Saturday, January 13, 2024

Ukraine: Types of Missiles that Russia Commonly Fires at Ukrainian Cities

 


 


     












S-300 / S-400 a potent, long range, surface-to-air, anti-aircraft guided missile, S300 developed in 1978, S400 in 2007. Fully automated, or can be manually piloted. Launched form a command post, which include acquisition and guidance radar, transportation, and launch vehicles. May be used to intercept aircraft or other missiles. Possessed by a number of countries in Europe and the Middle East, and used in conflicts including Syria and Nagorno-Karabakh. Used extensively against ground targets in Ukraine. Image by By Tourbillon - Own work, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6714828. 


Kh-47 Kinzhal hypersonic air-launched ballistic missiles, NATO name "Killjoy", entered service in 2017, design based on the older Iskander missile, uses standard ballistic missile technology at greater speeds. After launch, the missile rapidly reaches cruising speeds of Mach 4, and up to Mach 10 on a downward trajectory. Maneuverable, erratic flight path. Originally touted as "impossible to intercept" by Russia, Kinzhals have been used extensively in Ukraine, and a significant proportion of them were successfully shot down by Patriot air defense systems in 2023. They have also proven to be fairly inaccurate. Image from By kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68926303


Kaliber cruise missile, in service 1994, some models are capable of a supersonic terminal sprint, traves at ~70' over water, or ~150-350' over land, uses inertial guidance +terminal radar or satellite guidance, 


Iskander mobile ground-launched, short-range hypersonic ballistic missile, NATO name "Stone", first launched in 1996, as a replacement to the SCUD missile, uses inertial guidance or GPS, depending on model, can be re-targeted midflight, uses evasive maneuvers and decoys during terminal flight, travels at an altitude of 20,000-160,000 feet. Used in Syria, Georgia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Ukraine wars. In the summer of 2023, an Iskander was used to destroy Ria Pizzeria, a restaurant in Kramatorsk, Ukraine, frequented by journalists, aid workers, and military members. The famous Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina was killed, along with a pair of 14-year-old twin sisters, and 10 others. Dozens were injured.

Image from Vitaly V. Kuzmin - http://www.vitalykuzmin.net/Military/ARMY-2016-Demonstration/, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52213498


Kh-101 / Kh-555 / Kh-55 family of air-launched subsonic cruise missiles, Nato name "Kent", in service 1983, inertial guidance with terminal radar/terrain map, capable of cruising at tree-top level, the original Kh-55 ran on a Ukrainian-made Sich motor, used in Syria and Ukraine wars


Kh-22 "Storm" missiles. NATO name "Kitchen". Large, long-range anti-ship missile developed in 1962. Climbs to either 89,000' (high-altitude mode) or 39,000' (low-altitude mode), then hits top speed while dropping towards target. Guided by radio altimeter and gyroscope-stabilized autopilot. A 1,000kg shape-charge load results in a 16' wide, 40' deep hole. First combat use was in May of 2022 in Ukraine. Use against targets in civilian areas of Ukraine has been criticized due to low accuracy. Image by By Антон Бородин - Музей авиационной техники, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10658517


Kh-59 "Ovod" or "Gadfly" guided aerially-launched land-attack cruise missiles. Developed in the 1980's. Flies at about 22' above water, or 300-3,000' above ground, using a radio altimeter. Used in Chechnya and Ukraine.



Cost #USDWarhead SizeWarhead TypeMissile Length, SpeedEngineRange, AccuracyLaunch Platform
S300   1 millionup to  143 kg19,000-36,000 metal frag,s~25'
up to 250 nmvehicle-based
Kinzhal10 million480kgConventional or nuclear25'

Mach 10
solid-fuel rocket300nmTu-22
Mig-31
Kaliber1 million500kgConventional or nuclear~25'

Mach 3
solid-fuel rocket or turbojetup to 1300nmAir, ship, or sub launched
Iskander3 million480-700kgCluster, thermobaric, EMP, frag, bunker busting, nuclear25'


Mach 7
single-stage solid propellant300nm


3' - 100'
vehicle
Kh-10113 million400mgconventional or nuclear24'

Mach 0.7
turbofan jet3500nm

20-33'
bomber aircraft
Kh-221 million1,000 kgRDX or thermo - nuclear38'

Mach 4.6
liquid - fueled rocket320 nm             300-900'Tu-22  Tu-95
Kh-59



500,000320 kgCluster, Shape-Charge Frag18'

Mach 0.8
2-stage rocket60-160nmSukhoi and Mig jets


Notes: "hypersonic" missile is somewhat of a misnomer; nearly all ballistic missiles reach hypersonic speeds at some point during flight

"Kh" and "X" are both transliteration options for the same Russian letter, (X)

Info from Jane's Air-Launched Missiles





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