A file photo of an earlier, non-canisterised Agni-5 test
By Ajai
Shukla
DRDO
Missile Complex, Hyderabad
Business Standard, 26th Dec 16
The Agni-5
intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) was successfully test-fired on
Monday morning from APJ Abdul Kalam Island, off the Odisha coast. The missile’s
payload splashed down twenty minutes after launch, precisely on target in the
Southern Indian Ocean.
“All the
radars, tracking systems and Range Stations tracked and monitored the flight
performance and all the mission objectives were successfully met”, announced
the defence ministry.
Prime
Minister (PM) Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar tweeted their
congratulations after the test. “It will add tremendous strength to our
strategic defence”, said the PM.
This is the
fourth successive Agni-5 test launch that has gone to plan since the first
launch on April 19, 2012. Today’s test was the second in full operational mode,
with the missile launched from its storage canister.
The
road-mobile canister protects the deployed missiles, allowing them to be stored
for years. Yet, it permits launch in minutes, including the time needed for
mating the nuclear warhead (stored separately) with the missile.
The Agni-5 is
now ready to enter service with the Strategic Forces Command (SFC) as the
backbone of India’s China-specific nuclear deterrent. Its 5,000-kilometre range
allows it to deliver a nuclear payload anywhere in China.
In 1998,
soon after India’s five nuclear tests, the defence minister of that time, George
Fernandes, stated that China was “Potential threat number one”.
Even so,
the Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) is developing a modernised, short-range
ballistic missile, the Agni-1P, whose range of 300-700 kilometres will make it
the backbone of the Pakistan-focused nuclear deterrent. This was reported first
by Business Standard (December 17, “New-age
Agni to boost Pak-focused nuclear deterrent”).
Both
China’s and India’s nuclear doctrines mandate “No First Use” (NFU) of nuclear
weapons, so use against each other seems unlikely. Pakistan, however, retains
the option to use nuclear weapons in grave national security crises, and is
building an arsenal of tactical nuclear weapons that it insists it would use
early in a war with India.
To
understand the ultra-modern Agni-5, Business Standard visited the Advanced
Systems Laboratory (ASL) in Hyderabad, the DRDO facility that has designed,
developed and built all India’s Prithvi and Agni ballistic missiles.
Ballistic
missiles work on the same principle as lobbing a stone at a target. The impetus
and direction imparted while throwing the stone (or launching the missile)
determines where they will land.
The launch starts
with the “boost phase”, when the missile is propelled into space. A powerful
gas generation system in the canister rapidly builds up 300 tonnes of pressure,
popping the missile out, like a bullet. In less than half a second, when the
missile is 10-15 metres above the canister, the first stage ignites,
accelerating the missile upwards. Within 30 seconds, it goes supersonic and,
within 90 seconds, when the first stage burns out, the Agni-5 is hurtling
upwards at one-and-a-half kilometres each second.
Designing
and validating the canister was a key challenge, which was tackled after the
first two Agni-5s were launched from open launch pads. This involved conducting
two “pop-up tests” (technically “ejection tests”), in which a dummy missile was
ejected from the canister to test the gas generation and the command to ignite
the first stage.
Then, in a
landmark test on January 31, 2015, a fully operational Agni-5 was launched from
a canister. Today’s launch is the fourth validation of the canister, and the
missile as a whole.
While the
Agni-5’s first stage is built from conventional “maraging steel”, the second
and third stages are built from lightweight, new-age composite materials. The
second stage, which burns for 80 seconds, takes the missile 170 kilometres
above earth; and the third stage, which separates after a minute, carries the
payload up to 260 kilometres. With all three propulsion stages separated, all
that is left is the payload --- the tip of the missile.
With the
“boost phase” over, the missile enters its “ballistic phase”. Like a lobbed
stone, it is carried towards the target purely on momentum. Ten minutes after
launch, it reaches the top of its parabolic path, about 580 kilometres above
earth. Then gravity begins pulling it down towards the impact point.
Deep in
space here, with no atmosphere to allow aerodynamic steering with fins, course
correction is done with small “side-thruster rockets”, to correct any errors
that crept in during the launch.
By the time
the payload reaches the upper edge of the atmosphere, it is hurtling downwards
at about 5-6 kilometres per second. This is the most technologically
challenging part of the launch --- the re-entry stage.
As the missile
comes in contact with the atmosphere, friction heats its outer surface to 4,000
degrees Centigrade, while the payload inside (in wartime, a 200 KiloTonne
nuclear bomb) must be maintained at 50 degrees Centigrade. This is done by
building the re-entry vehicle from a thick block of carbon composite material, compressing
it with pressures of up to 1,000 atmospheres.
“A diamond
is created when 10,000 atmospheres of pressure are exerted on carbon. So we are
effectively creating one-tenth of a diamond”, quips one of the scientists.
At the
target end, in the stretch of ocean between the southern tips of Africa and
Australia, radar-equipped naval warships are pre-positioned to monitor where
the missile strikes. There is no scope for error beyond a few hundred metres.
India’s ballistic
missile arsenal currently has the 3,500-kilometre Agni-3 as its longest-range
missile, barely sufficient to place Mainland China at risk. The Agni-4 and
Agni-5, which will equip new Strategic Forces Command units, will greatly
expand India’s targeting options.
Manufacturing
the Agni-4 and Agni-5 at full-scale production rates will include more than 200
private sector industries, many of which have played roles in developing the
missiles. The DRDO itself manufactures key components, like rocket motors; but
even for those, private firms build components like casings and nozzles. As
they gain experience, a band of low profile, high-tech private firms, like Sigma
Micro Systems, VEM Technologies, and Resin Allied and Products (RAP) are
emerging as players in the missile field.
(Part 2: “India’s next generation
ICBM --- the Agni-6”)
Good news.
ReplyDeleteAm sure DRDO will turn around the cruise missile too.
Reliable deterrent....waiting intently for part-2
ReplyDeleteThank you for describing the flight path of the missile in such perfect detail. It seems like this is a stone-throw like missile, the designers do not seem to have added any maneuverability to the missile tip, if the description in the article is complete.
ReplyDeleteRead it again it says,
Delete"Deep in space here, with no atmosphere to allow aerodynamic steering with fins, course correction is done with small “side-thruster rockets”, to correct any errors that crept in during the launch."
This side thrusters can be programmed to evade BMD. This feature exists in Agni 3 and possibly Agni 4.
sayareakd@gmai.com
Sir, when will upload part-2?
ReplyDeleteSir there are various news reports about closure of Nirbhay Cruise Missile Project. Please provide the real story on that, would like to hear from you on that. Sir while the DRDO releases tenders for new missiles with exact specifications there is unnecessary cloak on many new missile projects, if possible try to report on that to. Example Pralay, NGARM, SR-SAM etc
ReplyDeletelooking forward to see your Part-2 of this article on MIRV Agni-6
ReplyDeleteSuperb , technical analysis , Ajai Shukla never dissappints.
ReplyDelete