Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
2 Surface-to-surface
ALARM under the wing of a Tornado
Several surface-to-surface missiles, like the Hormoz, P700 Granit, P-500 Bazalt, MM40 Exocet, B611MR, and
Otomat, include a home-on-jam capability wherein the
receiver component of their active radar homing is used
to home in on enemy radar, ECM or communications.
This makes these missiles signicantly harder to defeat
with ECM and distraction countermeasures, and makes
the use of semi-active missiles against them dangerous.
Air-to-surface
3 Surface-to-air
Air-to-air
More recently, air-to-air ARM designs have begun to appear, notably the Russian Vympel R-27EP. Such missiles
have several advantages over other missile guidance techniques; they do not trigger radar warning receivers (conferring a measure of surprise), and they can have a longer
range (since the battery life of the seeker head is the limiting factor to the range of most active radar homing systems).
In the 1970s, Hughes Aerospace had a project called
BRAZO (Spanish for ARM). Based on a Raytheon AIM7 Sparrow, it was meant to oer an air-to-air capability against proposed Soviet AWACS types and also some
other types with extremely powerful radar sets, such as
the MiG-25. The project did not proceed.
References
Reuben Johnson (February 2006). Improved Russian radar may level playing eld. Asian Aerospace.
Archived from the original on 2006-06-14. Retrieved 2006-07-10.
Russian site on the S-75 from Said Aminov Vestnik
PVO (Russian) Google translation
REFERENCES
6.1
Text
Anti-radiation missile Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-radiation_missile?oldid=700442246 Contributors: The Anome, Delirium, Shizhao, Riddley, Stewartadcock, Merovingian, DocWatson42, Avriette, SElefant, El C, Sietse Snel, Remuel, Joshbaumgartner,
Fawcett5, XB-70, Nvinen, GraemeLeggett, BD2412, Raguleader, Mark83, Bubbleboys, Arado, Jengelh, Gaius Cornelius, Los688, Finster, Jack Lin, Mike McGregor (Can), Kostmo, Vina-iwbot~enwiki, IronGargoyle, Dammit, Dave420, Mcfresh, Thijs!bot, Escarbot, Magioladitis, Appraiser, BilCat, Nono64, STBotD, VolkovBot, Mdk0642, Occasional Reader, EmxBot, Kivaan, Smsarmad, Guidosst, ImageRemovalBot, Karolrvn, Pplchi, Alexbot, Addbot, Zorrobot, The Bushranger, Luckas-bot, Ptbotgourou, Justme89, Xqbot, Tomdo08,
Armbrust, RedBot, Peterkinxl5, Trappist the monk, EmausBot, Hirsutism, Illegitimate Barrister, H3llBot, Thewolfchild, Will Beback
Auto, ClueBot NG, Wajahatalidoctor, Helpful Pixie Bot, DBigXray, Giblets46, Glevum, Mrt3366, Dexbot, Makecat-bot, Hammerfrog,
Mahdidavi and Anonymous: 48
6.2
Images
File:AGM-88_HARM_on_FA-18C.jpg Source:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f9/AGM-88_HARM_on_
FA-18C.jpg License: Public domain Contributors: http://www.navy.mil/view_image.asp?id=2196 Original artist: U.S. Navy Photo by
Photographers Mate 3rd Class Brian Fleske.
File:ALARM.jpeg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0c/ALARM.jpeg License: CC BY-SA 2.5 nl Contributors: Own work Original artist: User:Dammit
File:Text_document_with_red_question_mark.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/Text_document_
with_red_question_mark.svg License: Public domain Contributors: Created by bdesham with Inkscape; based upon Text-x-generic.svg
from the Tango project. Original artist: Benjamin D. Esham (bdesham)
6.3
Content license