active radar homing]]. Pure command guidance is not normally used in modern [[surface-to-air missile]] (SAM) systems since it is too inaccurate during the terminal phase, when a missile is about to intercept a target. This is because the ground-based radars are distant from the target and the returned signal lacks resolution. However, it is still quite practical to use it to guide a missile to a location near a target, and then use another more accurate guidance method to intercept the target. Almost any type of terminal guidance can be used, but the most common are [[semi-active radar homing]] (SARH) or [[active radar homing]] (ARH). Examples of missiles which use command guidance with terminal SARH include: * Russian: [[S-200 (missile)|SA-5 'Gammon']], [[2K12 Kub|SA-6 'Gainful']], [[Buk missile system|SA-11 'Gadfly']], [[SA-17 Grizzly|SA-17 'Grizzly']] * American: [[RIM-67 Standard]] Missile 2 (SM-2) Examples of missiles which use command guidance with terminal ARH include: * Russian: [[S-300VM missile system]], [[S-350E Vityaz 50R6|S-350E]], [[S-400 missile system|S-400]], [[S-500 missile system|S-500]] * American: [[RIM-174 Standard ERAM]], [[MIM-104 Patriot#MIM-104F (PAC-3)|MIM-104F Patriot Advanced Capability 3 (PAC-3)]] ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Missile types}} [[Category:Missile guidance]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page
(
help
)
:
Template:Main
(
edit
)
Template:Missile types
(
edit
)
Template:More citations needed
(
edit
)
Template:Navbox
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)