August 27, 2024
-Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) is redesigning the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) target vehicle for the Missile Defense Agency (MDA). The new design replaces the target’s heritage Trident C4 first stage solid rocket motor with a Peacekeeper SR119 motor to provide extended range, lift capability and payload capacity for ICBM target missions.
Expert:
Robin Heard, director of targets, Northrop Grumman: “Our approach to building target vehicles enables us to pair new and proven technologies together to create the best solution to meet customer needs. It’s about finding the right balance of affordability and innovation – combining capable, government-owned surplus motors and sophisticated front ends to simulate current and emerging threats.”
Details:
ICBM target vehicles are threat-representative ballistic missiles used by the MDA to test the efficacy of the nation’s missile defense systems, including the Ground-based Midcourse Defense System and Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System. Northrop Grumman is the prime contractor for the Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile and ICBM target vehicles, delivering 25 vehicles to date and supporting 10 successful launches since 2011.
The redesigned ICBM target is Northrop Grumman’s first target program to leverage virtual and augmented reality to fully animate the vehicle’s factory integration and field operations, known as pathfinding. Pathfinding provides a lower risk setting to fully vet new integration, stacking and test operations on inert hardware. Virtually simulating the vehicle's pathfinding operations further buys down risk, enhances end-to-end test capability and optimizes processes to deliver the critical capability with agility.
In collaboration with the MDA and the U.S. Air Force Rocket Systems Launch Program, the company successfully completed a static fire of the SR119 solid rocket motor in 2022 and initial SR119 integration pathfinding operations in June 2024. The tests validated the motor’s capability to serve as a first stage in this new target vehicle application.
Source : Northrop Grumman Corporation
Publish date: October 2020 - Pages: 410
Publish date: August 2021 - Pages: 241
Publish date: June 2024 - Pages: 212