DRDO Anti-Radiation Missile
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The Rudram (
IAST The International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration (IAST) is a transliteration scheme that allows the lossless romanisation of Indic scripts as employed by Sanskrit and related Indic languages. It is based on a scheme that emerged during ...
: Rudram, meaning remover of sorrows) is a series of air-to-surface
ground attack In military tactics, close air support (CAS) is defined as air action such as air strikes by fixed or rotary-winged aircraft against hostile targets near friendly forces and require detailed integration of each air mission with fire and movemen ...
and anti-radiation missiles in development by the
Defence Research and Development Organisation The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) (IAST: ''Raksā Anūsandhān Evam Vikās Sangaṭhan'') is the premier agency under the Department of Defence Research and Development in Ministry of Defence of the Government of India, ...
of India. It can be launched from a range of altitudes with large
standoff distance Standoff distance is a security term that refers to measures to prevent unscreened and potentially threatening people and vehicles from approaching within a certain distance of a building, car, or other shelter, roadblock or other location, or to ...
for destroying enemy surveillance radars, communication stations and bunkers. It will be manufactured jointly by
Bharat Dynamics Limited Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL) is one of India's manufacturers of ammunitions and missile systems. It was founded in 1970 in Hyderabad, Telangana, India. BDL was established to be a manufacturing base for guided weapon systems and begun with a p ...
(BDL) and
Bharat Electronics Limited Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) is an Indian Government-owned aerospace and defence electronics company. It primarily manufactures advanced electronic products for ground and aerospace applications. BEL is one of nine PSUs under the Ministry ...
(BEL) after trials and introduction. DRDO also involved Adani Defence and Aerospace under Development cum Production Partner programme for mass production.


Description

Defence Research and Development Laboratory Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL) is an Indian missile development laboratory, part of the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO). Their charter is centered on the design, development, and flight evaluation of var ...
(DRDL) is the primary agency which carried out the design and development of the missile system along with
Armament Research and Development Establishment The Armament Research & Development Establishment (ARDE) is a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). Located in Pune, it is the main DRDO lab involved in the development of conventional armaments. History A ...
(ARDE), Defence Electronics Research Laboratory (DLRL),
High Energy Materials Research Laboratory High Energy Materials Research Laboratory (HEMRL) is a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). Located in Pune, its main function is the research and development of technologies and products in the area of High En ...
(HEMRL),
Research Centre Imarat Research Centre Imarat (RCI) is a DRDO laboratory located in Hyderabad, Telangana. The lab is responsible for Research and Development of Missile Systems, Guided Weapons and advanced Avionics for Indian Armed Forces. It was established by APJ Ab ...
(RCI) and Terminal Ballistics Research Laboratory (TBRL). Many subsystem level developmental works were outsourced to private sector players. Software Development Institute of the Indian Air Force (IAF) helped in the integration of DRDO ARM with Sukhoi Su-30MKI while the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), Nasik Division did the AKU-58 launcher modification which undertook extensive wind-tunnel tests at National Trisonic Aerodynamic Facilities (NTAF) division of National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL), Bangalore, Bengaluru. DRDO ARM has a range of 100–250 km which is made to be integrated with Sukhoi Su-30MKI as its primary test platform, although can be used with Dassault Mirage 2000, SEPECAT Jaguar, HAL Tejas and HAL Tejas Mk2, HAL Tejas Mark 2/MWF in future. According to the then Director of
Research Centre Imarat Research Centre Imarat (RCI) is a DRDO laboratory located in Hyderabad, Telangana. The lab is responsible for Research and Development of Missile Systems, Guided Weapons and advanced Avionics for Indian Armed Forces. It was established by APJ Ab ...
(RCI), G. Satheesh Reddy, the missile will feature a Extremely high frequency#Weapons systems, millimetre wave seeker (mmW) transmitting on frequencies of 30 Hertz, Gigahertz (GHz) and above while capable of lock-on before launch and lock-on after launch modes. Mid-course guidance is accomplished through inertial navigation system (INS) and two-way Data link, datalink combined with Global Positioning System, GPS/NavIC satellite guidance through digital filtering as fall back to correct accumulated errors and a passive homing head (PHH) seeker which is developed by DLRL that can detect radio frequency emissions from 100 km away. PHH is a wide-band receiver system operating within D band (NATO), D band to J band (NATO), J band frequency of the electromagnetic spectrum. Its compact front-end structure is due to the use of monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) technology for identification of radiation emitting sources. The missile is a single-stage, approximately 5.5-metre in length and 600 kg of weight with cruciform wing surface to increase high maneuverability and to give constant aerodynamic characteristics similar to Astra (missile), Astra Beyond-visual-range missile, BVRAAM. It uses pre-fragmented warhead with optical proximity fuze and is powered by a dual-Pulsed rocket motor, pulsed solid rocket motor made by Premier Explosives Limited (PEL) under technology transfer from DRDO. The dual-pulsed solid rocket motor produces variable thrust within a range of 0.6 to 2 Mach that reduces the overall reaction time while widening the targeting envelope as well as the engagement capability. DRDO ARM can target mobile integrated air-defence system as well as radar station that shutdown to avoid detection.


Development and trials

Development had begun by April 2012 at Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL). The project was officially approved in December 2012 with a budget of with project completion by 2017. The feasibility studies were done in 2012–2013 with the aim is to develop a fully indigenous tactical, anti-radiation capable missile for the Indian Air Force, Indian Air force (IAF) which is comparable to AGM-88 HARM#AGM-88E AARGM, AGM-88E AARGM, MAR-1, Kh-31, Kh-31P and better than Martel (missile), Martel or Kh-25, Kh-25MP. From 2014, the development of missile picked up interest of the IAF. As of 2014, missile design and hardware development are in progress with first successful flight trial to happen before year 2017. IAF was initially very concerned with the higher weight and shorter range of new missile compare to the western ones due to the use of bulky Russian made Infrared homing, radio frequency (RF) seekers. IAF at the same time was also negotiating with USA for 1,500 AGM-88E which IAF was planning to induct in the next five years. The technologies that were developed by DRDO for NGARM are wide-band passive seeker, milli-metric wave active seeker, radome for the seekers and dual-pulsed Propulsion, propulsion system which are mostly lessons learnt during the development of Astra (missile), Astra and Barak 8. The Captive Flight Trial–1 (CFT–1) of DRDO ARM was completed on April/May 2016 by No. 20 Squadron IAF, No. 20 Squadron of IAF which checked the performance of seeker, navigation and control system, structural capability and Aerodynamics, aerodynamic vibrations while the Drop Flight Trial (DFT) was completed by December 2016 with the missile released by Sukhoi Su-30MKI at a speed of 0.8 Mach number, Mach, from 6.5 km altitude. Further carriage flight test was carried out to check mechanical/electrical integration as well as software interfacing of the missile before the maiden flight on 18 January 2018, where the missile was successfully flight tested for the first time on parametres such as auto-launch sequence, store separation, control guidance, aerodynamics, thermal batteries, airframe and propulsion without a seeker which were all proven successful. On 25 January 2019, NGARM was fired from a Sukhoi Su-30MKI over Bay of Bengal off the coast of Odisha that hit the designated target with a high degree of accuracy. The missile achieved an accuracy within 10 m Circular error probable, CEP covering a range of 100 km. The developmental test proved the performance of seeker, structural integrity of the missile, correct functioning of navigation and control system while validation of aerodynamic capability. The missile can strike at distances double the intended range depending upon the altitude. NGARM will further undergo series of carriage and release flight trials to check the performance of seekers against a different range of targets. Next trials during the period of July to August 2019 will be conducted initially to check the performance of indigenous passive seeker developed by DLRL with further test for an active seeker at later stage. While the crucial sensor technology is yet to be fully mastered by DRDO, the IAF wants fast track development of NGARM due to urgent requirement of newer anti-radiation missile. NGARM developmental trials will resume from 2020 after a gap of two years. The DRDO Anti-Radiation Missile or NGARM now officially named Rudram-1 was successfully test-fired from Integrated Test Range (ITR), Balasore on 9 October 2020. DRDO is planning final test flight between 28 and 29 December 2021 before moving Rudram-1 for serial production from 2022.


Induction

According to report, the plan is to make the missile a part of the Air Force by 2022 after conducting six to seven more tests. The missile's passive homing head can detect, classify and engage targets over a wide band of frequencies as programmed.


Production

Indian Air Force started working on a proposal to place ₹1,400 crore order for Rudram-1. It was already under review in Ministry of Defence (India), Ministry of Defence (MoD) and awaiting final call from senior officials.


Future development

DRDO is planning to bring further software improvements to handle a larger variety of targets under various operational conditions while developing a separate ground-based variant to be launched from mobile launcher. DRDO is developing Rudram-2 with a range of 300 km and air to ground version Rudram-3 with 550 km range.


See also

* Hormoz-2 * AGM-88 HARM * ALARM missile * Kh-31 * MAR-1 * YJ-91


References

{{Indian missiles


External links

Technical:
DRDO Technology Focus : Warhead for Missiles, Torpedoes and Rockets
Air-to-surface missiles Anti-radiation missiles of India Guided missiles of India Defence Research and Development Organisation