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RIM-7 Sea Sparrow

The RIM-7 Sea Sparrow is a U.S. ship-borne short-range anti-aircraft and anti-missile weapon system, primarily intended for defense against anti-ship missiles. The system was developed in the early 1960s from the AIM-7 Sparrow air-to-air missile as a lightweight "point-defense" weapon that could be retrofitted to existing ships as quickly as possible, often in place of existing gun-based anti-aircraft weapons. In this incarnation, it was a very simple system guided by a manually aimed radar illuminator.

RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
TypeSurface-to-air missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1976–present
Production history
ManufacturerRaytheon and General Dynamics
Unit cost$165,400
Specifications
Mass510 lb (230 kg)
Length12 ft (3.7 m)
Diameter8 in (20 cm)
Wingspan3 ft 4 in (1.02 m)
WarheadAnnular blast fragmentation warhead, 90 lb (41 kg)
Detonation
mechanism
Proximity fuzed, expanding rod, with a 27 ft (8.2 m) kill radius

EngineHercules MK-58 solid-propellant rocket motor
Operational
range
10 nmi (19 km)
Maximum speed 4,256 km/h (2,645 mph)
Guidance
system
Semi-active radar homing
Launch
platform
Ship

After its introduction, the system underwent significant development into an automated system similar to other US Navy missiles like the RIM-2 Terrier. Contemporary improvements being made to the Sparrow for the air-to-air role led to similar improvements in the Sea Sparrow through the 1970s and 80s. After that point the air-to-air role passed to the AIM-120 AMRAAM and the Sea Sparrow underwent a series of upgrades strictly for the naval role. It now resembles the AIM-7 only in general form; it is larger, faster and includes a new seeker and a launch system suitable for vertical launch from modern warships.

Fifty years after its development, the Sea Sparrow remains an important part of a layered air defense system, providing a short/medium-range component especially useful against sea-skimming missiles.

History edit

Background edit

High-speed jet aircraft flying at low altitudes presented a serious threat to naval forces in the late 1950s. Approaching under the local horizon of the ships, the aircraft would suddenly appear at relatively close ranges, giving the ships only seconds to respond before the aircraft dropped their payloads and withdrew. This gave the aircraft an enormous advantage over earlier weapons such as dive bombers or torpedo bombers, whose low speed allowed them to be attacked with some effectiveness by anti-aircraft guns. The advantage was so great that when the Royal Navy was faced by the threat of the new Soviet Sverdlov-class cruiser, they responded in a non-linear fashion by introducing the Blackburn Buccaneer aircraft to attack them.[1]

Further improving the capabilities of aircraft against ships were a variety of precision-guided weapons. Early designs were first used in World War II with manually controlled weapons such as the Fritz X, and evolving into semi-autonomous cruise missiles, such as the Raduga KS-1 Komet, that relied on a combination of initial guidance from the launching aircraft and terminal guidance on the missile itself. These systems allowed the aircraft to launch their attacks from outside the range of shipboard anti-aircraft weapons, in relative safety. Only the presence of defensive fighters operating at long ranges from the ships could provide cover against these attacks, by attacking the launch aircraft before they could close on the ships.

US Navy doctrine stressed long-range air cover to counter both high-speed aircraft and missiles, and development of newer short range defenses had been largely ignored. While the Navy was developing expensive long-range fighters like the Douglas F6D Missileer, most ships were left with older weapons, typically Bofors 40 mm guns or Oerlikon 20 mm cannons. By the early 1960s their capability against modern aircraft and missiles was limited; a lack of fast-reacting mounts, gunsight radars of limited accuracy, and long settling times for the fire control systems all meant that the guns were unlikely to be able to respond effectively against high-speed aircraft.

The introduction of sea-skimming missiles dramatically increased the threat against these ships. Unlike the earlier generation of anti-ship missiles (ASMs), sea-skimmers approached at low level, like an attack aircraft, hiding themselves until the last moment. The missiles were relatively small and much harder to hit than an attacking aircraft. While the older defenses might be considered a credible threat to a large aircraft at low altitude or a missile approaching at higher altitudes, against a sea-skimming missile they were useless. To successfully counter this threat, ships needed new weapons able to attack these targets as soon as they appeared, accurately enough to give them a high first-attempt kill probability - there would be little time for a second attempt.

Point defense missile system (PDMS) edit

The US Army faced a similar problem defending against attacks by high-speed jet-powered attack aircraft. In this case the local horizon was generally even more limited, blocked by trees and hills, and engagement times could be measured in seconds. They concluded that a gun-based system was simply unusable in this role; by the time the radar had locked-on and the gunsight calculated proper "lead" there would be no time to shoot at the target while it was within a gun's relatively short range. Missiles, on the other hand, could progressively tune their approach while they were flying toward the target, and their proximity fuses meant they only needed to get "close enough".

In 1959 the Army started development of the MIM-46 Mauler, which mounted a new high-speed missile on top of the ubiquitous M113 Armored Personnel Carrier chassis, along with a medium-range search radar and a separate tracking and illumination radar. In order to deal with the quick response times needed, the fire control system was semi-automatic; operators would view targets on the search radar and prioritize them, the fire control system would select ones within attack range and automatically slew the missiles toward them and launch. Since the missile would be operating close to the ground in highly cluttered environments, it used a combination of beam riding along the illumination radar and an infrared seeker in the nose, which allowed tracking as long as either the path in front or in rear of the missile remained free of obstructions.

These same basic engagement parameters - high-speed and the associated fleeting sighting times - applied to sea-skimming aircraft and missiles as well. The Navy intended to adapt the Mauler to shipboard use by removing its search radar and wiring it into the existing ship-borne radar systems instead. The 9-box launcher and illuminator radar would be retained in a relatively compact mount. Development started in 1960 under the "Point Defense Missile System" (PDMS), the naval version to be known as the "RIM-46A Sea Mauler". The Navy was so confident in the Sea Mauler that they modified the design of their latest frigates, the Knox class, to incorporate a space on the rear deck for the Sea Mauler launcher.[2]

The Navy's confidence in Mauler proved misplaced; by 1963 the program had been downgraded to a pure technology development effort due to continued problems, and was canceled outright in 1965. All three of the stakeholders, the US Army, US Navy and British Army, started looking for a replacement. While the British took a longer-term approach and developed the new Rapier missile, the US Army and Navy scrambled to find a system that could be deployed as quickly as possible. Facing the problem of guidance in a cluttered environment, the Army decided to adapt the infrared AIM-9 Sidewinder missile into the MIM-72 Chaparral. This was based on the AIM-9D, a tail-chaser, and would be useless for the Navy where its targets would be approaching head on. They required a radar-guided system, and this naturally led to the AIM-7 Sparrow. They also considered Chaparral for smaller ships due to its much smaller size, but no such fits were ever attempted.[2]

Basic point defense missile system (BPDMS) edit

 
Mark 115 manned director, initially used to guide a Sea Sparrow to its target as a part of BPDMS.

Quickly organizing the "Basic Point Defense Missile System", BPDMS, the then-current AIM-7E from the F-4 Phantom was adapted to shipboard use with surprising speed. The main developments were the new Mark 25 trainable launcher developed from the ASROC launcher, and the Mark 115 manually aimed radar illuminator that looked like two large searchlights. Operation was extremely simple; the operator would be cued to targets via voice commands from the search radar operators, and he then slewed the illuminator onto the target. The relatively wide beam of the radar only needed to be in the general direction of the target, the continuous wave signal being Doppler shifted by the moving target and showing up strongly even if it was not centered in the beam. The launcher would automatically follow the motions of the illuminator, so that when the missile was fired it would immediately see the signal being reflected off the target.

In this form the Sea Sparrow was tested on the destroyer escort USS Bradley[3] starting in February 1967, but this installation was removed when Bradley was sent to Vietnam later that year. Testing continued, and between 1971 and 1975 Sea Sparrow was fitted to 31 ships of the Knox class, hulls 1052 to 1069 and 1071 to 1083. The "missing ship" in the series, Downes (DE-1070), was instead used to test an upgraded version (see below).

The Sea Sparrow was far from an ideal weapon. Its rocket engine was designed with the assumption that it would be launched at high speed from an aircraft, and therefore is optimized for a long cruise at relatively low power. In the surface-to-air role one would rather have very high acceleration in order to allow it to intercept sea-skimming targets as soon as possible. The power profile is also suitable for cruising in thin air at high altitudes, but at low altitudes it does not produce enough power to overcome drag and dramatically decreases range; some estimates indicate that the Sea Sparrow may be effective only to 10 kilometres (6.2 mi), about one quarter of the range of the air-launched Sparrow. An engine of much higher power would greatly improve performance, in spite of a shorter burning time.

Another problem is that the Sparrow is steered with its mid-mounted maneuvering wings. These were used on the Sparrow because they required less energy for basic maneuvers during cruise, but this made the missile less maneuverable overall, which was not well suited to the quick-reaction weapon. Additionally, the powered wings meant that they could not easily be adapted to fold, and therefore the launcher cells were sized to the wings instead of the missile body, taking up much more room than required. Although the Sea Sparrow was meant as a small missile system that could be fit to a wide variety of ships, the launcher was relatively large and was deployed only to larger frigates, destroyers and aircraft carriers. Finally, the manually aimed illuminator was of limited use at night or in bad weather, which was hardly encouraging for a ship-borne weapon where fog was a common occurrence.

Improved basic point defense missile system (IBPDMS) edit

 
USS O'Brien launches a Sea Sparrow missile, shown with its mid-wing still folded as it departs a NSSM Mark 29 launcher on November 5, 2003.
 
Two Mark 95 unmanned illumination radars used to guide a Sea Sparrow to its target.

In 1968, Denmark, Italy, and Norway signed an agreement with the US Navy to use the Sea Sparrow on their ships, and collaborate on improved versions. Over the next few years a number of other countries joined the NATO SEASPARROW Project Office (NSPO), and today it includes 12 member nations.[4] Under this umbrella group, the "Improved Basic Point Defense Missile System" (IBPDMS) program started even while the original version was being deployed.

IBPDMS emerged as the RIM-7H, which was essentially the RIM-7A with the mid-mounted wings modified to be able to fold.[5] This was done in a fashion similar to carrier-based aircraft; the wings were hinged at a point about 50% along the span, with the outer portions rotated back toward the body of the missile. This allowed them to be stored in tighter container tubes in the new Mark 29 launcher, and flip open automatically when they were released from the tube.

The seeker was modified to work with a variety of guidance radars, including those being used with existing European missile systems. Production of the RIM-7H began in 1973 as NATO Sea Sparrow Missile System (NSSMS) Block I. For the US Navy's use the new Mark 95 illuminator system was also introduced, similar to the original Mark 115 but with automatic guidance that could be used in any weather. The Mark 95 formed the basis of the highly automated Mark 91 fire control system.

Missile upgrades edit

In 1972 Raytheon started a Sparrow upgrade program to arm the upcoming F-15 Eagle, producing the AIM-7F. The F model replaced the older analog guidance system with a solid state version that could operate with the F-15's new pulse-doppler radar. The guidance system was much smaller, which allowed the warhead to be moved from its former rear-mounted position to one in front of the mid-mounted wings, and increased in weight to 86 lb (39 kg). Moving it forward also allowed the rocket engine to be enlarged, so it was replaced by a new dual-thrust engine that quickly accelerated the missile to higher speeds, and then settled to a lower thrust for cruise. The new missiles were quickly adapted for the naval role in a fashion similar to the RIM-7H, producing the RIM-7F. The new missile used the lower model designation in spite of the newer technology than the H model.[5]

Another major upgrade to the AIM-7 followed, the AIM-7M. The M included a new monopulse radar seeker that allowed it to be shot downward from a higher-altitude aircraft at a target otherwise masked by the ground. The new model also included a completely computerized guidance system that could be updated in the field, as well as further reducing weight for yet another warhead upgrade. The computerized guidance system also included a simple autopilot that allowed the missile to continue flying toward the last known target location even with the loss of a signal, allowing the launch platform to break lock for short periods while the missile was in flight. All of these modifications also improved performance against low-altitude sea-skimming targets as well.[5] The M model entered US operational service in 1983.[6]

The original RIM-7E was capable to fly at about Mach 2+, between 30 and 15,000 metres (98 and 49,213 ft), with a range of 15–22 kilometres (8.1–11.9 nmi) (depending on the target height). The RIM-7F enhanced the performances, but also the proximity fuse versus low flying targets, as the minimum altitude was reduced to 15 metres (49 ft) or less. The RIM-7M was able to strike targets at an altitude of 8 metres (26 ft), providing some capability against sea-skimming missiles such the Exocet.[7]

While the M model was being worked on, the US Navy also introduced an upgrade for the Mark 91 fire control system, the "Mark 23 Target Acquisition System" (TAS). TAS included a medium-range 2D radar and IFF system that fed information to a new console in the ship's combat information center. The Mark 23 automatically detected, prioritized and displayed potential targets, greatly improving reaction times of the system as a whole.[8] The Mark 23 is also used to select targets for most other weapons systems, including gunfire and other missile systems. TAS started entering the fleet in 1980.[6]

 
Evolved Sea Sparrow being lowered into VLS tube

The NSPO also used the M series upgrade as an opportunity to upgrade the system to allow it to be launched from a Vertical Launching System (VLS).[5] This modification uses the "Jet Vane Control" (JVC) package that is added to the bottom of the missile. On launch, a small engine in the JVC boosts the missile up above the launching ship, then uses vanes positioned in its own exhaust to quickly slew the missile into the proper alignment with the target, which is fed to the JVC during launch. As far as the Sea Sparrow is concerned, there is no difference between being launched directly from a trainable launcher or using JVC, in both cases the missile becomes active looking directly at the target.

A final upgrade to the Sparrow was the AIM-7P, which replaced the M's guidance system with an improved model that allowed mid-course upgrades to be sent from the launching platform via new rear-mounted antennas.[5] For air-to-air use this allowed the missile to be "lofted" above the target and then be directed down towards it as it approached; this gives the missile greater range as it spends more time in thinner high-altitude air. In naval use, this meant it could also be directly guided against small surface targets that would otherwise not show up well on radar, allowing the ship's more powerful search radars to provide guidance until the missile approached the target and the reflected signal grew stronger. This also gave the Sea Sparrow a very useful secondary anti-shipping role that allows it to attack smaller boats.

Ground-launched Sea Sparrow edit

 
RIM-7 SAM towed launchers
 
RIM-7 SAM Missile Launcher Display at Ching Chuan Kang Air Base

Taiwan operates ground based Sea Sparrows as part of the Skyguard SHORAD system. Five hundred missiles entered service in 1991 and are deployed on trailers with four box launchers. In 2012 they were temporarily withdrawn from service following a pair of missile failures during testing as well as the failure of a related AIM-7 in the same exercises.[9]

In January 2023, the United States announced it would transfer Sea Sparrow missiles to Ukraine as part of a military aid package during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Sea Sparrows will be fired from Soviet-era 9K37 Buk missile launchers modified by Ukraine to accept them,[10] to counter attacks from cruise missiles and drones.[11][12][13]

Evolved Sea Sparrow missile (ESSM) edit

 
An ESSM launching. Note the enlarged engine section.

Although the Navy and Air Force initially planned additional upgrades for the Sparrow, notably the AIM-7R with a combination radar/infrared seeker, these were canceled in favor of the much more advanced AIM-120 AMRAAM in December 1996. With the link between the airborne and shipborne versions of the Sparrow severed, Raytheon proposed a much more extensive set of upgrades to the Sea Sparrow, the RIM-7R Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM). The changes were so extensive that the project was renamed, becoming the RIM-162 ESSM.[14]

The ESSM takes the existing guidance section from the RIM-7P and fits it to an entirely new rear-section. The new missile is 10 inches (25 cm) in diameter instead of the previous 8 inches, which allows for a much more powerful motor. It also eliminates the mid-mounted wings entirely, replacing them with long fins similar to those on the Standard missile (and practically every other Navy missile since the 1950s) and moves guidance control to the rear fins. The tail-fin based steering of the ESSM uses up more energy but offers considerably higher maneuverability while the engine is still firing.

The Mark 25 quad-missile pack was developed during the 1990s to fit four ESSMs into a single Mk 41 VLS cell.[15] For VLS use, ESSMs are fitted with the same JVC system as the earlier versions.

Operators edit

 
Map with RIM-7 operators in blue

Current operators edit

  Belgium
  Bulgaria
  Chile
  Denmark
  Germany
  Greece
  Italy
  Japan
  South Korea
  Mexico
  Netherlands
  Norway
  Portugal
  Spain
  Turkey
  Ukraine
  United States
  Republic of China

Former operators edit

  Australia
  Canada
  New Zealand

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Chesneau, Roger (2005). Aeroguide 30 - Blackburn Buccaneer S Mks 1 and 2. Ad Hoc Publications. pp. 5–6.
  2. ^ a b Friedman, p. 360
  3. ^ Friedman, p. 225
  4. ^ "NATO SEASPARROW Surface System Missile Project". Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e Parsch, Andreas (13 April 2007). "Raytheon AIM/RIM-7 Sparrow". Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  6. ^ a b Polmar, p. 521
  7. ^ War Machine encyclopedia (in Italian). London: Limited publishing Ltd. 1983. p. 233.
  8. ^ "MK 23 Target Acquisition System (TAS)". Federation of American Scientists. 30 June 1999. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  9. ^ Cole, J. Michael (25 July 2012). "Hundreds of missiles placed 'on hold' as Taiwan awaits US investigation". taipeitimes.com. Taipei. Retrieved 3 February 2019.
  10. ^ Malyasov, Dylan (8 January 2023). "Ukraine to integrate Sea Sparrow missile into Soviet-era Buk launchers".
  11. ^ Seligman, Lara; McLeary, Paul (2023-01-05). "Biden will send Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine. And tanks could be next". Politico. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  12. ^ U.S. Sending Ukraine Sea Sparrow Missiles in Latest Aid Package. USNI News. 6 January 2023.
  13. ^ US to Supply Ukraine with Bradleys, New Air Weapons in Massive $3 Billion Aid Package. Air & Space Forces Magazine. 6 January 2023.
  14. ^ Parsch, Andreas (27 March 2004). "Raytheon RIM-162 ESSM". Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  15. ^ "MK 41 Vertical Launching System". Federation of American Scientists. 30 June 1999. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  16. ^ "VELOS".
  17. ^ "More Than $3 Billion in Additional Security Assistance for Ukraine". www.defense.gov (Press release). United States Department of Defense. 6 January 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  18. ^ "Ukraine to integrate Sea Sparrow missile into Soviet-era Buk launchers". defence-blog.com. 2023-01-08. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  19. ^ "RIM-7 Sea Sparrow launch". Republic of China Air Force. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
  20. ^ Hundreds of missiles placed ‘on hold’ as Taiwan awaits US

Bibliography edit

  • Friedman, Norman (2004). U.S. Destroyers. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-442-3.
  • Polmar, Norman (2004). The Naval Institute Guide to the Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet. Naval Institute Press. p. 521. ISBN 1-59114-685-2. sea sparrow. (note: this source contains several obvious errors)

External links edit

  Media related to RIM-7 Sea Sparrow at Wikimedia Commons,

  • US Navy Sea Sparrow fact file

sparrow, ship, borne, short, range, anti, aircraft, anti, missile, weapon, system, primarily, intended, defense, against, anti, ship, missiles, system, developed, early, 1960s, from, sparrow, missile, lightweight, point, defense, weapon, that, could, retrofitt. The RIM 7 Sea Sparrow is a U S ship borne short range anti aircraft and anti missile weapon system primarily intended for defense against anti ship missiles The system was developed in the early 1960s from the AIM 7 Sparrow air to air missile as a lightweight point defense weapon that could be retrofitted to existing ships as quickly as possible often in place of existing gun based anti aircraft weapons In this incarnation it was a very simple system guided by a manually aimed radar illuminator RIM 7 Sea SparrowTypeSurface to air missilePlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1976 presentProduction historyManufacturerRaytheon and General DynamicsUnit cost 165 400SpecificationsMass510 lb 230 kg Length12 ft 3 7 m Diameter8 in 20 cm Wingspan3 ft 4 in 1 02 m WarheadAnnular blast fragmentation warhead 90 lb 41 kg DetonationmechanismProximity fuzed expanding rod with a 27 ft 8 2 m kill radiusEngineHercules MK 58 solid propellant rocket motorOperationalrange10 nmi 19 km Maximum speed4 256 km h 2 645 mph GuidancesystemSemi active radar homingLaunchplatformShipAfter its introduction the system underwent significant development into an automated system similar to other US Navy missiles like the RIM 2 Terrier Contemporary improvements being made to the Sparrow for the air to air role led to similar improvements in the Sea Sparrow through the 1970s and 80s After that point the air to air role passed to the AIM 120 AMRAAM and the Sea Sparrow underwent a series of upgrades strictly for the naval role It now resembles the AIM 7 only in general form it is larger faster and includes a new seeker and a launch system suitable for vertical launch from modern warships Fifty years after its development the Sea Sparrow remains an important part of a layered air defense system providing a short medium range component especially useful against sea skimming missiles Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Point defense missile system PDMS 1 3 Basic point defense missile system BPDMS 1 4 Improved basic point defense missile system IBPDMS 1 5 Missile upgrades 1 6 Ground launched Sea Sparrow 1 7 Evolved Sea Sparrow missile ESSM 2 Operators 2 1 Current operators 2 2 Former operators 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksHistory editBackground edit High speed jet aircraft flying at low altitudes presented a serious threat to naval forces in the late 1950s Approaching under the local horizon of the ships the aircraft would suddenly appear at relatively close ranges giving the ships only seconds to respond before the aircraft dropped their payloads and withdrew This gave the aircraft an enormous advantage over earlier weapons such as dive bombers or torpedo bombers whose low speed allowed them to be attacked with some effectiveness by anti aircraft guns The advantage was so great that when the Royal Navy was faced by the threat of the new Soviet Sverdlov class cruiser they responded in a non linear fashion by introducing the Blackburn Buccaneer aircraft to attack them 1 Further improving the capabilities of aircraft against ships were a variety of precision guided weapons Early designs were first used in World War II with manually controlled weapons such as the Fritz X and evolving into semi autonomous cruise missiles such as the Raduga KS 1 Komet that relied on a combination of initial guidance from the launching aircraft and terminal guidance on the missile itself These systems allowed the aircraft to launch their attacks from outside the range of shipboard anti aircraft weapons in relative safety Only the presence of defensive fighters operating at long ranges from the ships could provide cover against these attacks by attacking the launch aircraft before they could close on the ships US Navy doctrine stressed long range air cover to counter both high speed aircraft and missiles and development of newer short range defenses had been largely ignored While the Navy was developing expensive long range fighters like the Douglas F6D Missileer most ships were left with older weapons typically Bofors 40 mm guns or Oerlikon 20 mm cannons By the early 1960s their capability against modern aircraft and missiles was limited a lack of fast reacting mounts gunsight radars of limited accuracy and long settling times for the fire control systems all meant that the guns were unlikely to be able to respond effectively against high speed aircraft The introduction of sea skimming missiles dramatically increased the threat against these ships Unlike the earlier generation of anti ship missiles ASMs sea skimmers approached at low level like an attack aircraft hiding themselves until the last moment The missiles were relatively small and much harder to hit than an attacking aircraft While the older defenses might be considered a credible threat to a large aircraft at low altitude or a missile approaching at higher altitudes against a sea skimming missile they were useless To successfully counter this threat ships needed new weapons able to attack these targets as soon as they appeared accurately enough to give them a high first attempt kill probability there would be little time for a second attempt Point defense missile system PDMS edit The US Army faced a similar problem defending against attacks by high speed jet powered attack aircraft In this case the local horizon was generally even more limited blocked by trees and hills and engagement times could be measured in seconds They concluded that a gun based system was simply unusable in this role by the time the radar had locked on and the gunsight calculated proper lead there would be no time to shoot at the target while it was within a gun s relatively short range Missiles on the other hand could progressively tune their approach while they were flying toward the target and their proximity fuses meant they only needed to get close enough In 1959 the Army started development of the MIM 46 Mauler which mounted a new high speed missile on top of the ubiquitous M113 Armored Personnel Carrier chassis along with a medium range search radar and a separate tracking and illumination radar In order to deal with the quick response times needed the fire control system was semi automatic operators would view targets on the search radar and prioritize them the fire control system would select ones within attack range and automatically slew the missiles toward them and launch Since the missile would be operating close to the ground in highly cluttered environments it used a combination of beam riding along the illumination radar and an infrared seeker in the nose which allowed tracking as long as either the path in front or in rear of the missile remained free of obstructions These same basic engagement parameters high speed and the associated fleeting sighting times applied to sea skimming aircraft and missiles as well The Navy intended to adapt the Mauler to shipboard use by removing its search radar and wiring it into the existing ship borne radar systems instead The 9 box launcher and illuminator radar would be retained in a relatively compact mount Development started in 1960 under the Point Defense Missile System PDMS the naval version to be known as the RIM 46A Sea Mauler The Navy was so confident in the Sea Mauler that they modified the design of their latest frigates the Knox class to incorporate a space on the rear deck for the Sea Mauler launcher 2 The Navy s confidence in Mauler proved misplaced by 1963 the program had been downgraded to a pure technology development effort due to continued problems and was canceled outright in 1965 All three of the stakeholders the US Army US Navy and British Army started looking for a replacement While the British took a longer term approach and developed the new Rapier missile the US Army and Navy scrambled to find a system that could be deployed as quickly as possible Facing the problem of guidance in a cluttered environment the Army decided to adapt the infrared AIM 9 Sidewinder missile into the MIM 72 Chaparral This was based on the AIM 9D a tail chaser and would be useless for the Navy where its targets would be approaching head on They required a radar guided system and this naturally led to the AIM 7 Sparrow They also considered Chaparral for smaller ships due to its much smaller size but no such fits were ever attempted 2 Basic point defense missile system BPDMS edit nbsp Mark 115 manned director initially used to guide a Sea Sparrow to its target as a part of BPDMS Quickly organizing the Basic Point Defense Missile System BPDMS the then current AIM 7E from the F 4 Phantom was adapted to shipboard use with surprising speed The main developments were the new Mark 25 trainable launcher developed from the ASROC launcher and the Mark 115 manually aimed radar illuminator that looked like two large searchlights Operation was extremely simple the operator would be cued to targets via voice commands from the search radar operators and he then slewed the illuminator onto the target The relatively wide beam of the radar only needed to be in the general direction of the target the continuous wave signal being Doppler shifted by the moving target and showing up strongly even if it was not centered in the beam The launcher would automatically follow the motions of the illuminator so that when the missile was fired it would immediately see the signal being reflected off the target In this form the Sea Sparrow was tested on the destroyer escort USS Bradley 3 starting in February 1967 but this installation was removed when Bradley was sent to Vietnam later that year Testing continued and between 1971 and 1975 Sea Sparrow was fitted to 31 ships of the Knox class hulls 1052 to 1069 and 1071 to 1083 The missing ship in the series Downes DE 1070 was instead used to test an upgraded version see below The Sea Sparrow was far from an ideal weapon Its rocket engine was designed with the assumption that it would be launched at high speed from an aircraft and therefore is optimized for a long cruise at relatively low power In the surface to air role one would rather have very high acceleration in order to allow it to intercept sea skimming targets as soon as possible The power profile is also suitable for cruising in thin air at high altitudes but at low altitudes it does not produce enough power to overcome drag and dramatically decreases range some estimates indicate that the Sea Sparrow may be effective only to 10 kilometres 6 2 mi about one quarter of the range of the air launched Sparrow An engine of much higher power would greatly improve performance in spite of a shorter burning time Another problem is that the Sparrow is steered with its mid mounted maneuvering wings These were used on the Sparrow because they required less energy for basic maneuvers during cruise but this made the missile less maneuverable overall which was not well suited to the quick reaction weapon Additionally the powered wings meant that they could not easily be adapted to fold and therefore the launcher cells were sized to the wings instead of the missile body taking up much more room than required Although the Sea Sparrow was meant as a small missile system that could be fit to a wide variety of ships the launcher was relatively large and was deployed only to larger frigates destroyers and aircraft carriers Finally the manually aimed illuminator was of limited use at night or in bad weather which was hardly encouraging for a ship borne weapon where fog was a common occurrence Improved basic point defense missile system IBPDMS edit nbsp USS O Brien launches a Sea Sparrow missile shown with its mid wing still folded as it departs a NSSM Mark 29 launcher on November 5 2003 nbsp Two Mark 95 unmanned illumination radars used to guide a Sea Sparrow to its target In 1968 Denmark Italy and Norway signed an agreement with the US Navy to use the Sea Sparrow on their ships and collaborate on improved versions Over the next few years a number of other countries joined the NATO SEASPARROW Project Office NSPO and today it includes 12 member nations 4 Under this umbrella group the Improved Basic Point Defense Missile System IBPDMS program started even while the original version was being deployed IBPDMS emerged as the RIM 7H which was essentially the RIM 7A with the mid mounted wings modified to be able to fold 5 This was done in a fashion similar to carrier based aircraft the wings were hinged at a point about 50 along the span with the outer portions rotated back toward the body of the missile This allowed them to be stored in tighter container tubes in the new Mark 29 launcher and flip open automatically when they were released from the tube The seeker was modified to work with a variety of guidance radars including those being used with existing European missile systems Production of the RIM 7H began in 1973 as NATO Sea Sparrow Missile System NSSMS Block I For the US Navy s use the new Mark 95 illuminator system was also introduced similar to the original Mark 115 but with automatic guidance that could be used in any weather The Mark 95 formed the basis of the highly automated Mark 91 fire control system Missile upgrades edit In 1972 Raytheon started a Sparrow upgrade program to arm the upcoming F 15 Eagle producing the AIM 7F The F model replaced the older analog guidance system with a solid state version that could operate with the F 15 s new pulse doppler radar The guidance system was much smaller which allowed the warhead to be moved from its former rear mounted position to one in front of the mid mounted wings and increased in weight to 86 lb 39 kg Moving it forward also allowed the rocket engine to be enlarged so it was replaced by a new dual thrust engine that quickly accelerated the missile to higher speeds and then settled to a lower thrust for cruise The new missiles were quickly adapted for the naval role in a fashion similar to the RIM 7H producing the RIM 7F The new missile used the lower model designation in spite of the newer technology than the H model 5 Another major upgrade to the AIM 7 followed the AIM 7M The M included a new monopulse radar seeker that allowed it to be shot downward from a higher altitude aircraft at a target otherwise masked by the ground The new model also included a completely computerized guidance system that could be updated in the field as well as further reducing weight for yet another warhead upgrade The computerized guidance system also included a simple autopilot that allowed the missile to continue flying toward the last known target location even with the loss of a signal allowing the launch platform to break lock for short periods while the missile was in flight All of these modifications also improved performance against low altitude sea skimming targets as well 5 The M model entered US operational service in 1983 6 The original RIM 7E was capable to fly at about Mach 2 between 30 and 15 000 metres 98 and 49 213 ft with a range of 15 22 kilometres 8 1 11 9 nmi depending on the target height The RIM 7F enhanced the performances but also the proximity fuse versus low flying targets as the minimum altitude was reduced to 15 metres 49 ft or less The RIM 7M was able to strike targets at an altitude of 8 metres 26 ft providing some capability against sea skimming missiles such the Exocet 7 While the M model was being worked on the US Navy also introduced an upgrade for the Mark 91 fire control system the Mark 23 Target Acquisition System TAS TAS included a medium range 2D radar and IFF system that fed information to a new console in the ship s combat information center The Mark 23 automatically detected prioritized and displayed potential targets greatly improving reaction times of the system as a whole 8 The Mark 23 is also used to select targets for most other weapons systems including gunfire and other missile systems TAS started entering the fleet in 1980 6 nbsp Evolved Sea Sparrow being lowered into VLS tubeThe NSPO also used the M series upgrade as an opportunity to upgrade the system to allow it to be launched from a Vertical Launching System VLS 5 This modification uses the Jet Vane Control JVC package that is added to the bottom of the missile On launch a small engine in the JVC boosts the missile up above the launching ship then uses vanes positioned in its own exhaust to quickly slew the missile into the proper alignment with the target which is fed to the JVC during launch As far as the Sea Sparrow is concerned there is no difference between being launched directly from a trainable launcher or using JVC in both cases the missile becomes active looking directly at the target A final upgrade to the Sparrow was the AIM 7P which replaced the M s guidance system with an improved model that allowed mid course upgrades to be sent from the launching platform via new rear mounted antennas 5 For air to air use this allowed the missile to be lofted above the target and then be directed down towards it as it approached this gives the missile greater range as it spends more time in thinner high altitude air In naval use this meant it could also be directly guided against small surface targets that would otherwise not show up well on radar allowing the ship s more powerful search radars to provide guidance until the missile approached the target and the reflected signal grew stronger This also gave the Sea Sparrow a very useful secondary anti shipping role that allows it to attack smaller boats Ground launched Sea Sparrow edit nbsp RIM 7 SAM towed launchers nbsp RIM 7 SAM Missile Launcher Display at Ching Chuan Kang Air BaseTaiwan operates ground based Sea Sparrows as part of the Skyguard SHORAD system Five hundred missiles entered service in 1991 and are deployed on trailers with four box launchers In 2012 they were temporarily withdrawn from service following a pair of missile failures during testing as well as the failure of a related AIM 7 in the same exercises 9 In January 2023 the United States announced it would transfer Sea Sparrow missiles to Ukraine as part of a military aid package during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine The Sea Sparrows will be fired from Soviet era 9K37 Buk missile launchers modified by Ukraine to accept them 10 to counter attacks from cruise missiles and drones 11 12 13 Evolved Sea Sparrow missile ESSM edit Main article RIM 162 ESSM nbsp An ESSM launching Note the enlarged engine section Although the Navy and Air Force initially planned additional upgrades for the Sparrow notably the AIM 7R with a combination radar infrared seeker these were canceled in favor of the much more advanced AIM 120 AMRAAM in December 1996 With the link between the airborne and shipborne versions of the Sparrow severed Raytheon proposed a much more extensive set of upgrades to the Sea Sparrow the RIM 7R Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile ESSM The changes were so extensive that the project was renamed becoming the RIM 162 ESSM 14 The ESSM takes the existing guidance section from the RIM 7P and fits it to an entirely new rear section The new missile is 10 inches 25 cm in diameter instead of the previous 8 inches which allows for a much more powerful motor It also eliminates the mid mounted wings entirely replacing them with long fins similar to those on the Standard missile and practically every other Navy missile since the 1950s and moves guidance control to the rear fins The tail fin based steering of the ESSM uses up more energy but offers considerably higher maneuverability while the engine is still firing The Mark 25 quad missile pack was developed during the 1990s to fit four ESSMs into a single Mk 41 VLS cell 15 For VLS use ESSMs are fitted with the same JVC system as the earlier versions Operators edit nbsp Map with RIM 7 operators in blueCurrent operators edit nbsp BelgiumBelgian Navy nbsp BulgariaBulgarian Navy nbsp ChileChilean Navy nbsp DenmarkRoyal Danish Navy nbsp GermanyGerman Navy nbsp GreeceHellenic Air Force 16 Hellenic Navy nbsp ItalyItalian Navy nbsp JapanJapan Maritime Self Defense Force nbsp South KoreaRepublic of Korea Navy nbsp MexicoMexican Navy nbsp NetherlandsRoyal Netherlands Navy nbsp NorwayRoyal Norwegian Navy nbsp PortugalPortuguese Navy nbsp SpainSpanish Navy nbsp TurkeyTurkish Naval Forces nbsp UkraineArmed Forces of Ukraine Unknown number to be delivered by the United States in 2023 17 Sea Sparrows will be mounted on the self propelled Buk missile system 18 nbsp United StatesUnited States Navy nbsp Republic of ChinaRepublic of China Air Force 19 20 Former operators edit nbsp AustraliaRoyal Australian Navy nbsp CanadaRoyal Canadian Navy nbsp New ZealandRoyal New Zealand NavySee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to RIM 7 Sea Sparrow 1963 United States Tri Service rocket and guided missile designation system List of missilesReferences editNotes edit Chesneau Roger 2005 Aeroguide 30 Blackburn Buccaneer S Mks 1 and 2 Ad Hoc Publications pp 5 6 a b Friedman p 360 Friedman p 225 NATO SEASPARROW Surface System Missile Project Retrieved 2 April 2016 a b c d e Parsch Andreas 13 April 2007 Raytheon AIM RIM 7 Sparrow Directory of U S Military Rockets and Missiles Retrieved 2 April 2016 a b Polmar p 521 War Machine encyclopedia in Italian London Limited publishing Ltd 1983 p 233 MK 23 Target Acquisition System TAS Federation of American Scientists 30 June 1999 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Cole J Michael 25 July 2012 Hundreds of missiles placed on hold as Taiwan awaits US investigation taipeitimes com Taipei Retrieved 3 February 2019 Malyasov Dylan 8 January 2023 Ukraine to integrate Sea Sparrow missile into Soviet era Buk launchers Seligman Lara McLeary Paul 2023 01 05 Biden will send Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine And tanks could be next Politico Retrieved 2023 01 06 U S Sending Ukraine Sea Sparrow Missiles in Latest Aid Package USNI News 6 January 2023 US to Supply Ukraine with Bradleys New Air Weapons in Massive 3 Billion Aid Package Air amp Space Forces Magazine 6 January 2023 Parsch Andreas 27 March 2004 Raytheon RIM 162 ESSM Directory of U S Military Rockets and Missiles Retrieved 2 April 2016 MK 41 Vertical Launching System Federation of American Scientists 30 June 1999 Retrieved 2 April 2016 VELOS More Than 3 Billion in Additional Security Assistance for Ukraine www defense gov Press release United States Department of Defense 6 January 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2023 Ukraine to integrate Sea Sparrow missile into Soviet era Buk launchers defence blog com 2023 01 08 Retrieved 2023 01 13 RIM 7 Sea Sparrow launch Republic of China Air Force Retrieved 2017 06 19 Hundreds of missiles placed on hold as Taiwan awaits US Bibliography edit Friedman Norman 2004 U S Destroyers Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 442 3 Polmar Norman 2004 The Naval Institute Guide to the Ships and Aircraft of the U S Fleet Naval Institute Press p 521 ISBN 1 59114 685 2 sea sparrow note this source contains several obvious errors External links edit nbsp Media related to RIM 7 Sea Sparrow at Wikimedia Commons US Navy Sea Sparrow fact file Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RIM 7 Sea Sparrow amp oldid 1174501339 Basic point defense missile system BPDMS, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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