India successfully test fires Astra interceptor missile

spikey360

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From the ground is the most important word to note here.
Because a missile launched from the ground will be naturally more heavy as it have to start off from sea level and wont have the initial acceleration of a missile launched from fighter flying at supersonic speeds from high altitudes.
Well, the launcher imparts some kinetic energy to the missile. The rockets do not fire in any missile unless it is completely off the ground, so the missile, even if it was a ground launched one, does not have to accelerate from zero.

what s the funda with simulated target ?

are they testing the simulation technology ?

come on , so only once it hit actual target and twice it hit simulated target in space.
No, it is not a test of the simulation technology.
It basically means they were testing the guidance system and kinetic package in the first test and the guidance systems solely in the next two tests with simulated target.
 
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sayareakd

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As @Kunal sir has said it must be launched in SAM mode for that they must have modified the missile so that it will get required height that is why this weight (guess).
It is DDM error. Nothing to do with SAM or A2A version.

From the ground is the most important word to note here.
Because a missile launched from the ground will be naturally more heavy as it have to start off from sea level and wont have the initial acceleration of a missile launched from fighter flying at supersonic speeds from high altitudes.

So we have to wait for confirmation whether it was the version of air launched one.

Third Astra launch too a success
The launch of Astra, India's air-to-air missile, for the third day on Monday from a static launcher on the ground at Chandipur, Odisha, proved to be a success. The flight-trials on December 21 and 22 from fixed launchers were equally successful.

On Monday, Astra manoeuvred at 22g (gravitational force) and intercepted an electronic target with 6g. The three triumphs in a row have paved the way for its launch from an aircraft next year. While Friday's launch too was against an electronic target, Astra destroyed Lakshya, a pilotless target aircraft, the next day.

"It is ready for air-to-air launch," asserted S. Venugopal, Project Director, Astra, on Monday. He attributed the success of the launches to a young team of engineers of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), aged between 25 and 35 years. They did it by striking "a balance among the stability, controllability and agility of the missile, its vehicle dynamics, control algorithms and on-board technology," Mr. Venugopal said. "They have developed some of the best technologies for Astra. No country in the world has demonstrated such a successful system in three consecutive launches." The Astra launched last week and on Monday was a totally reconfigured vehicle. "The configuration is absolutely new. Everything has been changed," he said. While the earlier Astra weighed 300 kg, the present one weighs 168 kg and is 3.8-metres long.

After three more ground-to-air launches next year, Astra will be fired from aircraft such as Sukhoi-30 MI, MiG-29 and the Light Combat Aircraft, Tejas, DRDO officials said. It can be launched from different altitudes and the distance at which it can kill an enemy aircraft depends on the altitude from which it is fired.
The Hindu : Today's Paper / NATIONAL : Third Astra launch too a success

:wave:
 
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A chauhan

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Third Astra launch too a success
The launch of Astra, India's air-to-air missile, for the third day on Monday from a static launcher on the ground at Chandipur, Odisha, proved to be a success. The flight-trials on December 21 and 22 from fixed launchers were equally successful.

On Monday, Astra manoeuvred at 22g (gravitational force) and intercepted an electronic target with 6g. The three triumphs in a row have paved the way for its launch from an aircraft next year. While Friday's launch too was against an electronic target, Astra destroyed Lakshya, a pilotless target aircraft, the next day.

"It is ready for air-to-air launch," asserted S. Venugopal, Project Director, Astra, on Monday. He attributed the success of the launches to a young team of engineers of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), aged between 25 and 35 years. They did it by striking "a balance among the stability, controllability and agility of the missile, its vehicle dynamics, control algorithms and on-board technology," Mr. Venugopal said. "They have developed some of the best technologies for Astra. No country in the world has demonstrated such a successful system in three consecutive launches." The Astra launched last week and on Monday was a totally reconfigured vehicle. "The configuration is absolutely new. Everything has been changed," he said. While the earlier Astra weighed 300 kg, the present one weighs 168 kg and is 3.8-metres long.

After three more ground-to-air launches next year, Astra will be fired from aircraft such as Sukhoi-30 MI, MiG-29 and the Light Combat Aircraft, Tejas, DRDO officials said. It can be launched from different altitudes and the distance at which it can kill an enemy aircraft depends on the altitude from which it is fired.
The Hindu : Today's Paper / NATIONAL : Third Astra launch too a success
:whoa: :yey: It's not a simple achievement, it shows what Indian scientists can achieve when given time and money. Soon we'll need an Astra emoticon for DFI => :astra:
Three more ground to air launches then they will testfire it in air to air mode best of luck to DRDO :thumb:

BTW what would be Astra's scope in Indian armed forces seeing the current imports ?
 

sayareakd

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i have good idea as to what they are doing. They are testing different things and finally they will test the same as one from aircraft.
 

Kunal Biswas

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The Most Important factor is Astra is home made and we can modify it for any available fighter Aircraft which was not very possible before..

Meteor BVR is a very latest and will function with Astra side by side where as both BVR will replace most Russian Vintage BVR from IAF..

BTW what would be Astra's scope in Indian armed forces seeing the current imports ?
 

Armand2REP

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It is good that we supply seekers, but that engine burn is far too slow to make a good missile.
 

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