AIM-9 Sidewinder
 |
Sidewinder Missile |
The
AIM-9 Sidewinder is a
heat-seeking, short-range,
air-to-air missile carried by
fighter aircraft and recently, certain
gunship helicopters. It is named after the
Sidewinder snake, which also detects its prey via body heat. The Sidewinder was the first truly effective air-to-air missile, widely imitated and copied. Its latest variants remain in active service with many air forces.
Early development
The Sidewinder missile was a development of the Naval Ordnance Test Station (NOTS), Inyokern, California, now the Naval Air Weapon Development Center, China Lake, California. It was officially designated in 1952 and was originally conceived by William Burdette McLean.
Developed by the
U.S. Navy (USN) starting in the late
1940s, the Sidewinder introduced several new technologies that made it simpler and much more reliable than its
United States Air Force (USAF) counterpart, the
AIM-4 Falcon. After terrible experiences with the Falcon in the
Vietnam War, the Air Force replaced its Falcons with Sidewinders.
The primary advantage to the Sidewinder is its sophisticated, yet simple detection and guidance system. During
WWII the Germans had experimented with
infrared guidance systems in a large missile known as the
Enzian, but were unable to get it to work reliably. The Enzian was guided by an
IR detector mounted in a small, steerable telescope. A vane in front of the mirror shaded the detector, so the system could locate the target. By continually turning toward the telescope, the missile was guided toward the target using what is known as a
pure pursuit.
The Sidewinder improved on this. The first was to replace the "steering" mirror with a mirror rotating around a shaft pointed out the front of the missile. The detector was mounted in front of the mirror. Instead of attempting to track the target in the mirror, the IR sensor would see the target as brief flashes as the mirror lined up with the target. By knowing where the flash was as the mirror spun, the direction (radially) to the target was also known. This system could also track the radial angle to the target by timing the flashes. If the target was further to the side, the flash seen in the detector would be shorter due to the mirror's higher rate of motion at the outside.
This signal makes the tracking system both simpler and better. Instead of simply pointing the missile at the target (which is inefficient), the Sidewinder "remembered" each flash's direction and time. By attempting to zero out the changes, instead of the difference between the detector and missile angles, the Sidewinder flies a course known as
proportional pursuit, which is much more efficient and makes the missile "lead" the target.
However this system also requires the missile to have a fixed roll axis orientation. If the missile spins at all, the timing based on the speed of rotation of the mirror is no longer accurate. Correcting for this spin would normally require some sort of sensor to tell which way is "down" and then adding controls to correct it. Instead, small control surfaces were placed at the rear of the missile with spinning disks on their outer surface. Airflow over the disk spins them to a high speed. If the missile starts to roll, the gyroscopic force of the disk drives the control surface into the airflow, cancelling the motion. Thus the Sidewinder team replaced a potentially complex control system with a simple mechanical solution.
Service entry
A prototype Sidewinder, the
XAAM-N-7 (later
AIM-9A), was first fired successfully in September
1953. The initial production version, designated
AAM-N-7 (later
AIM-9B), entered operational use in
1956, and has been improved upon steadily since. The first combat use of the Sidewinder was in
1958 with the air force of the
Republic of China on Taiwan. During that period of time, the ROC was engaged in air battles with the
People's Republic of China over the
Taiwan Strait. The United States provided a few dozen Sidewinders to ROC forces, which used them to great effect against PRC
MiG-15s, adding a new element to an air war which had formerly been fought only with guns.
The Taiwan Strait battles inadvertently produced a new derivative of Sidewinder: shortly after that conflict the
Soviet Union began the manufacture of the
K-13/R-3S missile (
NATO reporting name AA-2 'Atoll'), a reverse-engineered copy of the Sidewinder. It was made possible after a Taiwanese AIM-9B hit a Chinese
MiG-15 without exploding; amazingly, the missile struck the MiG-15 and became lodged within the airframe, and the pilot was able to return to base with the missile. Years later, Soviet engineers would admit that the captured Sidewinder served as a "university course" in missile design and substantially improved Soviet and allied air-to-air capabilities. The K-13 and its derivatives remained in production for nearly 30 years.
Although originally developed for the USN, the Sidewinder was subsequently adopted by the USAF as the
GAR-8 (later
AIM-9E). During the
1960s the USN and USAF pursued their own separate versions of the Sidewinder, but cost considerations later forced the development of common variants.
The Sidewinder subsequently evolved through a series of upgraded versions with newer, more sensitive seekers with various types of cooling and various propulsion, fuse, and warhead improvements.
Although each of those versions had various seeker, cooling, and fuzing differences, all but one shared infrared homing. The exception was the U.S. Navy
AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IB (later
AIM-9C), a Sidewinder with a
semi-active radar homing seeker head developed for the
F-8 Crusader. Only about 1,000 of these weapons were produced, many of which were later rebuilt as the
AGM-122 Sidearm anti-radiation missile.
The
AIM-9J Sidewinder version was used by the United States Air Force as well as being widely exported. An improved version of the basic AIM-9B, the main features are larger control surfaces as well as a more aerodynamic IR seeker and improved rocket motor. The missile however still has to be fired at the target from behind, a drawback of all early IR missiles.
All-Aspect Sidewinders
AIM-9L / AIM-9M / AIM-9M-7
The next major advance in IR Sidewinder development was the
AIM-9L (
"Lima") model, introduced in
1978. This was the first "
all-aspect" Sidewinder with the ability to attack from all angles, including head-on. In its first combat uses by
Israel over
Lebanon and by the
United Kingdom during the
Falklands War, the "Lima" reportedly achieved a kill ratio of around 80%, a dramatic improvement over the 10-15% levels of earlier weapons. In both cases, the users' opponents had not developed any tactics for the evasion of a head-on missile shot of this kind, making them all the more vulnerable.
The subsequent
AIM-9M (
"Mike") has the all-aspect capability of the L model while providing all-around higher performance. The M model has improved defense against infrared countermeasures, enhanced background discrimination capability, and a reduced-smoke rocket motor. These modifications increase its ability to locate and lock on a target and decrease the missile's chances for detection. Deliveries began in
1983. The
AIM-9M-7 was a specific modification to AIM-9M in response to threats expected in the
Persian Gulf war zone.
AIM-9X
Now entering service is the
AIM-9X, a new variant with an imaging infrared focal plane array seeker with claimed 90° off-boresight capability, compatibility with
helmet-mounted sights (the new U.S.
Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing System), and a totally new thrust-vectoring system replacing the traditional control surfaces. It retains the same motor and warhead of the "Mike," but its lower drag gives it improved range and speed.
It is also important to note that the AIM-9X has demonstrated a Lock on After Launch capability. Allowing for possible internal use for the F-35.
Raytheon Press ReleaseSIDEARM / AGM-122A
The Sidewinder was also adapted into a new missile, the
AGM-122A Sidearm, which is an
Anti-radiation missile utilizing an AIM-9C guidance section modified to detect and track a radiating ground-based air defense system radar. The target detecting device is modified for air-to-surface use, employing forward hemisphere acquisition capability. Sidearm stocks have apparently been expended, and the weapon is no longer in the active inventory.
Architecture
The AIM-9 is made up of a number of different components manufactured by different companies, including
Aerojet and
Raytheon. The missile is divided into four main sections:
guidance, target detector,
warhead, and rocket motor.
The Guidance and Control Unit (GCU) contains most of the electronics and mechanics that enable the missile to function. At the very front is the
IR seeker head utilizing the rotating reticle, mirror, and five
CdS cells or "pan and scan"
CCD (AIM-9X),
electric motor, and armature, all protruding into a glass dome. Directly behind this are the electronics that gather data, interpret signals, and generate the control signals that steer the missile. An umbilical on the side of the GCU attaches to the launcher, which is pulled from the missile at launch. A 5,000
psig (35
MPa)
argon bottle or Sterling liquid nitrogen generator (AIM-9X) is used to cool the electronics. Two electric servos power the
canards to steer the missile (except AIM-9X). At the back of the GCU is a gas grain generator or thermal battery (AIM-9X) to provide electrical power. The AIM-9X features High-Off-Boresight capability; together with
JHeMoCS (Joint Helmet Mounted Cuing System), this missile is capable of locking on to a target that it is behind it. The AIM-9X also features a Built-In-Test to aid in maintenance and reliability.
Next is a target detector with four IR
emitters and
detectors that detonate the warhead in the event of a
near miss. Versions older than the AIM-9L featured an influence fuse that relied on the target's magnetic field as input. Current trends in shielded wires and non-magnetic metals in aircraft construction rendered this obsolete.
The AIM-9H model contained a 25 pound rodded-blast fragmentary warhead. All other models up to the AIM-9M contained a 22 pound annular blast fragmentary warhead.
Recent models of the AIM-9 are configured with an annular blast fragmentation
warhead, the WDU-17B by Argotech Corporation. The case is made of spirally wound spring steel filled with 8 pounds (4 kg) of PBXN-3 tritonol. The
fuse requires five seconds at 20
g (195.6 m/s²) acceleration to arm and features a safe/arm device.
The
solid propellant rocket motor provides propulsion for the missile. A reduced smoke propellant makes it difficult for a target to see and avoid the missile. This section also features the launch lugs used to hold the missile to the rail of the missile launcher. The forward of the three lugs has two contact buttons that electrically pre-arm the warhead and activate the motor igniter. The fins provide stability from an aerodynamic point of view, but it is the "rollerons" at the end of the fins providing
gyroscopic precession that prevents the
serpentine motion that gave the Sidewinder its name in the early days. The wings and fins of the AIM-9X are smaller to accommodate its use on the
F-22 Raptor and this time it is the fins that do the steering, while the wings up front provide stability. The AIM-9X also features
Vectored Thrust to increase maneuverability and accuracy, with four vanes inside the exhaust that move as the fins move. The last upgrade to the missile motor on the AIM-9X is the addition of a wire harness that allows communication between the guidance section and the control section, as well as a new 1760 bus to connect the guidance section with the launcher's digital
umbilical.
Conclusion
The Sidewinder is the most widely used air-to-air missile in the West, with more than 110,000 missiles produced for the U.S. and 27 other nations. It has been built under license by some nations (including Sweden, which builds it under the local designation
Rb24). The AIM-9 is one of the oldest, least expensive and most successful air-to-air missiles, with an estimated 270 kills worldwide to date.[
1]
It has been said that the design goals for the original Sidewinder were to produce a reliable and effective missile with the "electronic complexity of a table model radio and the mechanical complexity of a washing machine" -- goals which were well accomplished in the early missiles. The Sidewinder is so successful that the United States Navy hosted a 50th anniversary celebration of its existence in 2002.
*
Length: 2.85 m (9 ft 4.2 in)
*
Wingspan: 630 mm (24.8 in)
*
Diameter: 127 mm (5 in)
*
Launch weight: 91 kg (190 lb)
*
Speed:
Mach 2.5*
Range: 1-18 km (0.62-11.3 mi)
*
Guidance:
infrared homing
*
Warhead: 9.4 kg (20.8 lb) annular blast-fragmentation
*
Contractor:
Raytheon Corporation;
Ford Aerospace;
Loral Corp.*
Unit cost:
US$84,000
*
Chaparral, a
surface-to-air missile system using the AIM-9
*
MBDA MICA*
R550 Magic*
Shafrir*
Python 5*
IRIS-T*
ASRAAM*
AGM-122 Sidearm*
AIM-7 Sparrow*
AIM-54 Phoenix*
AIM-120 AMRAAM*
Vympel K-13*
List of missiles* Babcock, Elizabeth (1999).
Sidewinder – Invention and Early Years. The China Lake Museum Foundation. 26 pp. A concise record of the development of the original Sidewinder version and the central people involved in its design.
*
Designation Systems