MBDA Aster

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Aster

Type Aster 15
Short/medium range surface-air anti-aircraft and anti-missile missile
Aster 30
Long range anti-aircraft and anti-missile missile
Service history
In service 2001
Production history
Manufacturer MBDA
Specifications
Weight 310 kg (Aster 15)
510 kg (Aster 30)
Length 4.2 m
Diameter 180 mm

Warhead Directed fragmentation
Detonation
mechanism
Proximity

Engine Solid propellant two-stage rocket
Operational
range
1.7–30 km (Aster 15)
3–120 km (Aster 30)
Flight altitude 13 km maximum (Aster 15)
20 km (Aster 30)
Speed Mach 3 (1000 m/s) (Aster 15)
Mach 4.5; 1,400 m/s (Aster 30)
Guidance
system
Telemetry uplink, terminal active radar homing
Launch
platform
Aster 15 :

Aster 30 :

  • UK: Type 45 AAW Destroyer
  • France/Italy: Horizon class frigate

Aster is a family of surface-to-air missiles manufactured by Eurosam, a European consortium consisting of MBDA France, MBDA Italy (combined 66%) and the Thales Group (33%).

Contents

[edit] Overview

The Aster family was developed to perform three distinct missions:

  • Naval autodefence — using the Aster 15 surface-to-air anti-missile missile (SAAM) as used on the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle (SAAM-FR), the future Italian aircraft carrier Cavour (SAAM-IT) and selected for the 27 French/Italian FREMM multipurpose frigates.
  • Naval local and zone defence — Integrated Principle Anti-Air Missile System (PAAMS) using Aster 15 and Aster 30 missiles, selected by British, French and Italian navies. PAAMS delivered by EUROPAAMS consortium, another MBDA/Thales partnership.
  • Ground-based area defence — Sol-Air Moyenne Portée (SAMP-T) using batteries of Aster 30 missiles.

[edit] History

During the 1980s, the predominant missile was the short-range missile, like the Roland or Crotale, with ranges up to a dozen kilometres. During the 1990s, very-short range systems came to complete the defensive perimeter in a five kilometre radius.

The 2000s are expected to see the replacement of the present medium-range defence systems (ranges between 30 to 100 kilometres) coming to obsolescence. The current range of SAM systems, like the American Sea Sparrow or the Standard-Tartar, the British Sea Dart, or the Italian Aspide, or the land-based systems Hawk and Patriot, cannot be modernised indefinitely, and are already showing their limitation against opponents growing smaller, faster, stealthier, more intelligent, and more capable of electronic warfare.

The actual systems also have the characteristic of being specialised either in short-to-medium range "point defence" (ships, for instance), or in medium-to-long range "zone defence" (fleets).

In this context, Eurosam is developing the new generation Aster anti-missile missile, with the following specifications :

  • Inter-service: addresses the needs of the land, air and naval forces alike)
  • Multinational: development shared by France, Italy and the United Kingdom
  • Modular and extensible

Additionally, the Aster system was designed in such a way as to allow any of the versions to have an anti-ballistic tactical missile role.

[edit] Characteristics

Models of the Aster 30 and Aster 15 side by side; note the difference between the boosters.
Models of the Aster 30 and Aster 15 side by side; note the difference between the boosters.

The Aster features two significant improvements over the previous generation of missiles :

[edit] Maneuverability

New control system : control flaps are associated with four powder maneuver rockets at the center of gravity of the missile (also referred to as PIF-PAF for Pilotage induit en force—Pilotage aérodynamique en force). The system prevents a rupture of the missile under high-g maneuvers during trajectory corrections, and allows such maneuvers to be performed without losing aerodynamic performances, improving the precision of the impact on target. A standard launch of the Aster can include 90-degree trajectory changes.

[edit] Radars

The shipboard radar fulfills roles of sentry, meteo, target discrimination, acquisition and chase. It is capable of simultaneously tracking 300 flying objects, discriminating around 60, and guiding up to 16 missiles.

[edit] Operators

Aster launchers on the Charles de Gaulle.
Aster launchers on the Charles de Gaulle.
Land-based system
Land-based system
  • Flag of France France
    • The Charles de Gaulle received her complement in 2001.
  • Flag of Italy Italy
    • The new Italian aircraft carrier Cavour will carry Aster 15 (32 missiles in two blocks of 16 cells).

[edit] Combat performance

As of May 2006, the Aster has never been used in actual combat.

During trials, between 1993 and 1994, all flight sequences, altitudes and ranges, were validated. This was also the period during which the launch sequence of Aster 30 was validated.

In May 1996, trials of the Aster 15 active electromagnetical final guidance system against live targets began. All six attempts were successful:

  • 8 April 1997: interception of a C22 target simulating a subsonic antiship missile, flying at 10 metres, at a distance of 7 kilometres.
  • 23 May 1997: Direct impact on an Exocet anti-ship missile of the first generation, at 9 kilometres, to protect a distant ship (7 kilometres). This was the first "hit-to-kill" interception ever against an anti-ship missile.
  • 13 November 1997: interception of a C22 target in very low flight in a strong countermeasures environment. In this test, the Aster was not armed with its military warhead so that the distance between the Aster and the target could be recorded. The C22 was recovered bearing two strong cuts due to the fins of the Aster missile.
  • 30 December 1997: Interception of a live C22 target by an Aster 30 at a distance of 30 kilometres, an altitude of 11,000 metres, and a speed of 900 km/h. The Aster climbed up to 15,000 metres before falling on the target at a speed of 2880 km/h. The closest distance between the Aster and the C22 was four metres.
  • 29 June 2001 : Interception of a Arabel missile in low altitude, in less than five seconds.
  • In 2001 : Interception by the Aster 15 of a target simulating an aircraft flying at Mach-1 at an altitude of 100 metres.
  • On 3rd April 2008, the Republic of Singapore Navy frigate RSS Intrepid shot down a aerial drone off the French port of Toulon.

[edit] Variants

The Aster 15 and Aster 30 differ only in the size of their booster - total weights being 310kg and 450kg respectively.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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